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India getting ready to answer the ‘1-800-Future’ call

By Ranjith Anand

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Published: Thursday, November 13, 2008

Updated: Thursday, November 13, 2008

space

MCT

Chandrayaan-1, the first Indian spacecraft sent to the moon, began its voyage on Oct. 22 from Satish Dhawan Space Center in Andhra Pradesh, India, carrying 11 scientific instruments, including five of its own and six from various other space agencies. It also carried the aspiration of a billion people.

The aim of the mission is to map the surface of the moon in its entirety — a task that has not yet been attempted. Though this investment helped India join the ranks of previous lunar explorers (NASA, the European Space Agency, Japan and China), it is considered a rather expensive endeavor, costing almost $4 billion. In terms of social impact, however, it certainly promises to be a large leap forward.

Although applause for the mission was nearly unanimous, there has been a smattering of disapproving grunts that criticize India’s heavy investment in a non-utilitarian program. Opponents question how India, a Third World country, can afford to spend so much money on something as seemingly trivial as probing the surface of the moon. Given that 25 percent of its population lives under the national poverty line, could India have better spent the $4 billion on food aid?

On the surface, the argument seems to make sense. Imagine the following (with a melancholic, Bollywood-style violin note in the background): On one side stand 250 million hungry citizens waiting in line for the food that could save their lives, and on the other side, the button to the moon waits to be pushed. The humane thing to do in such a situation, no doubt, would be to immediately turn away from the launch station and hand over the $4 billion to feed the hungry. If one looks past the surface of this argument, however, the need for long-term strategies, such as investments in technology, becomes obvious.

Economic growth and human development are inseparable and intricately woven into the fabric of national development. The current generation of “software Indians” best exemplifies an instance where economic growth and human development have progressed hand in hand. When the IT boom arrived — thanks to the investments in science education that their ancestors had so wisely made — Indians were ready to hop on the bandwagon and enjoy its enormous economic benefits. Therefore, Indians, or anyone for that matter, will do well if they remember that the key to future prosperity is technology rather than capital. Space technology could do for India what industrial technology did for Britain; automobile, nuclear and pharmaceutical technology for the United States; chemical technology for Germany; wind technology for Denmark; food technology for the Netherlands; and banking technology for Switzerland. India must learn from its mistake of ignoring the ‘genome’ bandwagon. With its highly skilled and scientifically non-conservative workforce, Indian genetic engineers, similar to their software counterparts, could have been the heroes of what is now someone else’s success story.

The fact that the Indian space program has become a successful commercial enterprise should allay the concerns of critics who are wary of India investing in advanced and seemingly non-utilitarian technologies. The hope is that India’s space programs can easily be self-sustained if Antrix, the corporate face of the Indian Space Research Organization, can attract at least a fraction of the multi-billion-dollar space technology market. With only a few countries possessing the expertise on space technology and India being the cheapest resource, it would hardly be surprising to see India becoming a star player in the space market.

In my opinion, by deciding to invest in space programs, India has taken the right step in the direction of national development. As the saying goes, “Give a man a fish, and you have fed him for a day.Teach a man to fish, and you have fed him for a lifetime.” There is little doubt that the space boom will do for the new generation of Indian engineers, mathematicians and physicists what the software boom did for the current one. I believe that India has done itself immense good by embarking on this futuristic space program. After all, isn’t it high time that Indians dream beyond becoming the faceless voice answering a 1-800 call?

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Ranjith Anand is pursuing a Ph.D. in biology.

Comments

33 comments
starlee
Tue Nov 18 2008 09:45
please stick to doing research in biology as ur maths is , u know hopeless
Jayanta
Tue Nov 18 2008 09:44
As my eminent predecessors have already pointed out, it is time to outsource space activities to the low-cost, high-quality provider--ISRO. I will also venture to say that there is no space program on earth today that is as relevant to alleviating poverty as ISRO's and it is time the "rich" countries stopped crying about it.
Kasthuri
Tue Nov 18 2008 09:43
4 billion USD? Where did you get the number from?
AM
Tue Nov 18 2008 09:32
Ranjith,
Nice spin on the numbers. Do you do the same in your Phd experimental data? Do you even understand millions or billions? Or this junk was fed by some social 'science' type so that your scholarship could continue?
Sanjeev
Tue Nov 18 2008 09:04
Ranjith - Quick, change your school as you cannot do basic maths. Well, if you cannot, you can try google currency exchange..the number is $80 millions and not $4 billion.
AM
Tue Nov 18 2008 09:03
Ranjith - beyond the fact that the number is obviously wrong ($4 billion stated vs. $80 million to be accurate); one major element - ISRO's annual budget is less than Tuft University's!

Can you claim to have had as much social, economic, and scientific impact on the population as ISRO has?

Clue: To begin assessing the impact of ISRO, you may want to begin with looking back and accounting for all the communication satellites, distance education programs, remote sensing satellites for assisting natural resource management and assisting the farmer, ... and shall we go on? I would expect a Ph.D. student to do better research before writing articles. At the very least, question numbers that seem wildly inaccurate ($4 billion - geez!).

It is absolutely imperative that a correction be published in Tuf's Daily (presuming journalistic integrity exists)

Saff
Tue Nov 18 2008 08:45
4 Billion USD? Tried learning some basic math before you started writing this article? Atleast have you read the major reports on Chandrayaan 1 being the cheapest mission of it's kind ever costing an equivalent 80 Million USD?? Also note that 80 M USD includes 30 Million USD for the Deep Space Network article. Now please write an article totally contradicting your present one if you want to redeem yourself. Thanks.
Your name
Thu Nov 13 2008 16:36
Get your facts right - do not give false numbers.
Ranjith
Thu Nov 13 2008 16:03
Thank you very much for pointing out the mistake.
aman
Thu Nov 13 2008 14:53
Ranjith, a crore is 10^7 and it currently equates to $77 million.
Joe
Thu Nov 13 2008 13:57
Ranjith, INR 386 crores is about 80 million in dollars. You should know that, being an Indian. I'm not sure the kind of calculations used at Tufts University, I wish ISRO hade 4 billion in dollars --they would have had 400 moon-crafts to answer your 1-800-Future calls. The entire budget for ISRO this year is 665 million in American dollars.
Ranjith
Thu Nov 13 2008 11:35
According to ISRO the mission cost them approximately INR 386 crores, which roughly translates to 4 billion US dollars.
Rocketman
Thu Nov 13 2008 08:04
I don't know where the $4B figure came from.. the mission cost was $80 million. A significantly smaller number. Keep in mind that they reused an existing rocket, and did not design anything new.