Indian engineering major, Larsen & Toubro (L&T), in
partnership with Korea’s Samsung Techwin (STW), has bagged a Rs 4,875 crore
($750 million) order for supplying the Indian Army with 100 self-propelled
(SP), tracked howitzers.
Business Standard has learnt the defence ministry has
written to L&T and STW informing them that their gun --- called the K-9
Vajra --- has cleared army trials conducted in 2013 and 2014. Simultaneously,
the ministry has written to the other vendor in contention, Russia’s arms
export agency, Rosoboronexport (RoE), rejecting the gun it offered, the 2S19
MSTA howitzer.
The K-9 Vajra consist of a 155 millimetre, 52-calibre howitzer,
mounted on a tracked vehicle. It is highly mobile and can keep up with tank
columns in the open desert. The Indian army wants this gun for its mechanized
strike corps, which launches rapid thrusts deep into enemy territory.
The strike corps’ T-90S tanks currently outpace their
artillery guns, which are towed by wheeled vehicles. This constrains the tank
spearheads to fight without artillery support at key moments in the advance. With
the K-9 Vajra mounted on a tracked vehicle that keeps up with tanks, the armour
spearheads would be assured of heavy fire support.
The contract falls under the “Buy Global” category of
procurement, which provides for over-the-counter sales of ready-built defence
equipment. Despite that, STW has partnered L&T to ensure that a full 50 per
cent of the weapon system is built in India.
L&T plans to build 13 major sub-systems of the K-9 Vajra
at its facilities in Pune, Talegaon and Powai. This includes the fire control
system, ammunition handling system, muzzle velocity radar, and the nuclear,
biological and chemical (NBC) system.
With the acquisition subject to 30 per cent offset
liability, the high percentage of domestic manufacture meets that requirement
easily.
The exact cost of the deal is still unknown, since the
commercial bid submitted by STW and L&T has not yet been opened. However,
STW-L&T are the only ones remaining of the four companies that originally
bid: Bharat Earth Movers Ltd (BEML), Tata Power, RoE and STW-L&T. The first
two didn’t make it to the trial stage, while RoE failed to meet the army’s
requirements during trials.
The army requires at least three K-9 Vajra regiments for
each of its three armoured divisions, and another regiment for each of the
independent armoured brigades in the three strike corps. The eventual
requirement, therefore, is of 12 regiments of tracked SP guns, i.e. 252 K-9
Vajra systems.
That suggests supplementary purchases of the K-9 Vajra would
take the order up from the initial Rs 5,000 crore for 100 guns, to at least Rs
12,500 crore. The vendors would continue reaping benefits from maintenance,
repair, overhaul and upgrade of the gun through its 30-40 year service
lifetime.
L&T has pursued its relationship with STW strategically,
ever since the two sides struck up a partnership in 2007. Noting that the
Samsung gun’s turret fired only a single type of high-explosive ammunition,
against India’s requirement of multiple warheads, L&T re-engineered and
indigenized the gun control system to conform to the Indian Army’s
requirements.
Besides the K-9 Vajra, the army is looking to buy several more
gun types to equip its 264 artillery regiments that have not bought new equipment
since 1986, when Bofors
controversially supplied India 410 FH-77 howitzers.
In the pipeline now are 114 howitzers from the Ordnance
Factory Board (OFB), with the order possibly rising to 414 guns if they perform
well. The Defence R&D Organisation (DRDO) is partnering Indian private
companies in the Advanced Towed Artillery Gun (ATAG) project to develop a new
155-millimetre, 52-calibre gun. A contract could be concluded soon with BAE
Systems for 145 ultralight howitzers for mountain formations. In November, the ministry sanctioned the
purchase of 814 mounted gun systems (MGS) for an estimated Rs 15,750 crore. Meanwhile
separate tenders are out for 180 wheeled (self-propelled) howitzers, and 1580 towed
guns.
The defence ministry and L&T declined to comment on this
subject.
- ajaishukla
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