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Customers of India’s PSLV rocket say India unlikely to accept U.S. terms

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Customers of India’s PSLV rocket say India unlikely to accept U.S. terms
by Peter B. de Selding — July 19, 2016
SkySat3_Chicago_Soldier_Field-879x485.jpg

This image of Chicago from Terra Bella's SkySat-3 satellite was taken on June 25, three days after its launch aboard India's PSLV rocket. The launch also orbited 12 commercial observation satellites for California-based Planet. Both companies required a U.S. government waiver of a ban on commercial use of Indian launch vehicles. Credit: Terra Bella

PARIS— Past and future customers of India’s PSLV rocket said they doubt whether India will ever sign the kind of price-commitment agreement with the U.S. government that has been a subject of dispute for a decade.

Without substantial modifications that would reduce the agreement to no more than a fig leaf, Indian authorities will never agree to lose face by signing it because of its implied loss of sovereignty, they said.

Given the worldwide growth in the number of small, lightweight satellites intended to operate in low Earth orbit – the kind the PSLV has demonstrated it can launch as secondary passengers, these officials said they saw only two scenarios:

Either the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) scraps or renders meaningless, through regular waivers, the current ban on commercial U.S. satellite launches on Indian rockets, or small satellite developers will increasingly order satellites built outside the United States.

The USTR is currently reviewing the policy that bars commercial U.S. satellites – including non-U.S. satellites with U.S. components – from being exported for launch aboard India’s PSLV rocket unless they are granted a waiver.

Multiple waivers have been granted, but some small-rocket developers want to maintain the policy to help them gain traction in a market in which they will compete with India’s government-financed PSLV.

India’s PSLV pricing for commercial payloads is not substantially less expensive than its competitors in China, Russia, Europe and the United States, according to a list of prices published by the Indian Prime Minister’s office.

One example: a price of 17.5 million euros, or $19.4 million at mid-2014 exchange rates, to launch the 700-kilogram commercial Spot 7 Earth observation satellite, owned by Airbus Defence and Space of France. Spot 7 was the lead payload for the June 2014 launch. Smaller satellites from Germany, Singapore and Canada were also aboard and contributed to the total revenue generated from the launch.

How much pricing flexibility the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) and its commercial arm, Antrix, have with PSLV is unclear. ISRO officials said after the most recent PSLV launch that they want to increase the vehicle’s annual cadence and give Indian industry more control over the program.

Officials from PSLV customer companies said they had no special insight into the current state of U.S.-Indian negotiations over the Commercial Space Launch Agreement (CSLA). The proposed CSLA language has not been made public. But they said past negotiations have collapsed because of CSLA provisions that India considered beyond the pale.

“There were sticky points,” said one industry official whose company has had commercial dealings with ISRO/Antrix for PSLV launches. “One of the stickiest points was the required permission to access and audit the books of ISRO during office hours. No sovereign nation will allow you to audit the books of their space agency under normal conditions.”

Another industry official said Indian launch officials privately say the CSLA is an insult to India’s national pride.

U.S. government officials said the current CSLA discussions with India were begun following Hawthorne, California-based SpaceX’s introduction of its Falcon 1e rocket, which was introduced in 2009 but retired in 2009 when SpaceX focused on the much larger Falcon 9 vehicle.

Despite the Falcon 1’s retirement, U.S. insistence that India sign a CLSA has been maintained. More recently, several other U.S.-based companies have begun developing small rockets.

Pressure to allow PSLV to launch commercial U.S. satellites has increased with the takeoff of the small-satellite market. U.S. companies including Google-owned Terra Bella, Planet, Spire, PlanetiQ and Blacksky Global have booked Indian launches for parts of their intended low-orbiting constellations after securing U.S. government waivers.

The U.S. government in the past has negotiated similar agreements with Russia, China and Ukraine, although it is unclear whether these accords had the same level of oversight.

The U.S. government “did have some sort of access to Chinese, Russian and Ukrainian prices… These had been within 7.5 percent of comparable Western prices,” said a former U.S. government official familiar with the agreements.

U.S. satellites are barred from using Chinese rockets not because of pricing, but ostensibly because of technology-transfer concerns. The future availability of current Russian and Ukrainian rockets, most of them converted ballistic missiles, is unclear.

This official said it would not be surprising if the USTR wanted to resist taking on the role of “some sort of police force checking international pricing for these types of launches. Such a system is cumbersome and difficult to enforce.”

