Bengaluru: ISRO's commercial arm NewSpace India Limited (NSIL) on Friday said it is looking at investing approximately Rs 10,000 crore over the next five years and a manpower requirement of 300 people as it plans to scale up operations.
NSIL, incorporated as a wholly government owned Central Public Sector Enterprise (CPSE) with a paid up capital of Rs 10 crore on March 6, 2019, would raise Rs 2,000 crore a year through a mix of equity and debt, its Chairman and Managing Director G Narayanan told reporters here.
The company, under the Department of Space (Dos), launched its first dedicated commercial mission on February 28, orbiting Brazilian satellite Amazonia-1 from Sriharikota spaceport of the city-headquartered Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO).
"We expect an investment of approximately Rs 2,000 crore per year starting next year or year after, that is the kind investment we are seeking to do, and our resources, manpower we are targeting a requirement of approximately 300 people in about 5 years from now," Narayanan said in response to a question.
Noting that the NSIL has an authorised capital of Rs 100 crore, he said the 2021-22 union budget has allocated Rs 700 crore for the company.
"..how it will be taken into the company is being worked out...it may happen by next financial year," the official added.
NSIL Director Technical and Strategy Radhakrishanan D said the company clocked a revenue of over Rs 300 crore in its first year of operation and it was expected to be around Rs 400 crore in 2020-21.
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"This basically means in the years to come our target is to see how best we keep increasing....but I must admit that we are in a very nascent stage of operation today...," he said.
Narayanan said NSIL's initial mandate was to take over the production and operation of ISRO's launch vehicles from ISRO and it was allowed to productionise and market other space based services as well. The company started its activities and made good progress in its first year of operations.
Taking note of all relevant aspects and the growth in the space sector both nationally and globally, the Centre as part of the space sector reforms process had during June 2020 enhanced the mandate of NSIL, he said.
As part of the reforms, NSIL has been mandated to own and operate capital-intensive space assets such as satellites and launch vehicles and to provide end-to-end services on a commercial basis, he said.