Artemis signup allows Isro and the fast-growing Indian aerospace sector to bid for Nasa tenders and the famously frugal Indian engineering sector could find opportunities there and pick up new skills

- Leapfrogging Capabilities: Collaboration provides ISRO with access to cutting-edge technologies in areas like advanced propulsion systems, robotics, deep space communication, and life support systems. This is crucial for ambitious future projects, including the Gaganyaan human spaceflight mission, lunar exploration, and interplanetary missions.
- Joint Missions and Data Sharing: The NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) mission is a prime example. Its high-resolution data will be invaluable for India in managing climate change, disaster response (floods, earthquakes), and resource mapping for agriculture and forestry. This pooling of resources avoids costly duplication of effort.
- Scientific Research: Joint research enhances our understanding of space weather, astrophysics, and planetary science, contributing to the global scientific knowledge base and elevating the profile of Indian scientists.
- Counterbalancing China: In an era of growing space militarisation and China’s ambitious space program, a robust Indo-US partnership acts as a strategic counterbalance in the Indo-Pacific and beyond. It strengthens the technology and security pillar of groupings like the Quad.
- Enhancing Soft Power: Successful joint missions enhance India’s global prestige and project its image as a responsible and advanced technological power. This reinforces India’s claim for a greater role in global governance institutions.
- Maritime Domain Awareness: Enhanced satellite capabilities bolster India’s capacity to monitor the Indian Ocean Region, contributing to its role as a net security provider and combating threats like piracy and illegal fishing.
- Boosting the Private Space Sector: The NASA-ISRO partnership lends immense credibility to India’s burgeoning private space industry. Indian startups like Skyroot and Agnikul can get integrated into global supply chains, attracting foreign investment and contracts.
- New Market Creation: The collaboration will spur innovation in downstream applications, creating markets for satellite data analytics in urban planning, insurance, and precision agriculture.
- Cost-Sharing and Sustainability: By sharing the financial and technical burden of mega-missions, both nations can pursue more ambitious goals sustainably, making space exploration more economically viable.
- Intellectual Property Rights (IPR): Harmonizing IPR regimes and ensuring fair access to co-developed technology is critical.
- Technology Transfer Regulations: US regulations like the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) can sometimes slow down the pace of collaboration.
- Dependency: India must ensure that the partnership complements, rather than replaces, its ethos of indigenous development and self-reliance (Aatmanirbharta).
