×

India’s Skyroot becomes first $1 billion space-tech startup with GIC, Sherpalo, Blackrock backing

By Thomson Reuters May 7, 2026 | 2:24 AM

BENGALURU, May 7 (Reuters) – India’s Skyroot Aerospace has became the first space-sector company in the country to hit a $1 billion dollar valuation after securing $60 ​million in fresh funding from Singapore’s sovereign wealth ‌fund GIC and Silicon Valley-based Sherpalo Ventures.

Investment management company BlackRock also took part in the funding round, taking Skyroot’s total capital raised to $160 million, the company said in a statement on Thursday.

The ‌company ​launched India’s first privately developed rocket ⁠in 2022 and said ⁠it is now valued at $1.1 billion.

The valuation and financial backers involved send a “strong signal to global investors” about the credibility of India’s space sector, said retired Lieutenant ​General AK Bhatt, the director general of the Indian Space Association, an industry lobby group.

Skyroot is preparing ⁠the maiden launch of Vikram-1, ⁠the country’s first privately developed orbital rocket, ​after the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), the country’s national space ​agency, suffered consecutive orbital launch failures.

Founded in 2018, Hyderabad-based ‌Skyroot was the first space startup to sign an agreement to use ISRO launch-and-test facilities when the government opened the door to private companies in 2020.

CEO and ⁠co-founder of Skyroot Aerospace, Pawan Kumar Chandana, said the ability to launch rockets is critical given few countries or private companies ⁠have such ‌capabilities.

“This will promote more and more investments ⁠in India,” he said.

Sherpalo Ventures founder Ram ​Shriram, ‌known for his early backing of Google, ​will join ⁠the Skyroot’s board, the company also said.

Skyroot said the funding will allow it to increase the frequency of Vikram-1 launches, expand its manufacturing capacity, and advance development of Vikram-2.

(Reporting by Nivedita Bhattacharjee and Preetika Parashuraman in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Neil Fullick)