Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: India’s first crewed space mission is being built the way astronauts come home — carefully, from the splashdown up. The Indian Space Research Organisation has cleared three key qualification tests on the Gaganyaan crew module, validating the systems that will keep an astronaut safe at the most dangerous moments of a flight. It is an unshowy but decisive step toward Gaganyaan, the programme meant to make India only the fourth nation to launch its own people into orbit.
The three tests target the descent. One qualified the Crew Module Uprighting System, the flotation unit that turns the capsule the right way up after it lands in the sea; a second validated the mechanism that cleanly separates the crew and service modules; a third checked that the structure can bear the loads when the cover protecting the parachutes is jettisoned. None makes a dramatic headline — and that is precisely the point of human-rating a spacecraft.
A human spaceflight programme is judged not by the launch but by the landing. India is qualifying the way home before it sends anyone up.
The sequence from here is deliberate. An uncrewed test flight, G1, will carry the half-humanoid robot Vyommitra to check life-support and safety systems before any human flies; only after such trials succeed will the first crewed mission lift off, currently planned for 2027. Around it sits a full 2026 slate — earth-observation and a quantum-technology demonstration among them — that shows a space agency widening its range, not chasing a single spectacular.
The constructive read is that India is building an entire human-spaceflight capability rather than a one-off flag-plant. Every qualification test forges skills in materials, avionics and recovery that will outlast the mission and seed India’s wider space economy — from launch services to satellites for farming, weather and disaster response. Refusing to rush safety is not a delay; it is the discipline on which a durable programme, and a generation of Indian engineers, will be built.













