Published on: August 22, 2025
WHY INDIA NEEDS A NATIONAL SPACE LAW
WHY INDIA NEEDS A NATIONAL SPACE LAW
The Context
- India celebrates its National Space Day on August 23 marking Chandrayaan-3’s success.
- Upcoming missions — Gaganyaan, Chandrayaan-4, Bharat Antariksh Station — highlight India’s rapid space advancements.
- However, the legal framework lags behind technological progress.
Global Legal Framework
- Outer Space Treaty (1967): Space belongs to all mankind, prohibits national appropriation, and makes states responsible for activities by government and private entities.
- Not self-executing: Countries must enact domestic space laws to operationalise treaty principles.
- Many nations (U.S., Luxembourg, Japan) already have legislation enabling licensing, liability coverage, and commercial rights.
India’s Current Approach
- India has ratified UN treaties but lacks a comprehensive national space law.
- Progress so far:
- Indian Space Policy, 2023 – defines private sector roles.
- IN-SPACe Norms, Guidelines and Procedures (NPG) – regulate authorisation of activities.
- Catalogue of Standards – ensures safety in operations.
- Missing: An overarching “Space Activities Law” to integrate treaty obligations into domestic law.
Industry Concerns
- IN-SPACe lacks statutory authority, creating regulatory uncertainty.
- Startups face delays due to multiple ministry approvals.
- Absence of clear FDI rules, liability coverage, and IP protection discourages investors.
- Affordable insurance frameworks are vital to cover risks of high-value assets.
Why a National Space Law is Essential
- Provides legal clarity, predictability, and accountability.
- Ensures compliance with international obligations.
- Strengthens private sector participation with licensing and liability frameworks.
- Protects innovation, prevents talent/technology migration.
- Enhances investor confidence and fosters sustainable space growth.
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