Pipavav Defence and Offshore Engineering plans to set up
its main system integration facility for manufacturing missiles and
torpedoes in Hyderabad.
The company, which was the
first private firm in India to get a licence to build warships, has
already firmed up strategic partnerships for missile and torpedo making
under the Ministry of Defence’s Make-and-Buy programme.
Naresh
Kumar, Senior Advisor, said the company is looking at tie-ups with
local firms in and around Hyderabad working in the sub-system design and
manufacture of missile and torpedo parts.
“The
vendor qualification will be undertaken jointly by Pipavav Defence and
our technology partner,” he said at a Vendor Development Programme for
MSE suppliers organised by the CII here.
Promoted by
Nikhil Gandhi and Bhavesh Gandhi, the firm has entered into a strategic
partnership with Saab in key technology areas, including combat
management systems and missiles. It is currently bidding for 43 ships
command management systems.
The private defence
shipyard is also tying up with German firm Atlas Elektronik, to provide
heavyweight torpedoes to the Indian Navy.
Atlas has
worked with the Indian Navy for the last two decades, providing SUT
torpedoes for the Navy’s Shishumar class of submarines. The company sees
significant opportunities in the proposal of the Defence Ministry’s to
acquire multiple helicopter platforms under the ‘Buy-and-Make Indian’
category.
This project envisages the first
initiative by the government to build helicopters in the private sector,
which will enable private firms manufacture, assemble and integrate
critical aviation components. “This will provide opportunities for local
companies to enter global supply chain,” Naresh Kumar said. Pipavav,
which has already invested over $1.2 billion in the Indian defence
industry, has orders worth $985 million from the Indian Navy, besides
$282 million and $742 million in the offshore and commercial segments.
Last year, it won its first overseas order to build two offshore patrol
vessels for a West African client valued at ₹1,192 crore.
The Hindu
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