India’s PSLV launched four satellites for San Francisco-based Spire Global in September 2015. Twelve satellites for San Francisco-based Planet and one for Terra Bella of Mountain View, California, were launched in June. Blacksky Global is planning a launch on the next PSLV, according to the vehicle’s current manifest.

Already some European companies are including in their sales pitches the fact that they do not use U.S. components and thus are not bound by U.S. policy. “It takes a potential future worry off the table for the customer,” an official with one of these companies said.

The ability to fit what was once considered advanced technology into a small, relatively low-cost satellite has encouraged not only Western companies to plan business models based on them, but also expanded the number of nations owning at least one of their own spacecraft.

Space industry consultancy Euroconsult on July 19 said its latest market survey found that 24 emerging-market nations have launched 69 satellites in the past 20 years. Another 23 nations are expected to become first-time satellite owners by 2025, Euroconsult said.

- See more at: http://spacenews.com/customers-of-i...ely-to-accept-u-s-terms/#sthash.qqJxzhxp.dpuf

----------------
Comment by a person on discus.com
what a bunch of peanut brains...... Google,Amazon,SpaceX almost all technology companies have market access to Indian markets which runs into 10's billions and stupids want to lose that for at most a $200 million dollar low earth orbit launching rockets.... I used to think Indian Bureaucrats are stupid but US bureaucrats are even stupid...... If this news develops steam in India they could lose the market access........

@Abingdonboy @anant_s @Taygibay @Picdelamirand-oil @Vergennes @randomradio @MilSpec @Koovie @Echo_419 @Dash @hellfire @ito @SR-91 @AMCA @DesiGuy1403 @ranjeet @hellfire @fsayed @SpArK @AUSTERLITZ @nair @proud_indian @Roybot @jbgt90 @Sergi @Water Car Engineer @dadeechi @kurup @Rain Man @kaykay @Joe Shearer @Tshering22 @Dandpatta @danger007 @Didact @Soumitra @SrNair @TejasMk3@jbgt90 @ranjeet @4GTejasBVR @The_Showstopper @guest11 @egodoc222 @Nilgiri @SarthakGanguly @Omega007 @GURU DUTT @HariPrasad @JanjaWeed @litefire @AMCA @Perpendicular @Spectre@litefire @AMCA @Perpendicular@Ryuzaki @CorporateAffairs @GR!FF!N @migflug @Levina @SvenSvensonov @Blue Marlin @waz @mike2000 is back @Mike_Brando @Oscar @Icarus @WAJsal @Stephen Cohen @zebra7 @Ankit Kumar 002 @others
 
I am all for exceptionalism of US but it won't work with India. Hopefully the USTR is smart enough to understand trade.
 
The US wants satellite services as part of CSLA with India. They don't have this with any other country. That's unacceptable to India.

Basically, the Americans are threatened by ISRO in the satellite launch segment. Even SpaceX thinks it cannot compete with ISRO.

CSLA is needed to launch American made satellites. Right now, they are doing it with special waivers. But it may not last for long. That's why ISRO wants to privatize PSLV, so the Americans can't insist on checking ISRO's information. They will have to check information from private companies and that's not a threat to our security.
 
I can't understand this habit of USA govt, they just want to compromise the sovereignty of any nation. Even with the civil nuclear agreement, they wanted to inspect the nuclear fuel from all the sources. I mean this is just pathetic way of doing trade by USA. I hope WTO protects individual nations decision for defense and space related trade otherwise India should file complain against USA if they don't their private companies to launch satellites from PSLV.
 
The US wants satellite services as part of CSLA with India. They don't have this with any other country. That's unacceptable to India.

Basically, the Americans are threatened by ISRO in the satellite launch segment. Even SpaceX thinks it cannot compete with ISRO.

CSLA is needed to launch American made satellites. Right now, they are doing it with special waivers. But it may not last for long. That's why ISRO wants to privatize PSLV, so the Americans can't insist on checking ISRO's information. They will have to check information from private companies and that's not a threat to our security.
Even if it is private company also they have no business looking into their audit books unless they are investing.
Its got to do more with insecurity than any thing. India should not kow tow to any such anti national intrusions. If they want to business with us, it will be on our terms only.
 
Even if it is private company also they have no business looking into their audit books unless they are investing.
Its got to do more with insecurity than any thing. India should not kow tow to any such anti national intrusions. If they want to business with us, it will be on our terms only.

It's actually much more intrusive than you think. They also want to decide how many launches ISRO can do every year and the price of each launch, so that it is competitive with US launch services. Of course, this is only for US satellites and the US market.

