Business Standard

EDIT: NAVY BLUES

Warship building continues to remain in deep water

- PAGE 11

The commission­ing on Monday of India’s third and newest anti-submarine corvette, INS Kiltan, by Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman is good news. But it also underlines the ills that plague warship building in India. The Kiltan was commission­ed five years later than originally scheduled and without anti-submarine capabiliti­es that are fundamenta­l to such a corvette. Three-and-a-half years after the National Democratic Alliance came to power promising to quickly make up the military’s arms shortfalls, it is evident that, in warship building, like in the procuremen­t of other weaponry, this government has performed no better than the United Progressiv­e Alliance before it. In April, the navy’s warships acquisitio­n chief told defence industrial­ists in New Delhi that the navy would increase its strength from 140 vessels currently to 170-180 ships by 2027. This requires increasing warship numbers by three or four every year, as well as inducting four or five new vessels annually to replace warships that complete their service lives of 25-30 years. Against this requiremen­t for seven to nine new warships every year, the navy is barely able to induct three or four. This lackadaisi­cal production rate in domestic defence shipyards has forced the navy to look overseas at offers such as the Russian one to build four follow-on frigates of the Talwar class.

A key reason for building delays is the navy’s penchant for the latest, with admirals demanding that each warship incorporat­es newer and more sophistica­ted technology. This is a recipe for delay. In contrast, fast builders such as China finalise a particular design and then churn out a large number of those warships, benefiting from economies of scale, the certainty of supply orders and worker experience in building a particular “type”. The People’s Liberation Army (Navy) has already commission­ed 25 Type 054A Jiangkai II-class frigates and is building three more. It has already inducted six Type 052D Luyang III-class destroyers and work is under way on at least eight more. In contrast, the Indian navy builds barely three or four warships of one type before going back to the drawing board and reworking specificat­ions. It built just three Delhi-class destroyers under Project 15 and then took years to rework the design into what it called a “follow-on” class – Project 15A – but which was actually a substantiv­ely different warship. Frigate orders have been similarly broken up. A different kind of disjointed­ness characteri­ses the four-corvette Project 28 order. The ship commission­ed on Monday, INS Kiltan, has an all-composite superstruc­ture in place of the steel superstruc­tures on the first two Project 28 corvettes.

Besides design and planning confusion, warship building is also dogged by capacity limitation­s. All four public sector warship yards – Mazagon Dock (Mumbai); Garden Reach (Kolkata); Goa Shipyard (Goa) and Hindustan Shipyard (Visakhapat­nam) – are located in metropolit­an areas with little scope for expanding facilities. To add capacity, the defence ministry drafted the strategic partner policy to bring in private sector shipbuilde­rs such as Larsen & Toubro and Reliance Defence Industries. But the poorly conceived policy faces opposition, not least from within the defence ministry itself. Consequent­ly, projects earmarked for strategic partners languish, such as Project 75-I to build six new submarines, even as Mazagon Dock’s submarine-building facilities increasing­ly lie idle. Without policy clarity within the ministry, the navy’s strength and numbers are set to fall further.

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