Project NETRA


Project NETRA is an indigenous space-situational-awareness initiative of ISRO. Announced publicly in September 2019, the programme gives India an independent capability to monitor, catalogue and predict orbital debris and near-Earth objects that could endanger Indian satellites.

Background

Orbital congestion has intensified with mega-constellations and anti-satellite tests, raising collision risk for India’s fleet of more than 50 operational satellites. Until NETRA, ISRO relied largely on publicly available data from the United States Space Command. A 2021 internal report noted that ISRO carried out 19 collision-avoidance manoeuvres that year, up from three in 2015.

Development timeline

  • 2015 – Multi-Object Tracking Radar commissioned at Sriharikota as a precursor SSA asset.
  • 2019 – Project NETRA formally sanctioned with an initial outlay of ₹400 crore.
  • 2020 – The dedicated SSA Control Centre “NETRA” at ISTRAC, Bengaluru, inaugurated by then ISRO chairman Dr K. Sivan alongside multiple industry dignitaries.
  • 2024 – ISRO released its first Indian Space Situational Assessment Report compiled using NETRA data.
  • 2025 – ISRO chairman Dr V. Narayanan inspected the Chandrapur radar site; construction of India’s first dedicated debris-tracking phased-array radar began.

    Architecture and capabilities

Project NETRA integrates:
Sensors can detect debris as small as 10 cm in low Earth orbit and larger objects in geosynchronous orbit.

Strategic significance

NETRA strengthens India’s technological self-reliance while enhancing national security. An indigenous catalogue reduces reaction time for collision-avoidance and supports planned debris-removal missions and human-spaceflight programmes.

International context

India shares SSA data with global partners and participates in the Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee. Analysts view NETRA as elevating India to peer status with the United States, Europe and Japan in cooperative SSA.

Future plans

ISRO intends to:
  • Deploy additional radars for nationwide all-weather coverage.
  • Integrate NETRA with the Debris-Free Space Missions initiative targeting zero-debris launches by 2030.
  • Explore active debris-removal technologies with domestic start-ups.