US has similar agreements with Russia and China.

They are making two arguments. One is false, the other is partly true.
1. That ISRO's launch is cheap because it is subsidized. It's wrong, but the FAA has upheld that and banned ISRO.

2. The other is that they have no access to India's satellite launch market while ISRO wants full access to US market. But if ISRO's services are cheap, then why would Indian companies opt for American launch services?

They are whining and ISRO is not biting. ISRO wants to rope in the private sector and triple the launch rate. Plus the US ban on satellite launches from India that have US components in them can give India the opportunity to have satellite construction outsourced to ISRO or other Indian companies which can then use PSLV. So there is opportunity there.

The CSLA is one-sided, but then the US is a huge market and that's why it's one-sided.
 
Basically, the Americans are threatened by ISRO in the satellite launch segment. Even SpaceX thinks it cannot compete with ISRO
WOW....:pop:

They are whining and ISRO is not biting. ISRO wants to rope in the private sector and triple the launch rate. Plus the US ban on satellite launches from India that have US components in them can give India the opportunity to have satellite construction outsourced to ISRO or other Indian companies which can then use PSLV. So there is opportunity there.

The CSLA is one-sided, but then the US is a huge market and that's why it's one-sided.
it seems like it is gud deal for india ........
 
Customers of India’s PSLV rocket say India unlikely to accept U.S. terms
by Peter B. de Selding — July 19, 2016
SkySat3_Chicago_Soldier_Field-879x485.jpg

This image of Chicago from Terra Bella's SkySat-3 satellite was taken on June 25, three days after its launch aboard India's PSLV rocket. The launch also orbited 12 commercial observation satellites for California-based Planet. Both companies required a U.S. government waiver of a ban on commercial use of Indian launch vehicles. Credit: Terra Bella

PARIS— Past and future customers of India’s PSLV rocket said they doubt whether India will ever sign the kind of price-commitment agreement with the U.S. government that has been a subject of dispute for a decade.

Without substantial modifications that would reduce the agreement to no more than a fig leaf, Indian authorities will never agree to lose face by signing it because of its implied loss of sovereignty, they said.

Given the worldwide growth in the number of small, lightweight satellites intended to operate in low Earth orbit – the kind the PSLV has demonstrated it can launch as secondary passengers, these officials said they saw only two scenarios:

Either the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) scraps or renders meaningless, through regular waivers, the current ban on commercial U.S. satellite launches on Indian rockets, or small satellite developers will increasingly order satellites built outside the United States.

The USTR is currently reviewing the policy that bars commercial U.S. satellites – including non-U.S. satellites with U.S. components – from being exported for launch aboard India’s PSLV rocket unless they are granted a waiver.

Multiple waivers have been granted, but some small-rocket developers want to maintain the policy to help them gain traction in a market in which they will compete with India’s government-financed PSLV.

India’s PSLV pricing for commercial payloads is not substantially less expensive than its competitors in China, Russia, Europe and the United States, according to a list of prices published by the Indian Prime Minister’s office.

One example: a price of 17.5 million euros, or $19.4 million at mid-2014 exchange rates, to launch the 700-kilogram commercial Spot 7 Earth observation satellite, owned by Airbus Defence and Space of France. Spot 7 was the lead payload for the June 2014 launch. Smaller satellites from Germany, Singapore and Canada were also aboard and contributed to the total revenue generated from the launch.

How much pricing flexibility the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) and its commercial arm, Antrix, have with PSLV is unclear. ISRO officials said after the most recent PSLV launch that they want to increase the vehicle’s annual cadence and give Indian industry more control over the program.

Officials from PSLV customer companies said they had no special insight into the current state of U.S.-Indian negotiations over the Commercial Space Launch Agreement (CSLA). The proposed CSLA language has not been made public. But they said past negotiations have collapsed because of CSLA provisions that India considered beyond the pale.

“There were sticky points,” said one industry official whose company has had commercial dealings with ISRO/Antrix for PSLV launches. “One of the stickiest points was the required permission to access and audit the books of ISRO during office hours. No sovereign nation will allow you to audit the books of their space agency under normal conditions.”

Another industry official said Indian launch officials privately say the CSLA is an insult to India’s national pride.

U.S. government officials said the current CSLA discussions with India were begun following Hawthorne, California-based SpaceX’s introduction of its Falcon 1e rocket, which was introduced in 2009 but retired in 2009 when SpaceX focused on the much larger Falcon 9 vehicle.

