"Earlier, we were doing 2-3 (launches) per year, then we increased it to 4-5, last few years we have been doing seven launches," space agency Chairman A S Kiran Kumar told PTI.
"Now, we are trying to go up to 8-9 PSLV per year, two GSLV-Mk II and one GSLV-Mk III. Total about 12 per year," he said.
ISRO is trying to increase its capacity to deliver by scaling up the frequency of launches by building more satellites, lowering the cost of access to space and also to do heavier satellite launches, the Chairman said.
Kiran Kumar said approval for a proposal to build a space station was yet to come.
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ISRO plans to undertake the Chandrayaan-2 mission in the first quarter of the next calendar year, he said.
"It (Chandrayaan-2) is a fully Indian affair. There is no Russian participation in that," Kiran Kumar said.
"All the developments required for that, all the variable thrust engines, lander, rover....All that work is going on and we are getting ready for this launch," he said.
On reusable launch vehicle, he said ISRO has identified its next steps in terms of air-breathing propulsion system.
"We are now trying to do an experiment where it will demonstrate that the thrust generated is more than the friction so that you have a net positive thrust.
"What we have (already) demonstrated is combustion happening with oxygen and hydrogen. The next step is the thrust whatever is generated should be more than the friction that's going to come up because of the surfaces involved," Kiran Kumar explained.