New Delhi, April 2026.
Amid rising
geopolitical tensions and the increasing centrality of Space in modern warfare,
India’s top defence and space leadership today underscored the urgent need to
build resilient, sovereign, and integrated space capabilities at the Indian
Defence Space Symposium (IDS) 2026, organised by the Indian Space Association (ISpA).
The two-day forum kicked off today in New Delhi, anchored around strengthening
synergy between India’s defence and space ecosystems, bringing
togetherofficials from Ministry of Defence, Armed Forces, Defence Space Agency,
policymakers, PSUs, start-ups, and industry leaders.
The inaugural session
featured a virtual address by General Anil Chauhan, Chief of Defence Staff,
Indian Armed Forces, along with the presence of key defence officials
including Air Chief Marshal RKS Bhadauria (Retd), Former Chief of the Air
Staff; Dr. Samir V Kamat, Secretary, Department of Defence R&D and
Chairman, DRDO; Lt. Gen. Zubin A Minwalla, Deputy Chief of Integrated Defence
Staff (Operations), HQ IDS; Rahul Vatts, Chief Regulatory Officer, Bharti
Airtel & Vice Chairman, ISpA and Lt. Gen. A.K. Bhatt, Director General,
Indian Space Association, among other distinguished dignitaries.
In his virtual
address, General Anil Chauhan, Chief of Defence Staff, Indian Armed Forces
said, “We must target towards distributed, resilient, and proliferated
architectures with redundancy, inter-satellite links, and rapid replenishment
capability. Future space capability will not be built by government agencies
alone. It will be co-developed with industry, start-ups and technology innovators.
We must move from using space as a program to treating it as a continuous
operational asset. Our objective is not merely to access space, but to secure
operational advantage through space. We must pursue strategic partnerships
without compromising our strategic autonomy. We must build space architecture
that is resilient, artificial intelligence enabled, quantum secure, cyber
hardened, rapidly replenishable, and unquestionably sovereign to us. Anything
less will leave us in a reactive mode.”
The first day of the
symposium, themed “Commercial Space Operations: Navigating Threats and
Military Employment,” examined the evolving threat landscape, including
global conflicts and adversarial space capabilities, while exploring how
commercial space is shaping military outcomes. Also, discussions focused on the
role of space in modern conflicts, strategic communications and network-centric
operations, and space-based intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR)
in contested environments.
Additionally, three
publications were released at the symposium, including a report by OrbitAID and
the ISpA on In-Space Servicing, Assembly and Manufacturing (ISAM), highlighting
its role in enabling the future space economy and India’s opportunity to build
leadership in in-orbit services through stronger policy alignment and industry
collaboration. Another report by SatSure and ISpA on Geospatial Foundation
Models outlines how AI-driven, reusable intelligence layers can unlock
large-scale impact from Earth Observation data, enabling faster, scalable, and
decision-ready insights across sectors. A third report by Amity University
captures key discussions and strategic takeaways from the ISpA India
International Space Conclave 2025, outlining priorities across policy, industry
growth, technology development, and international collaboration in the space
sector.
Dr. Samir V Kamat,
Secretary, DD(R&D) and Chairman, DRDO said, “Space is no longer just an enabler. It is the
dominant domain which is going to decide the outcome of future battles. For
DRDO and the country to catch up, it is going to be a challenge, and this can
be done only if we work in a whole-of-nation approach. There are areas where
technologies can be sourced externally, but there are other areas where
sovereign capabilities are essential, and these are the areas where DRDO is
focusing. Today, we spend only 0.65% of our GDP on R&D and only 5% of our
defence budget on R&D. What we need is to invest much more in our R&D
efforts. We definitely need to scale this up if we have to catch up with our
rivals.”
Lt. Gen. Zubin A
Minwalla, Deputy Chief of Integrated Defence Staff, (Operations), HQ IDS said, “India must chart its own
path, based on speed, agility and intelligent integration of private industry.
Relying solely on one agency would be suboptimal. We must build an ecosystem
where all stakeholders complement each other. The Defence Space Agency has
articulated the joint military space doctrine and a long-term roadmap under
Defence Vision 2047. The Defence Space Agency has grown into a fully
operational tri-service entity and in the future will be a fully operational
space command. We continue to face dependencies in critical technologies and
gaps in high-end indigenous systems. The focus must remain on indigenous
development aligned with operational timelines.”
Air Chief Marshal
RKS Bhadauria (Retd), Former Chief of Air Staff said, “It is time to think big, act
big, and change the norms. We need to redraw the landscape if we are serious
about achieving meaningful outcomes. Three years down the line, we must ask
ourselves what have we achieved. The key lesson is technological sovereignty in
critical areas essential for military operations, and this can only be achieved
by designing and developing systems within the country. The challenge is not
technology, but how we are attempting to implement change using legacy
processes. We cannot continue to approach space capability development using
traditional methods. Time is no longer a luxury.”
Rahul Vatts, Chief
Regulatory Officer, Bharti Airtel & Vice Chairman, ISpAsaid, “The Indian DefSpace Symposium
has become an important forum for understanding defence requirements, industry
capabilities, and the convergence between the two. This is where satellite
communications become critical. India is now at the cusp of launching satellite
communication services. There are also important considerations around
reliability, security, and supply chains. As an Indian, I believe we should
develop our own satellite communication systems. Satellite communications can
play a critical role in enabling this, contributing not just to defence
capabilities but also to economic growth. The road ahead is significant, and we
are entering a phase where discussions and planning must translate into
execution.”
Lt. Gen. AK Bhatt,
Director General, Indian Space Association said, “The Defence Space Symposium has evolved into a
key platform for advancing India’s defence space discourse, bringing together
operational communities, policymakers, and industry. Achieving this synergy
requires deep integration between the armed forces and a capable and responsive
industrial base. India’s private sector today is a vital pillar of national
capability. However, we must reduce dependence on critical imports and build
indigenous capabilities aligned with operational requirements.”
Over the next two
days, IDS 2026 will host a series of high-level sessions, panel discussions,
and industry engagements, including the Industry Showcase, fireside
conversations, and dedicated forums for interaction between the armed forces
and private sector. The symposium will also feature participation from global
stakeholders, enabling dialogue on emerging trends and collaboration
opportunities, while continuing to serve as a key platform for aligning
operational requirements with industry capabilities.