BENGALURU, India – Key government officials and industry leaders from the United States and India met in Bengaluru on Tuesday, Feb. 10, for the inaugural US-India Commercial Space Forum of 2026.

The high-level summit aims to operationalize the TRUST (Technology Release and Universal Space Transfer) Initiative established in mid-2025, which significantly lowered export control barriers for dual-use space technologies.
The forum included a delegation of 14 major U.S. space companies and representatives from the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and the U.S. Department of Commerce, focusing on deep-tech collaboration and the integration of India into the global space supply chain.
Context: The Legacy of the 2025 TRUST Initiative
The Bengaluru meeting serves as the first major implementation milestone since the signing of the 2025 bilateral trade agreement. Previously, Indian private space startups faced significant hurdles in procuring high-grade U.S. sensors and radiation-hardened components due to ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations) restrictions.
The TRUST initiative created a “Trusted Trader” fast-track system, which has already resulted in a 35% increase in component trade between the two nations over the last six months. This regulatory shift is a cornerstone of the iCET (initiative on Critical and Emerging Technology), designed to decouple critical technology chains from non-aligned actors.
Strategic Rationale: Supply Chain Resilience
For the U.S. Department of Commerce, the forum is a move toward “friend-shoring” the production of small satellite components and ground station hardware. India’s growing ecosystem of over 200 space-tech startups offers a cost-effective manufacturing base that complements U.S. design and systems integration capabilities.
Key areas of focus during the forum included:
- LEO Constellation Deployment: Streamlining the licensing process for U.S. operators to use Indian launch vehicles (such as the SSLV and LVM3).
- Space Situational Awareness (SSA): Joint data-sharing protocols to monitor debris and assets in the increasingly crowded Indian Ocean orbital corridor.
- Geospatial Standards: Aligning regulatory frameworks for high-resolution earth observation data.
Leadership Perspective
“The momentum we are seeing today is not just about government-to-government cooperation; it is about the commercial sector taking the lead,” said S. Somanath, Chairman of ISRO. “The TRUST initiative has opened doors that were closed for decades, allowing our private industries to co-develop solutions rather than just acting as vendors.“
Outlook: Implementation Timeline
The forum concluded with the announcement of a permanent Joint Space Technology Working Group, which will meet quarterly to resolve remaining tariff discrepancies. A key milestone to watch is the anticipated finalization of the Commercial Space Insurance Treaty by Q3 2026, which is expected to lower premiums for joint ventures operating out of Indian spaceports like Sriharikota.
