MDL To Get More Orders; India Plans To Have Just 2 Submarine-Builders
India will soon have a domestic private shipyard building advanced submarines for its Navy. The public sector Mazagon Docks Limited (MDL), building six Scorpene submarines with French firm DCNS' help already, is likely to get more orders for building advanced submarines too.
This was indicated by Defense
Minister Manohar Parrikar after he commissioned INS Kochi, a MDL-built
indigenous guided missile stealth destroyer, into the Indian Navy on
Sep.30, 2015.
Parrikar was responding to
queries from reporters on board India's latest stealth Destroyer. This
is an important bit of news for the Indian warship building sector and
the world submarine-builders.
The new plan for submarine
building is a shift in the Navy's plans effected by the Narendra Modi
government and a significant boost to the private sector shipyards.
Parrikar indicated that the
government plans to hand over the responsibility of building six new
conventional submarines for the Navy to an Indian private sector
shipyard.
Interestingly, a panel set up by
the Defense Ministry in October 2014 to identify Indian shipyards from
among five public sector and three private sector shipyards, which can
boast of the capability to build Project 75I submarines, has submitted
its report in March this year recommending a few names. But a final call
on the report's recommendations is yet to be taken.
As part of the new plan, India
would like to continue honing the submarine building skills at the MDL
by giving it orders for additional conventional submarines -- possibly
three more -- by providing the vessels more technological edge such as
Air Independent Propulsion, Land Attack and Advanced Stealth, features
that are contemporary and the best in the world.
Though the Indian Navy had in
April this year declared that there would be no follow-on orders for
Scorpenes, the question now arises if it is possible for MDL to shake
off the Scorpenes technology when it builds three more submarines.
"If I don't add up to the
production capacity of MDL by more orders, whatever capability Mazagon
has developed will be destroyed and forgotten," Parrikar said on board
INS Kochi, reminding the nation of the experience of losing the talent
gained in building the German HDW submarines in the mid 1980s, after the
deal got tainted by graft allegations.
"We had initiated contract of
German HDW submarines in 1984. Two submarines we got from Germany, two
were assembled in Mazagon Docks. Mazagon got some experience here. Two
more were supposed to be built here. But, because of the scandal, the
issue could not be pursued and we stopped at two submarines," he said.
"Here, we not only lost two
submarines to be built, but the main important aspect is that all the
technical expertise, including specialized welding which is required for
submarine hulls -- it is not very easy to develop them -- we lost that
technology. I dont want Mazagon Docks to lose these technology of
submarines. So we are working out a mechanism by which Mazagon can have
continuity."
The Scorpenes under Projet 75 and
the six more under Project 75I apart, the government has already
decided to have six new nuclear-powered submarines -- SSNs to be precise
-- to be built in India through foreign help. This decision had come in
February this year at the Cabinet Committee on Security headed by Prime
Minister Narendra Modi. The SSNs may continue to be built at the
Visakhapatnam-based submarine building center.
The six Scorpenes, the six
Project 75I vessels, and the six SSNs -- all form part of the Indian
Navy's 30-year submarine building plan approved in the year 2000. The
plan then was to have 24 conventional submarines built in India.
Scorpenes were to be the first lot of six vessels, followed by 18 more
to be built by 2030. But Scorpenes are already delayed by four years,
even as the first of the six, Kalavari, is scheduled for induction in
2016.
Even if three more conventional
submarines are ordered with MDL, after it completes the Scorpenes
project, the total number of locally built submarines would still be
short by three, compared to the 30-year plan's 24 submarines project as
the requirement.
"We can't have infinite number of
submarines. Same way, in the private sector, we have decided to get six
submarines, and we will select the strategic partner (for building
these vessels), so that one private sector and Mazagon Docks specialize
in submarine production. You can't have ten people doing it, like
manufacturing of cars," Parrikar said.
This plan effectively eliminates
the possibility of Project 75I for six submarines going to multiple
shipyards. This also gives the indication that the Project 75I may go to
one of the private years - Pipavav or Larsen & Toubro. The final
decision is expected soon.
The Indian Navy currently operates nine Russian-origin Kilo class submarines and four German-origin HDW submarines in its fleet.
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