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Updated Oct 13, 2025 · 12:06
Business India News Updated Oct 13, 2025

India's GalaxEye to launch world's 1st multi-sensor Earth observation satellite in 2026

GalaxEye is making history with the world's first multi-sensor Earth observation satellite set for 2026. This Bengaluru-based startup's Mission Drishti represents India's largest privately-built satellite with impressive 1.5-meter resolution capability. The satellite combines synthetic aperture radar and optical payloads for unprecedented all-weather monitoring. This mission kicks off a planned constellation that will provide near real-time data for global applications.

Bengaluru, Oct 13

Spacetech startup GalaxEye on Monday said it is planning to launch its maiden ‘Mission Drishti’ in Q1 2026, which is world’s first multi-sensor Earth observation satellite.

Weighing 160 kgs, ‘Mission Drishti’ is India’s largest privately-built satellite and also the highest-resolution one developed in the country.

The launch will also mark the beginning of GalaxEye’s satellite constellation programme, comprising 8-12 satellites to be launched successively until 2029, aiming to achieve near real-time Earth observation for global applications.

“With Mission Drishti, we are unlocking a new era of actionable data through space exploration. For the first time in the world, we are deploying a satellite that combines multiple sensing technologies on a single platform, enabling us to observe the Earth in ways that were previously impossible,” said Suyash Singh, Co-founder and CEO, GalaxEye.

This mission places India firmly on the global space map and creates a system that turns space technology into intelligence that businesses, governments, and communities can rely on, he added.

Bengaluru-based GalaxEye has built the world's first multi-sensor Earth observation platform, carrying synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and high-resolution optical payloads on a single satellite. Enabling unprecedented earth observation data available through any weather, any time of the day.

The satellite will enable governments, defence agencies, and industries to perform advanced geospatial analysis across a wide range of applications, including border surveillance, disaster management, defence, utilities and infrastructure monitoring, agriculture as well as financial and insurance assessment - providing real-time environmental and structural insights.

The Drishti satellite has undergone comprehensive structural testing at ISRO’s UR Rao Satellite Centre (URSC), proving its capability to endure the harsh conditions of space, including extreme temperatures, vibrations, and vacuum.

Each satellite is engineered as a remote-sensing Earth observation system, optimised for spatial, spectral, and temporal resolutions to capture high-precision imagery.

The first satellite will offer a spatial resolution of 1.5 metres, meaning each pixel in its imagery represents a 1.5 x 1.5 metre section of Earth’s surface from 500 km above.

—IANS

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rohit P

Finally some good news! Private space sector in India is really taking off. This multi-sensor technology will be game-changing for agriculture monitoring and infrastructure projects across the country.

Sarah B

As someone working in environmental monitoring, this is revolutionary! All-weather, all-time observation capability will transform how we track climate change impacts in South Asia. Kudos to the GalaxEye team!

Arjun K

While this is impressive, I hope the data will be accessible and affordable for Indian researchers and startups, not just big corporations. The true success will be in how this technology benefits common people.

Vikram M

Testing at ISRO's URSC shows the strong collaboration between private and public sectors. This is exactly what India needs to become a global space power. Can't wait for the 2026 launch! 🌟

Michael C

The constellation of 8-12 satellites by 2029 is ambitious but achievable. This could put India ahead of many established space nations in Earth observation capabilities. Remarkable progress!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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