The government has issued 73 industrial licences to the defence sector since June 2014, against 50 such licences granted between 2011 and May 2014.
These include 16 proposals with a proposed investment of Rs.613
crore, cleared at a licensing committee meeting chaired by the
secretary of the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) on
10 June.
DIPP is a department under the ministry of commerce and industry.
According to a DIPP statement on Friday, the proposals
cleared at the meeting include applications from Pipavav Defence and
Offshore Engineering Co. Ltd, Tata Group, Samtel Thales Avionics Ltd,
Solar Industries India Ltd, Titagarh Wagons Ltd and Premier Explosives
Ltd.
The statement said many of these proposals were pending
with the government for several years and were for the manufacture of
helicopters, aircraft, radars, bulletproof jackets, bulletproof helmets
and ammunition.
The other licences cleared by the government are for
manufacturing tanks, rockets, missiles, mortar shells, grenades,
warships, radar, electronic warfare systems, night-vision devices,
howitzers, armoured vehicles, armoured personnel carriers and unmanned
aerial vehicles, among other defence equipment.
Recently, the government increased the initial validity
of a licence for the defence sector to seven years from three years,
further extendable up to three years, in view of the long gestation
period of defence contracts.
“In addition to this, the government has taken a series
of measures to improve the ease of doing business in India. The
government now expects that these measures will give a boost to private
participation in the vast opportunities available for defence
manufacturing in India,” DIPP said.
In a May report, legal consultancy Khaitan and Co. said
the government is attempting to simplify the industrial licence process
and its policy initiatives are being followed by swifter decision
making, as evidenced by the grant of industrial approvals by DIPP to
proposals for defence production by Reliance Aerospace Technologies Ltd,
Bharat Forge Ltd, Mahindra Telephonic Integrated Systems Ltd, Punj
Lloyd Ltd, Mahindra Aero Structure Ltd and Tata Advanced Materials Ltd.
The Khaitan report said physical registrations are no
longer mandatory and applications for an industrial licence can now be
made on the government of India’s e-Biz portal
“A number of leading industrial houses have nascent but
growing defence industry divisions. These companies need to invest now
in order to build capabilities that stretch their technical,
operational, research as well as partnering capabilities so that they
are considered world-class producers as industry matures,” a December
report by industry lobby Assocham and audit firm PricewaterhouseCoopers
said.
livemint
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.