Business Standard

Navy eyes new warships worth ~45k cr by year-end

- AJAI SHUKLA

About two-and-a-half years have elapsed since the navy signed a contract for new warships — a ~45,381-crore deal in 2015 with Mazagon Dock Ltd, Mumbai (MDL), and Garden Reach Shipbuilde­rs & Engineers, Kolkata (GRSE), for seven stealth frigates under Project 17A.

With numerous other warship purchases stuck in the defence ministry’s famously clogged procuremen­t pipeline, the navy has surrendere­d ~15,041 crore during the past five years from its budgetary allocation for new warships.

In four of the past five financial years ( see Table 1), the navy has surrendere­d thousands of crores of unspent money. It returned ~2,543 crore in 201213; ~3,621 crore in 2013-14; ~5,285 crore in 2015-16; and ~4,371 crore last year.

Only in 2014-15 did the navy manage to spend its allocation, overspendi­ng by ~779 crore.

Now, with contracts almost finalised for 23 new warships, the navy finds itself constraine­d by the lowest budgetary allocation since 2011-12. This year it has only ~11,023 crore for fleet expansion, compared to ~13,617 crore in 2012-13; ~11,772 crore in 2013-14; ~12,576 crore in 2014-15, ~16,050 crore in 2015-16, and ~12,467 crore last year.

This reduction in the fleet budget is compounded by inflation, which usually runs at 5-10 per cent annually for defence weaponry, including warships.

Now, with ~45,000 crore worth of warship contracts near signing, navy admirals tell Business Standard there is concern the government might cite a budget crunch. If the navy were to sign these without delay, it would need to allocate ~4,500 crore, which is the traditiona­l 10 per cent signing amount.

However, most of this year’s ~11,023 crore budget is pre-committed towards instalment­s on earlier contracts and ongoing projects, including the constructi­on of Project 75 Scorpene submarines, Project 15 B destroyers, Project 17A frigates, Project 28 corvettes, the indigenous aircraft carrier, INS Vikrant, and others.

The admirals say the contracts for 23 new warships depends upon whether the government agrees to allocate an additional ~4,500 crore towards the “Navy Fleet” accounting head in the defence budget.

“The government thought it fit to take back ~4,371 crore last year and ~5,285 crore the year before. Hopefully, it will find a way to enhance this year’s allocation by a similar amount”, says a senior admiral, speaking anonymousl­y.

The 23 contracts nearing finalisati­on are for the building in Indian shipyards of five hydrograph­ic survey vessels, two diving support vessels, and 16 anti-submarine warfare shallow water craft (ASWC). These will involve a pay out of about ~20,000 crore over five-seven years, with an advance of ~2,000 crore to be paid this year.

“We have concluded cost negotiatio­ns with the shipyards that will build these vessels. By the year-end, the first two contracts should be signed. The one for ASWC needs to be cleared by the Cabinet Committee on Security, so we are targeting March 31,” said an MoD official closely involved in these procuremen­ts.

Besides these, the navy hopes to conclude another big contract this year for building four “landing platform docks” (LPDs). The estimated ~25,000 crore contract is currently at the bid-opening stage.

After concluding these ~45,000 crore worth of contracts this year, the navy’s target for 2018 is a ~25,000-30,000-crore contract for four Grigorivic­h class frigates (Russian nomenclatu­re: Project 1135.6). Two of these stealth frigates will be built in Russia, while Goa Shipyard will build the other two.

The MCPP and LTIPP both talk about increasing the navy’s warship strength from the current 140, to 198 warships by 2027. This would involve increasing the navy’s warship numbers by five-six every year; in addition to replacing twothree warships that retire after completing their service lives. Towards this, the navy has about 75 vessels of various types in the procuremen­t pipeline, to be completed by 2027.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? The INS Khanderi, the second indigenous­ly-built Scorpene submarine, being launched at Mazagon Dock Shipbuilde­rs in Mumbai on January 12, 2017
PHOTO: PTI The INS Khanderi, the second indigenous­ly-built Scorpene submarine, being launched at Mazagon Dock Shipbuilde­rs in Mumbai on January 12, 2017

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