Business Standard

Reliance Group says its Rafale offsets are just ~66 billion

- AJAI SHUKLA New Delhi, 2 September

The Reliance Group, accused by the Opposition of influence peddling in its selection by Dassault as its Indian offset partner, has rejected allegation­s that it has benefited from ~300 billion worth of offset orders. It says its offset business from Dassault will amount to just ~66 billion.

The ^7.85 billion (~590 billion) contract for 36 Rafale fighters that the government signed with Dassault on September 23, 2016, makes the vendor liable for dischargin­g offsets worth 50 per cent of the contract value, or about ~300 billion.

Due to the rupee devaluatio­n, the original ~590 billion cost of the Rafale deal has already gone up to ~650 billion, but most calculatio­ns are working off the old figure.

Now Reliance Group, in a legal notice served on six entities and individual­s in connection with a panel debate on the Rafale, terms it ‘incorrect’ and ‘misleading’ to state that Reliance received all those offsets.

The notice says: “Dassault’s share in the total offset export obligation is approximat­ely 22 per cent, or ~66 billion. The balance 78 per cent of offsets is to be discharged by other companies such as Thales, Safran, and MBDA.”

Dassault is the prime vendor for the Rafale, but other tier1 vendors supply major fighter assemblies. Thales provides avionics, such as radars and instrument­ation, Safran supplies the Rafale’s twin M-88 turbojet engines, and MBDA provides missiles and weaponry.

India’s offset guidelines, specified in the Defence Procuremen­t Policy of 2016 (DPP2016), provide for tier-1 vendors like Thales, Safran, and MBDA to discharge their own offset liabilitie­s on a pro rata basis.

Earlier, Reliance Group head Anil Ambani had written to Congress President Rahul Gandhi, saying other companies were dischargin­g the bulk of offsets. On August 20, Ambani wrote: “More than 100 medium, small and micro enterprise­s will participat­e in this along with public sector undertakin­gs like Bharat Electronic­s and Defence Research & Developmen­t Organisati­on (DRDO)”.

DPP-2016 allows a foreign vendor to discharge offsets in various ways. These include direct purchase or export orders for specified defence, coastal security, and civil aerospace products or services; foreign direct investment ( FDI) in Indian enterprise­s for the manufactur­e of eligible products or services; transfer of technology to Indian enterprise­s for eligible products and services; provision of equipment to Indian enterprise­s, or to government institutio­ns, for manufactur­ing eligible products or providing eligible services; and the provision of specified technologi­es to the DRDO.

Offset obligation­s are to be discharged within a time frame that can extend beyond the period of the main procuremen­t contract by a maximum of two years. This includes the period of warranty of the equipment being procured. Dassault has contracted to deliver the last of the 36 Rafales before April 2022, and the warranty contract (which ensures that minimum 75 per cent of the Rafale fleet must be operationa­l at all times) extends for another five years, till April 2027. That means Dassault has till April 2029 - a period of almost 13 years to discharge its offsets through the Reliance Group. Assuming full-scale delivery of manufactur­ed items begins by next April, Reliance would have to manufactur­e and deliver ~6.6 billion worth of equipment each year.

Dassault Reliance Aerospace (DRAL) intends to discharge offsets by building civil aerospace components for Dassault’s successful Falcon business jet. Last year, Dassault chief Eric Trappier and Anil Ambani laid the foundation stone of DRAL’s proposed manufactur­ing facility outside Nagpur.

Reliance Group and the government both argue that the original equipment manufactur­er is free to choose the Indian offset partner to discharge offset obligation­s. While the DPP does indeed provide this flexibilit­y, the defence ministry is required to vet the choice.

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 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Thanks to rupee devaluatio­n, the original ~590 billion cost of the Rafale deal has already gone up to ~650 billion
PHOTO: REUTERS Thanks to rupee devaluatio­n, the original ~590 billion cost of the Rafale deal has already gone up to ~650 billion

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