India's growing capabilities: Jaishankar lauds GalaxEye's 'Mission Drishti' marking global breakthrough in all-weather imaging
New Delhi [India], May 3 (ANI): In a move that cements India's transition into a high-tier global space power, the successful launch of Mission Drishti on Sunday has signalled the arrival of a new, hybrid space ecosystem where private innovation meets national strategic goals.
Developed by Bengaluru-based startup GalaxEye, the 190 kg satellite--India's largest privately built spacecraft to date--successfully reached orbit aboard a SpaceX Falcon-9 rocket.
"The success of Mission Drishti, world's first OptoSAR satellite by @GalaxEye reinforces India's growing capabilities in the global space sector. It also highlights the role being played by our entrepreneurs, strengthening nation's technical and innovation ecosystems," Jaishankar said in a post on X.
The technical centrepiece of Mission Drishti is its OptoSAR technology, a world-first for a commercial satellite. While traditional satellites struggle with cloud cover or darkness, GalaxEye's "made-in-India" system fuses two distinct technologies: Optical Sensors, providing high-resolution, intuitive visual data and SAR (Synthetic Aperture Radar), penetrating clouds, smoke, and total darkness.
The success of Mission Drishti is not just a win for GalaxEye, but a validation of India's reorganised space sector. The project utilised a multi-layered support system:
IN-SPACe facilitated the private-public partnership, opening state-of-the-art infrastructure for private testing. While building indigenous tech, the startup plugged into the global launch market via SpaceX, showcasing the "plug-and-play" capability of modern Indian space firms.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi termed it "a major achievement" in India's space journey.
To understand why this matters, it is important to break down what OptoSAR means. Traditionally, satellites use either optical cameras -- similar to regular photographs that give clear visuals but fail during night or cloudy conditions -- or radar systems known as Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), which can "see" through clouds and darkness but produce less intuitive images. Mission Drishti brings both together. As the company itself explained, "OptoSAR imagery enables insights that were impossible with traditional satellites," while being designed to be "reliable, predictable, and ready to power the next generation of applications."
At 190 kg, the Mission Drishti satellite is "India's largest privately built satellite," and its launch aboard a SpaceX Falcon-9 rocket reflects how Indian startups are now plugging into global launch ecosystems while building indigenous capabilities.
The Bengaluru-based startup, GalaxEye, has partnered with NewSpace India Limited, the commercial arm of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), for the global distribution of its satellite imagery. This means the data generated by Mission Drishti can be marketed and accessed by government and commercial users, turning satellite output into a scalable data service.
While developed in India, Mission Drishti is designed for global applications, with demand emerging across regions. The company has indicated strong interest in its datasets from international defence partners, particularly in the Middle East, the United States and Europe, reflecting the growing global relevance of high-resolution, all-weather satellite intelligence.
The startup is led by CEO and Co-founder Suyash Singh and CTO and Co-founder Denil Chawda.
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