ISRO Tightens Resignation Rules Amid Scientist Exodus Threatening Key Space Missions

July 16, 2026
ISRO Tightens Resignation Rules Amid Scientist Exodus Threatening Key Space Missions
  • ISRO has tightened rules on routine resignations and voluntary retirement requests from scientists working on its critical missions, including Gaganyaan and Chandrayaan-3, in response to a wave of departures.

  • Notable exits include senior leaders such as the LVM-3 project director at VSSC and a SpaDeX project director at URSC, among others tied to Chandrayaan-3.

  • A new memo bars personnel from resigning until their ongoing projects are completed, reversing a 2020 policy that allowed center directors to approve exits up to the Scientist/Engineer-SG level.

  • The policy shift aims to balance retention with continuity of critical programmes amid ongoing challenges at ISRO, including a slowdown in launches after PSLV mission failures.

  • The 2025-26 annual report shows continued recruitment for about 1,050 vacancies and cadre changes that permanently filled 466 project posts while adding around 460 senior positions, indicating ongoing staffing adjustments.

  • The move is set against broader privatization and private-sector engagement as India seeks to maintain momentum on flagship space initiatives despite resignations and technical hurdles.

  • The directive is intended to safeguard leadership continuity and minimize disruption to missions such as Gaganyaan by ensuring stable succession on key programs.

  • Departures represent a small share of ISRO’s 14,600+ workforce but come from strategically vital centers and have been an ongoing issue across years, predating growth of the private space sector.

  • The rising private space sector in India is attracting experienced ISRO personnel with higher salaries and different career opportunities, potentially affecting institutional knowledge and project continuity.

  • The move reflects concerns that rising exits could disrupt high-priority missions, prompting the government to tighten governance around personnel changes.

  • ISRO Chairman V. Narayanan acknowledged resignations as normal and said the organization can manage by reassigning responsibilities to keep projects on track.

  • To counter talent drain, the government approved a cadre review and began recruiting to fill about 1,050 vacancies across ISRO.

Summary based on 6 sources


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