A repeat tender for Pinaka rocket
launchers appears to be in the offing with the Defence Ministry looking
to buy six regiments — one regiment is 18 systems — of the home-made
weapon system. Touted as one of the first ‘create in India’ product, the
Pinaka is designed and developed by two private companies, the Tatas
and Larsen and Toubro (L&T), in association with the Armament
Research and Development Establishment of the DRDO.
Confirming
the development, and the private entities’ wait for the Request for
Proposal (RFP), Jayant Patil, Senior Vice-President and Head-Defence and
Aerospace, L&T, told BusinessLine, “We expect the commercial
RFP for the next six regiments to be issued within the coming few
weeks. Thereafter, contracting is likely to be completed during FY18.”
Prime contract
Tata
Power’s Strategic Engineering Division (SED) was one of the two private
companies to be awarded the prime contract by the Defence Ministry way
back in 2006. Several technological advances have taken place since. “At
present, one regiment of Pinaka (20 launchers) supplied by Tata Power
SED are in service with the Indian Army,” Rahul Chaudhry, CEO, Tata
Power SED, told BusinessLine.
Last December,
Tata Power SED received an order from the Defence Ministry for the
supply of one regiment of Command Post and Launcher of Pinaka Multi
Rocket Launcher System to the Indian Army. The 200 crore order included
supply of 20 launchers and eight command posts.
Pinaka
supplements the existing artillery gun at ranges beyond 30 km, and has a
quick reaction time and high rate of fire. It was designed to replace
the BM-21 Grad multiple rocket launcher systems of the Indian Army.
A
multifaceted system, the Multi Barrel Rocket Launcher (MBRL) grants the
Pinaka concentrated firepower to destroy enemy targets. The Pinaka is
also proving to be a test-bed for the fruitful partnerships that can be
developed between the government and the private sector to address
challenges and to collaborate and bring on indigenous innovation, as
well as provide frameworks for working together.
Speaking to BusinessLine
about the recent strategic partnership policy announcements, Chaudhry
termed it the “government’s empathetic announcement that private sector
participation in defence is the new normal in this sector.”
Sources
added that “though the army has inducted Pinaka Mark-I, it is an
unguided area weapon. Mark-II is in the trial phase. There are major
differences between the two. Mark-II is guided and the range has been
extended. The rocket propellant has been redesigned and can be fixed on
to the same barrel, so one does not have to change barrels and can fire
simultaneously. Mark-I can fire at 35 km, now this has been extended to
55 km.”
Speaking of the advanced Pinaka,
DRDO sources said, the “System on-board accuracy has been increased. The
extra aerodynamics would help destroy the same area with fewer rockets,
leading to less damage.”
thehindubusinessline
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