The Spacetech Guru

‘Space industry is an unforgiving industry, and allows no room for mistakes’

By Entrepreneur India Staff | Jun 05, 2019
Entrepreneur India

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

With Kawa Space, Kris Nair aspires to make Space of the people, by the people and for the people. When India’s first privately owned satellite created history on December 4, 2018, the country’s first private space-tech company hogged the limelight. But Kris Nair, 35, the man who led the mission, prefers his privacy.

He says, “Space industry is an unforgiving industry, and allows no room for mistakes.”

Kris is now helming Kawa Space, an angel investor-backed firm founded in 2018. It designs and operates advanced earth observation satellite constellations for enterprises operating in financial services, government, strategic risk management, agricultural, and critical asset management domain.

Kris says, “Accessing data from space is not for the select few anymore. Our solutions can be afforded by not just Fortune 500 companies, but Fortune 10,000 companies.”

Kawa’s team of eight is expected to double in size this year. It is creating a low earth orbit satellite constellation for a global infrastructure company. Kris attributes the boom in the space industry to a cut in costs by 1/10th over the last 20 years.

With Kawa Space, Kris Nair aspires to make Space of the people, by the people and for the people. When India’s first privately owned satellite created history on December 4, 2018, the country’s first private space-tech company hogged the limelight. But Kris Nair, 35, the man who led the mission, prefers his privacy.

He says, “Space industry is an unforgiving industry, and allows no room for mistakes.”

Kris is now helming Kawa Space, an angel investor-backed firm founded in 2018. It designs and operates advanced earth observation satellite constellations for enterprises operating in financial services, government, strategic risk management, agricultural, and critical asset management domain.

Kris says, “Accessing data from space is not for the select few anymore. Our solutions can be afforded by not just Fortune 500 companies, but Fortune 10,000 companies.”

Kawa’s team of eight is expected to double in size this year. It is creating a low earth orbit satellite constellation for a global infrastructure company. Kris attributes the boom in the space industry to a cut in costs by 1/10th over the last 20 years.

Related Content

Technology

What’s Unfolding For India’s Data Center Ambitions

Currently, with artificial intelligence (AI) workloads increasing, data centers require significantly higher power densities, GPU-heavy infrastructure, advanced cooling systems, and ultra-low latency connectivity. Indian players are gearing up to meet the new infrastructure demands