The startup was the first Indian private company to design and develop a space-qualified solar array from the ground up
The Hyderabad and Austria-based startup is incubated at the European Space Agency’s business incubator
The Indian government had launched ISpA to enable spacetech startups in the country
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Spacetech startup Dhruva Space has raised INR 22 Cr led by IAN Fund and Blue Ashva capital. The Hyderabad and Austria-based startup will use the funds raised to launch new offerings, including Satellite as a Service, Space-grade solar arrays, and ground station solutions, aimed at both the international and domestic audience.
Founded in 2012 by Sanjay Nekkanti, Dhruva Space provides full-stack engineering solutions to enable ‘faster, reliable and more cost-effective access to space. The startup also provides its clients with integrated access to owning and operating space-based assets.
Space-qualified solar arrays are solar cells or panels built to the strict design specifications that would allow them to operate in space. These solar arrays are designed to be operated for long periods of time in a harsh environment flush with radioactivity.
Dhruva Space is currently incubated at the European Space Agency’s Business Incubation Centre in Austria, giving it access to the European spacetech market and technology.
“With our passion for creating exceptional small satellite systems to help space exploration technology meet human imagination, we are already working on launching our first satellite for a client,” said Sanjay Nekkanti, cofounder of the startup.
Dhruva Space claims to be the first Indian private company to secure an order to design and develop space-qualified solar arrays from the ground up. It also boasts of being the first and (currently) only Indian private company with both satellite and launcher interfaces.
According to Inc42 research, there were more than 120 active startups in the spacetech domain in the country in 2019. But despite India spending over $1.8 Bn on space programmes in 2019-20, the country lags far behind the United States, Russia and China.
To address this, the Indian government launched the Indian Space Association (ISpA): an industry association of space and satellite companies. The ISpA will engage with all stakeholders (public and private) in the Indian space domain and undertake policy advocacy to make the Indian space industry atmanirbhar.
According to the government, the ISpA stands on four pillars — the government as the enabler; the private sector as innovators; students and engineers as future talents; and space data as being a resource for progress in various sectors.
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