(Reuters) - Boeing Co, considered the frontrunner in the race to supply the Indian navy with new fighter jets, is now in contention for a much bigger $15 billion order after the government abruptly asked the air force to consider the twin-engine planes.
Until recently, Lockheed Martin Corp’s F-16 and Saab AB’s
Gripen were in a two-horse race supply at least 100 single-engine jets
to build up the Indian Air Force’s fast-depleting combat fleet.
Both
had offered to build the planes in India in collaboration with local
companies as part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s drive to build a
domestic industrial base and cut back on arms imports.
But
last month the government asked the air force to open up the
competition to twin-engine aircraft and to evaluate Boeing’s F/A-18
Super Hornet, a defense ministry source said. That jet is a finalist for
the Indian navy’s $8 billion to $9 billion contract for 57 fighters.
The
defense ministry plans to within weeks issue a request for information
(RFI), the first stage of a procurement process, for a fighter to be
built in India. The competition will be open to both single and
twin-engine jets, the official said, but both Lockheed and Saab said
they had not been informed about the new requirements.
The
latest change of heart is a major opportunity for Boeing, whose only
foreign Super Hornet customer so far is the Royal Australian Air Force.
It also illustrates how dysfunctional the weapons
procurement process and arms industry are in the world’s
second-most-populous country. The need for new fighters has been known
for nearly 15 years, but after many announcements, twists and turns, the
country’s air force has only three-quarters of the aircraft it needs.
An indigenous light combat aircraft, the Tejas, is still not operational, 35 years after it was first proposed.
An
Indian Air Force source said fighter procurement was urgent: the
branch’s operational strength has fallen to just 33 squadrons, its
weakest level in four decades, as it decommissions Soviet-era MiG-21s.
“The
IAF wants the RFI issued within weeks and get the process started,”
said the source, who declined to be identified because he was not
authorized to speak to the media. “The problem is that government keeps
shifting what it wants.”
A PRESSING NEED
Over the next decade, 13 more
squadrons will be retired as their aircraft age out of service,
parliament’s standing committee on defense said in a December report.
The
defense ministry declined to comment on the air force’s aircraft
modernization program, saying it was not in a position to do so.
Lockheed,
which had offered to shift its F-16 production line in Fort Worth,
Texas, to India, said it had not been told of any change to the Indian
plan for single-engine fighters.
“Our proposed F-16
partnership with India stands firm,” the company said in an email. Last
year it picked Tata Advanced Systems as its local partner and said it
was in talks with dozens of firms to build up the supplier network.
“The
Government of India has not yet issued formal requirements but we are
continuing to support government-to-government discussions and engage
with Indian companies about F-16 industrial opportunities,” Lockheed
said.
Sweden’s Saab was also caught off guard.
“We
have seen the reports in the Indian media, but no new formal
communication has been made to us regarding the fighter program,” said
Rob Hewson, Saab Asia Pacific’s head of communications.
France’s
Dassault Systemes SE’s Rafale, the Eurofighter Typhoon and Russian
aircraft are also potential contenders under the new requirements, the
air force source and industry analysts said.
An order
the size of India’s is rare. The only comparable opportunity for the
Super Hornet is Canada’s request for 88 fighters, which could be worth
as much as $14.6 billion.
The Indian air force
competition has echoes of a 2007 tender for 126 medium multi-role combat
aircraft, which the Rafale won. But negotiations quickly bogged down
over local production and prices, and in the end, the government ordered
just 36 of the planes in 2016 for $8.7 billion.
LOCAL FIGHTER
The
air force ideally would like a combination of lighter single-engine and
twin-engine jets, as well as stealthy aircraft, but cannot afford such a
range of foreign systems, analysts said.
A twin-engine foreign fighter would perhaps offer the best value while the Tejas finishes development, they said.
India’s
annual defense capital procurement budget of $14 billion to $15 billion
has to be spread over the army, navy, air force and the indigenous
defense research organization.
“The operational costs
are going up with increased manpower, higher wages and general
inflation. Ministry of Defence doesn’t have the luxury to go for too
many platforms despite the rapidly falling squadron strength of the air
force,” said Amber Dubey, partner and India head of aerospace and
defense at global consultancy KPMG.
Boeing India President Pratyush Kumar said the company was ready to respond to any request from the air force.
“We will follow the MoD’s lead on their process and will be
responsive to their needs if we are asked to provide any information,”
he said.
Kumar said Boeing was committed to building the
planes in India and had offered to help with India’s plans to develop
its own advanced medium combat aircraft.
But the experience with the Rafale contract has made experts skeptical that the latest tender will proceed as planned.
Richard
A. Bitzinger, visiting senior fellow at Singapore’s S.Rajaratnam School
of International Studies, said he did not expect a resolution in even
the next two to three years.
“I am never surprised by
what the Indians do when it comes to their procurement tenders. They are
constantly changing the rules, changing their minds, and often even
cancelling orders mid-way through,” he said.
“The Indians have a remarkable knack for snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.”
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