One spacecraft will be Indian Space Research Organisation's own Chandrayaan-2, while the other will be from India's first private moonshot Team Indus which is competing in the Google LunarXPrize challenge.
Contributors to Team Indus project will have names etched on an object going to space.
The success of the PSLV-C34 mission is a result of ISRO's professionalism and the hard work put in by their scientists over the last many decades., says Ajay Lele.
Some time before December 31, 2017, Bengaluru based Team Indus aims to land a vehicle on the moon.