India currently has 49 satellites serving various applications in Earth's orbit and four more are ready for launch this year, said Dr P Kunhikrishnan, Director of ISRO's Bengaluru-based UR Rao Satellite Centre, the lead facility which is responsible for building India's satellites and associated technologies.

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According to the official, GISAT-1, Microsat 2-A, GSAT-12R and RISAT-2BR2 are ready for shipment, which means they are ready to be sent to the spaceport in Sriharikota for launch.

In the year 2019-20, ISRO built 12 satellites, of which eight have been launched and four are ready for launch. It is notable that ISRO hasn't had any launches this year, owing to the pandemic and related challenges.

The maiden launch that was scheduled for early March had to be postponed owing to some technical reasons. Besides launching India's own satellites, the Indian space agency has also placed 319 satellites from 33 countries in orbit, thus far.

Dr Kunhikrishnan also provided the split-up of the 49 Indian satellites that were in Earth's orbit - 19 in Geostationary orbit(communication and broadcast), 20 were serving the purpose of Earth observation, 8 Navic satellites were for navigation and 2 were for meteorological use.

Besides the 49, there are also 3 satellites/spacecraft that are on science missions to aid in scientific discovery, they are - AstroSat, Chandrayaan-2 (orbiter) and Mangalyaan (Mars Orbiter Mission).

For context, America, China, and Russia have hundreds of satellites (including those belonging to private companies) in various orbits.

Recent figures indicate that America has over 1300 satellites in Earth's orbit whereas China and Russia have 363 and 169 respectively. In total, there are over 2600 satellites in orbit.

The Senior ISRO official was speaking at the International Space Conference and Exhibition 'Ushering the new era in Indian Space Sector' organised by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) in association with Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), Antrix Corporation Limited and supported by NewSpace India Limited (NSIL).

Speaking of the complexities in building satellites and rockets, he said that while rockets had to perform their job for a maximum of 30 minutes, satellites had to survive and function in harsh space environment for about 15 years.

"Each satellite is unique and has its own functions, so there is no repeat in the manner in which they are produced. Launch vehicle(rocket) works in a go or no-go fashion, but in terms of satellites, careful design, component selection, design, reliability need to be factored in considering their long life," he said.

In terms of the functioning of ISRO's satellite division, he said that about 60% of the budget of every spacecraft (satellite) goes to the Indian industry, which can handle certain aspects of its manufacturing, testing and qualification process.

On the way ahead, given the current reforms, he believes that ISRO would provide more know-how and infrastructure to private industry, start-ups, and academia while shifting focus to R&D.