– Launch: Scheduled on July 3 at 3:32 p.m. EDT via Soyuz rocket from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan. Coverage starts at 3:10 p.m. on NASA+.
– Docking: Expected on July 5 at 5:27 p.m., wiht coverage starting at 4:45 p.m. on NASA+.- Prior Undocking: Progress 90 spacecraft will undock from ISS’s Poisk module on july 1; no NASA live stream for this activity is planned.
India has increasingly engaged with international space exploration efforts thru collaboration and independant achievements such as Chandrayaan missions or Gaganyaan initiatives. While this update pertains to U.S.-Russia cooperation aboard a global platform like the ISS, it underscores India’s need to expand presence in similar international programs that drive scientific research beyond Earth.
The sustained human operations aboard the ISS symbolize technological ambition toward self-sufficiency in long-duration space activities-a critical benchmark as India aims for crewed missions under ISRO’s advancement roadmap. Additionally, advancements facilitated by partnerships or autonomous systems used hear contribute indirectly toward economic opportunities within sectors such as satellite technologies or reusable rockets-a potential growth area for India’s aerospace industry.
Such developments remind Indian stakeholders of evolving global challenges concerning collaboration amidst geopolitical complexities while urging continued focus on competitive innovation without losing sight of multilateral benefits.