India's interplanetary missions crucial for nation and world: Astronaut Prashanth Nair 
National

India's interplanetary missions crucial for nation and world: Astronaut Prashanth Nair

Indian Air Force Group Captain Prashanth Balakrishnan Nair, who is part of India's Gaganyaan mission, on Friday said the country's inter-planetary missions have a crucial role, not just for the country but for the entire world.

Thiruvananthapuram | Indian Air Force Group Captain Prashanth Balakrishnan Nair, who is part of India's Gaganyaan mission, on Friday said the country's inter-planetary missions have a crucial role, not just for the country but for the entire world.

Nair was speaking at the Huddle Global 2025 startup festival organised at Kovalam here by the Kerala Startup Mission (KSUM).

He, according to a KSUM release, said that the rest of the world will look up to India to represent them when space powers rewrite the rules for outer space.

Nair was speaking on the subject of 'Astronaut Mindset Towards Nation Building', the release said.

Addressing the audience, he pointed out that Indians already contribute about 30 per cent of the work in the sector, as most leading space research centres like NASA employ hundreds of Indian-origin professionals.

"India has to ensure that we develop our own entity in space instead of doing the work for others. Upcoming projects like Gaganyaan and Chandrayaan missions will prove India's capabilities to the rest of the world," he is quoted as having said in the release.

Nair also pointed out that there are many areas in space missions themselves that Indian enterprises and startups can contribute to, it said.

He urged the audience to look for human-centric development even in space, the release said.

"Even now, all manned space missions rely on toilet systems developed by Russians, and they have a monopoly. NASA experts have spent a lot of time trying to find a replacement but still have not been able to come up with a proper alternative," he said according to the release.

He suggested that such technological developments that address problems faced by humans, even in space, should be the hallmark of Indian startups, it said.

Nair also advised all startup founders to acquire multi-disciplinary skills, so that they can understand what each team member is trying to do.

He also applauded the successes of Indian space scientists, pointing out that in developed countries it is a coalition of well-resourced private sector and government that has worked together to find breakthroughs, while India has done it with limited financial clout and by relying on the excellence of our space experts, the release said.

"Startups and enterprises have a key role to play in helping India become a global space power," he is quoted as having said in the release.

Sabarimala gold loss: Tantri arrested for his 'silent nod' for replating of temple artefacts outside

13 killed, around 30 injured as private bus falls into 500 feet deep gorge in Himachal's Sirmaur

India-US trade deal didn't happen because Modi did not call Trump: Lutnick

Budget session of Parliament begins on Jan 28; to continue till Apr 2

US State Dept highlights 'mission-defining challenge' during Jaishankar's New York visit in Nov last year