On Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar’s
first official visit to the United States from December 7-10, Washington has
signalled its willingness to co-develop with India an aircraft engine for
India’s indigenous fifth-generation fighter that is called the Advanced Medium
Combat Aircraft (AMCA).
India’s Defence R&D Organisation (DRDO)
believes it essential to work with US company, General Electric Aviation (GE),
in up-rating its F-414S6 engine into the so-called F-414 Enhanced Engine, which
would power the futuristic AMCA.
As Business Standard earlier reported (June
1, “Carter to face Indian demand for
engine technology”) GE has been eager to partner the DRDO in this lucrative
project. But the US government had earlier stood in the way, reluctant to transfer
to India strategic technologies, such as the high-melting-point alloys needed
to build the gas turbine.
During Parrikar’s visit, Washington signalled
that it has changed its mind.
“Secretary [of Defense Ashton] Carter
informed Minister Parrikar that in light of the strengthening relationship
between the United States and India, the [US Department of Defense] has updated
its policy on gas turbine engine technology transfer to India. As a result of
this policy update, the Secretary is confident that the United States will be
able to expand cooperation in production and design of jet engine components”,
says the joint statement issued on Friday by the Indian Embassy in Washington.
That opens the doors for GE and DRDO to
work together in uprating the F-414S6 engine, which India has already selected
for the indigenous Tejas Mark II. This will enhance the current engine’s peak
power of 90 KiloNewtons (KN), delivering 110 KN of thrust. The AMCA’s twin F-414
Enhanced Engine will thus deliver an awesome 220 KM of peak power.
The green signal for co-developing this
engine appears to have been given, with the joint statement saying: “Secretary
Carter and Minister Parrikar look forward to U.S. companies working with their
Indian counterparts to submit transfer requests that will benefit from this
updated policy.”
For GE, this could be a commercial windfall,
providing it an assured market for all India’s indigenous fighters. This would
include 100 F-404 engines for the Tejas Mark I, another 100 F-414 engines for
the Tejas Mark II; and 400 F-414 Enhanced Engines for a planned 200 AMCAs.
Since an aero engine’s life is about 1,500
hours, each fighter --- with a service life of 5,000-6,000 hours --- consumes
3.5 engines. That means GE could be supplying 700 engines for the Tejas Marks I
and II, and 1,400 engines for the AMCA over their service lives.
This is a sizeable share of the Indian aero
engine market, which the DRDO estimates to be worth Rs 3,50,000 crore over
coming decades.
Given this massive requirement, India put
jet engine technology, along with aircraft carrier design, at the core of its
high-technology expectations from Washington.
The joint statement issued on January 22,
after President Barack Obama met Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Delhi, agreed
to “form a working group to explore aircraft carrier technology sharing and
design, and explore possible cooperation on development of jet engine
technology.”
During his visit, Parrikar’s counterpart,
Ashton Carter, accompanied him on a visit to the aircraft carrier, USS Dwight D
Eisenhower. Parrikar is the first Indian defence minister to visit an American
carrier.
With India’s first indigenous aircraft
carrier, INS Vikrant, likely to be commissioned in 2018, the navy is focused on
designing a second, larger, indigenous carrier that could include advanced American
knowhow and technologies.
Business Standard understands the navy is
opting for indigenous nuclear reactors to power the second carrier. However,
the admirals are keen to incorporate an American-designed catapult launch
system.
A catapult allows a carrier to launch
larger aircraft, more quickly, than the ski-jump that equips contemporary
Indian carriers. This would allow Indian aircraft carrier battle groups to
launch not just heavier fighters, but airborne early warning (AEW) aircraft,
fitting with radars, that monitor and control the aerial battle space.
“Minister Parrikar and Secretary Carter
commended positive discussions at the Joint Working Group on Aircraft Carrier
Technology Cooperation (JWGACTC), especially in the area of Aircraft Launch and
Recovery Equipment (ALRE), and look forward to continued progress to be
achieved at the second meeting of the JWGACTC in February 2016 in India”, said
the joint statement.
Ashton Carter, during his visit to the
Eastern Naval Command in Visakhapatnam earlier this year, became the first US
defense secretary to visit an operational military command in India. With that
gesture reciprocated by Carter, Parrikar became the first Indian defense
minister to visit the US Pacific Command in Hawaii en route to Washington.
According to the Pentagon website, Parrikar and Carter “also discussed the importance of India’s participation in US military exercises such as Malabar, Rim of the Pacific, and for the first time in eight years for India, participation in Red Flag, which Carter called ‘the premier air-to-air combat exercise’.”
Ajaishukla
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