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India’s Skyroot Aerospace readies country’s first private orbital rocket launch

By Thomson Reuters Jul 2, 2026 | 4:01 AM

July 2 (Reuters) – Indian space startup Skyroot Aerospace said on Thursday it was preparing for the launch of its Vikram-1 ​rocket, the first attempt by an ‌Indian private company to place a satellite in orbit.

Founded by former Indian Space Research Organisation engineers, Skyroot is developing small rockets similar to those built ‌by ​Rocket Lab and Firefly ⁠Aerospace.

The Vikram-1, a seven-stories-tall, ⁠multi-stage launch vehicle, is designed to carry payloads of up to 350 kilograms into the low Earth orbit.

Skyroot, which became India’s ​first space startup to reach a $1 billion valuation after raising $60 million from GIC ⁠and Sherpalo Ventures in May, ⁠has set a July 12 – ​August 4 launch window for the maiden flight ​from the country’s main spaceport, the Satish ‌Dhawan Space Centre.

The test flight, carrying a mix of domestic and international customers, aims primarily to collect in-flight performance data across propulsion, ⁠guidance and stage separation systems, the company said.

The launch comes as India opens its state-dominated space ⁠sector to ‌private companies, seeking a bigger share ⁠of the global market for ​satellite ‌launches and related services.

Industrial groups such ​as Larsen & ⁠Toubro and Hindustan Aeronautics Limited are also moving into rocket manufacturing as the government pushes to build a $44 billion space economy by 2033.

(Reporting by Abhinav Parmar in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Nivedita Bhattacharjee)