Despite the Falcon 1’s retirement, U.S. insistence that India sign a CLSA has been maintained. More recently, several other U.S.-based companies have begun developing small rockets.

Pressure to allow PSLV to launch commercial U.S. satellites has increased with the takeoff of the small-satellite market. U.S. companies including Google-owned Terra Bella, Planet, Spire, PlanetiQ and Blacksky Global have booked Indian launches for parts of their intended low-orbiting constellations after securing U.S. government waivers.

The U.S. government in the past has negotiated similar agreements with Russia, China and Ukraine, although it is unclear whether these accords had the same level of oversight.

The U.S. government “did have some sort of access to Chinese, Russian and Ukrainian prices… These had been within 7.5 percent of comparable Western prices,” said a former U.S. government official familiar with the agreements.

U.S. satellites are barred from using Chinese rockets not because of pricing, but ostensibly because of technology-transfer concerns. The future availability of current Russian and Ukrainian rockets, most of them converted ballistic missiles, is unclear.

This official said it would not be surprising if the USTR wanted to resist taking on the role of “some sort of police force checking international pricing for these types of launches. Such a system is cumbersome and difficult to enforce.”

India’s PSLV launched four satellites for San Francisco-based Spire Global in September 2015. Twelve satellites for San Francisco-based Planet and one for Terra Bella of Mountain View, California, were launched in June. Blacksky Global is planning a launch on the next PSLV, according to the vehicle’s current manifest.

Already some European companies are including in their sales pitches the fact that they do not use U.S. components and thus are not bound by U.S. policy. “It takes a potential future worry off the table for the customer,” an official with one of these companies said.

The ability to fit what was once considered advanced technology into a small, relatively low-cost satellite has encouraged not only Western companies to plan business models based on them, but also expanded the number of nations owning at least one of their own spacecraft.

Space industry consultancy Euroconsult on July 19 said its latest market survey found that 24 emerging-market nations have launched 69 satellites in the past 20 years. Another 23 nations are expected to become first-time satellite owners by 2025, Euroconsult said.

- See more at: http://spacenews.com/customers-of-i...ely-to-accept-u-s-terms/#sthash.qqJxzhxp.dpuf

----------------
Comment by a person on discus.com
what a bunch of peanut brains...... Google,Amazon,SpaceX almost all technology companies have market access to Indian markets which runs into 10's billions and stupids want to lose that for at most a $200 million dollar low earth orbit launching rockets.... I used to think Indian Bureaucrats are stupid but US bureaucrats are even stupid...... If this news develops steam in India they could lose the market access........

@Abingdonboy @anant_s @Taygibay @Picdelamirand-oil @Vergennes @randomradio @MilSpec @Koovie @Echo_419 @Dash @hellfire @ito @SR-91 @AMCA @DesiGuy1403 @ranjeet @hellfire @fsayed @SpArK @AUSTERLITZ @nair @proud_indian @Roybot @jbgt90 @Sergi @Water Car Engineer @dadeechi @kurup @Rain Man @kaykay @Joe Shearer @Tshering22 @Dandpatta @danger007 @Didact @Soumitra @SrNair @TejasMk3@jbgt90 @ranjeet @4GTejasBVR @The_Showstopper @guest11 @egodoc222 @Nilgiri @SarthakGanguly @Omega007 @GURU DUTT @HariPrasad @JanjaWeed @litefire @AMCA @Perpendicular @Spectre@litefire @AMCA @Perpendicular@Ryuzaki @CorporateAffairs @GR!FF!N @migflug @Levina @SvenSvensonov @Blue Marlin @waz @mike2000 is back @Mike_Brando @Oscar @Icarus @WAJsal @Stephen Cohen @zebra7 @Ankit Kumar 002 @others


Yeah try Bellatrix Aerospace then.

http://bellatrixaerospace.com/

They have two Space Vehicle

Chetak and Garuda may be they could give you much cheaper rate per kg.

chetak-main1.png
garuda-main1.png



Reg. Office:
No. 23, 2nd main, 12th cross,
Vidyaranyapuram, Mysore - 570008

Works Office:
No. 15-A/2, SIDCO Industrial Estate,
Coimbatore - 641021, TN, India.
Mail : info@bellatrixaerospace.com
 
Yeah try Bellatrix Aerospace then.

http://bellatrixaerospace.com/

They have two Space Vehicle

Chetak and Garuda may be they could give you much cheaper rate per kg.

