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Indian start-up GalaxEye to launch world’s first multi-sensor EO satellite in 2026

The 1.5-meter resolution satellite will help governments, defence agencies, and industries conduct advanced geospatial analysis for border surveillance, disaster management, infrastructure monitoring, agriculture, and financial assessments, offering real-time environmental and structural insights

Representational image. File picture

PTI
Published 13.10.25, 09:31 AM

Space-tech start-up GalaxEye on Monday said it will launch the world's first multi-sensor Earth observation (EO) satellite 'Mission Drishti' in the first quarter of next year, marking the beginning of setting up a constellation of satellites over the next four years.

The satellite, offering 1.5 meter resolution, 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.

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"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," Suyash Singh, co-founder & CEO, GalaxEye, said in a statement.

The company plans to launch 8-10 satellites over the next four years.

Weighing 160 kg, Mission Drishti is India's largest privately built satellite and also the highest-resolution satellite developed in the country.

"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," Singh said.

According to the company, the satellite, carrying synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and high-resolution optical payloads, will make available Earth observation data through any weather and at any time of the day.

The Drishti satellite has also undergone rigorous examination, such as structural testing in extreme temperatures, to prove its capability in harsh conditions of space, the company said.

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

"With the recent geopolitical events increasing, next generation imaging technologies with AI infusion, we look forward to providing unparalleled imagery intelligence," Singh said.

"We already have interest from defence and security agencies, utilities, agriculture, and financial companies and we are truly excited about the potential of this technology to transform decision-making and operational efficiency across industries," Singh said.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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