India’s CSIR–National Physical Laboratory (NPL) marked its 80th Foundation Day by launching two major scientific facilities – the world’s second National Environmental Standard Laboratory and the world’s fifth National Primary Standard Facility for Solar Cell Calibration. The developments strengthen India’s role in environmental governance, metrology, and solar technology standards.
New Environmental Standard Facility
The National Environmental Standard Laboratory is designed to improve calibration and certification of air pollution monitoring systems in India. It will provide reliable, traceable, and India-specific testing under local climatic conditions. This is expected to support regulators, industries, and startups, and improve enforcement under programmes such as the National Clean Air Programme.
Solar Cell Calibration Capability
The National Primary Standard Facility for Solar Cell Calibration places India among a small group of global leaders in photovoltaic measurement standards. Developed with PTB, Germany, the laser-based Differential Spectral Responsivity system has achieved a global-low uncertainty of 0.35% for reference solar cell calibration. The facility will reduce dependence on foreign certification agencies, cut turnaround time, save foreign exchange, and boost investor confidence in the solar sector.
CSIR-NPL’s Scientific Legacy
CSIR-NPL is one of India’s oldest scientific institutions and predates Independence. It has played a major role in national timekeeping through its atomic clocks and in establishing Indian Standard Time. The laboratory is seen as a bridge between India’s scientific past and its technological future.
Quality Standards and Future Use
On the occasion, 14 Phytochemical Bharatiya Nirdeshak Dravya, two Gas BNDs, and one Silica Fume BND were released to strengthen quality assurance and metrological traceability. Several MoUs and technology transfer agreements were also concluded to support indigenous manufacturing, startups, and MSMEs. The event underlined the growing strategic role of scientific institutions in India’s development goals.
Last Modified: April 25, 2026