chetak-main1.png
garuda-main1.png



Reg. Office:
No. 23, 2nd main, 12th cross,
Vidyaranyapuram, Mysore - 570008

Works Office:
No. 15-A/2, SIDCO Industrial Estate,
Coimbatore - 641021, TN, India.
Mail : info@bellatrixaerospace.com

Is this Indian private firm?
In fact, some other companies also are working in space research. In a year or we will have first private satellite from India not from private university but from a private company.
Dhruva Space
Dhruva Space
Actually, Dhruva-1 by Dhruva Space will be the first pvt satellite of India.
Some of the future launch mission of ISRO(Not a complete list)
Most of the micro & nanosatellite in the list are Indian.
Some of the startups
Earth2Orbit (E2O) http://www.earth2orbit.com
Aniara Space
ARDL – http://www.ardl.org
Astrome –
http://www.astrome.co
TeamIndus GLXP Moon Mission

C35 & C36 will launch three Algerian satellites ALSAT 1B, 2B & 1N.
So, this list is not a complete list.

INDIAN LAUNCH MANIFEST (24 Jul 2016)

Date Launch Vehicle Payload
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Aug 16 PSLV-CA C35 Scatsat 1, PlanetiQ (2), BlackSky Pathfinder 1/2,
Max Valier Sat, Venta 1
# Sep 16 GSLV-II F05 Insat 3DR (GSAT 3DR)
# Oct 16 PSLV C36 Resourcesat 2A, IITMSAT
8 Dec 16 GSLV-II South Asia Satellite
# Dec 16 PSLV C37 EMISAT/SPADEX
Dec 16 GSLV-III D1 GSAT 19E
4qt 16 PLS GSAT 11
# 16 PSLV Dhruva 1, HAMSAT II, IMS 1B, SRE 2, NIUSAT
(Keralshree)
16 PLS GSAT Ka
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Mar 17 PSLV C38 Cartosat 2D, Microsat
May 17 GSLV-II F09 GSAT 9
Aug 17 PSLV NEMO-AM
Sep 17 PSLV HHK1 (Team Indus)
Dec 17 PSLV Cartosat 2E
Dec 17 GSLV-III D2 GSAT 20
4qt 17 GSLV NextStar 1, NextStar 2
4qt 17 PSLV Venus mission
17 PSLV Alsat 2B
17 PSLV IinuSat 1 (INSPIRE)
17 PSLV-XL IRNSS 1H (R1H)
17 PSLV-XL IRNSS 1I (R1I)
17 GSLV-II F12 GSAT 7A
17 GSLV-III GSAT 11E
? GSLV-II F11 GSAT 6A
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mar 18 PSLV Cartosat 3
1qt 18 GSLV-II F08 Chandrayan 2 (Orbiter/Lander/Rover)
Jul 18 PSLV Oceansat 3 (Argos 4)
18 PSLV EnMAP
18 GSLV MOM 2 (probably with lander and rover)
18 GSLV-II GISAT 1
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mar 19 PSLV Cartosat 3A
Mar 19 PSLV HySIS
2qt 19 PSLV RISAT 1A
#21 Nov 19 PSLV? Lunar Pathfinder (7 cubesats)
19 PSLV-XL Aditya L1
19 PSLV Resourcesat 3 Mx
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mar 20 PSLV RISAT 2A
Mar 20 PSLV Cartosat 3B
2qt 20 PSLV Resourcesat 3S
Mid 20 PSLV Oceansat 3A
20 PSLV CCI-Sat
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2qt 21 PSLV? Resourcesat 3SA
# 21 GSLV-IIA NISAR
21 GSLV-III Crewed Mission
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
22 GSLV-II Insat 3DS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
? PSLV? Resourcesat 3A Mx
? PSLV? Resourcesat 3B Mx
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Launch Failure
+ Partial Launch Failure
# Change since beginning of month
BEESat Berlin Experimental and Educational Satellite
CA Core Alone
CCI-Sat Communication-Centric Intelligence Satellite
GHGSat-D Greenhouse Gas Satellite Demonstrator
GISAT GEO Imaging Satellite
HySIS Hyperspectral Imaging Satellite
IMS Indian Mini Satellite
M3MSat Maritime Monitoring and Messaging Micro-Satellite
NEMO-AM Next Generation Earth Monitoring, Observation and Aerosol Monitoring
NISAR NASA ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar
PLS Procured Launch Service
PSLV Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle
RISAT Radar Imaging Satellite
SRE Space Capsule Recovery Experiment

http://www.sworld.com.au/steven/space/india-man.txt
 

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