New Agreement Between ISRO and ESA for
Earth Observation Missions
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and the
European Space Agency (ESA) have signed a significant agreement aimed at
strengthening Earth Observation missions. The agreement is titled
"ESA-ISRO Arrangement for Joint Calibration, Verification Activities and
Scientific Studies for Earth Observation Missions."This agreement aims to
enhance cooperation between the two space agencies, further improving
Earth-related scientific research and the quality of satellite data. This
partnership will involve joint calibration and validation activities, ensuring
the accuracy and reliability of data obtained by satellites.
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The agreement aims to
strengthen cooperation in joint calibration, validation activities, and
scientific studies for Earth observation missions.
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The collaboration will
support future Earth observation missions, including ESA’s Fluorescence
Explorer (FLEX) mission, which seeks to improve understanding of vegetation
biology and photosynthesis processes.
¨ Both agencies highlighted
cooperation in areas such as Earth observation, satellite navigation, ground
station support, and human spaceflight.
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ESA has earlier supported
Indian missions such as Chandrayaan and Aditya‑L1, while ISRO has provided deep
space antenna support and ground station services.
¨ The new arrangement will
facilitate joint calibration and validation campaigns and scientific research
for upcoming satellite missions, strengthening India–Europe space cooperation.
Earth Observation Missions
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Earth Observation (EO)
missions involve the use of satellites equipped with active or passive sensors
to collect data about the Earth’s surface and environment.
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These sensors monitor a
wide range of targets, from oceans and mountains to the atmosphere,
magnetosphere, and even deeper Earth systems, enabling scientists to study
environmental processes and planetary dynamics.
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Many EO satellites,
especially CubeSats, use passive sensors that detect natural radiation from the
Sun or Earth and analyse spectral changes as the radiation interacts with the
atmosphere and surface.
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Due to their small size
and limited power generation, CubeSats often rely on such passive sensing
technologies, but their low cost and ease of mass production allow them to
operate in constellations, significantly improving the spatial and temporal
coverage of Earth data.
¨ EO missions support
applications such as climate monitoring, disaster management, environmental
protection, and atmospheric research, demonstrating how compact satellite
platforms can effectively contribute to global Earth system observation.
ISRO–ESA Cooperation in Earth Observation
(EO)
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Cooperation between the
ISRO and the ESA in Earth Observation dates back to 1978, making it one of the
longest-running international space collaborations focused on environmental
monitoring and scientific research.
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The cooperation framework
established in 1978 was significantly renewed in 2002, expanding collaboration
from basic satellite data exchange to deeper technical, operational, and
scientific cooperation in Earth observation missions.
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In 2018, ISRO and ESA
signed a Technical Operating Arrangement enabling the full, free, and open
exchange of satellite data between Europe’s Sentinel satellites and India’s EO
missions such as Oceansat-2, Megha-Tropiques, and Scatsat-1, supporting global
environmental monitoring, climate research, and disaster management.
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Data from Indo-French
missions such as Megha-Tropiques and SARAL are widely used within the broader
European Earth observation ecosystem, contributing to global climate models,
ocean monitoring, and atmospheric studies.
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A major focus of the new
arrangement is ESA’s Fluorescence Explorer (FLEX) mission, which studies
vegetation health and plant photosynthesis, with ISRO contributing expertise in
terrestrial and agricultural observationto validate the mission’s findings.
¨ ESA’s global ESTRACK tracking network provides ground station support for several Indian missions. At the same time, ISRO has supported European missions, including Proba-3 (2024), reflecting a high level of operational trust and technical cooperation between the agencies.
¨ Key collaborative platforms include Copernicus data exchange for environmental monitoring, FLEX for vegetation studies, Sentinel–Oceansat cross-platform ocean observation, and TRISHNA for high-resolution thermal infrared imaging, strengthening joint capabilities in climate science and Earth system observation.