Business Standard

India pitches weapons to foreign diplomats

- AJAI SHUKLA More on business-standard.com

In an unusual thrust to meet ambitious export targets, Indian defence officials on Friday made a pitch for defence and aerospace products to over 50 foreign military attaches posted with their embassies in New Delhi.

The Indian officials talked up the growing logic of buying Indian defence products, the export of which shot up from ~4,682 crore ($660 million) in 2017-18 to ~10,500 crore ($1.47 billion) last year.

The defence ministry is shooting to triple exports over this enhanced figure over the next five years. The Defence Production Policy of 2018 (DPRP-2018) stipulates an annual export target of $5 billion by 2025.

New Delhi considers exports essential for meeting the DPRP-2018 target of making India one of the world’s top five defence producers by 2025. This involves boosting annual defence production from the current ~90,000 to ~170,000 crore ($26 billion) by 2025, thereby generating employment for two-to-three million people.

Addressing the foreign military diplomats were India’s army and navy chiefs, General Bipin Rawat and Admiral Karambir Singh, Defence R&D Organisati­on chief Satheesh Reddy, and the defence ministry’s interface with Indian industry, Sanjay Jaju. They underscore­d New Delhi’s recent policy and regulatory reforms, which they claimed had cut down licensing requiremen­ts and speeded up export clearances, enabling Indian firms to compete better for internatio­nal tenders.

Jaju pointed out that last year ’s doubling of defence exports was achieved mainly through exporting aerospace and defence components for global supply chains of foreign aerospace and defence corporatio­ns. “We will have to start looking at exporting [weapons] platforms,” he said, referring to high-value, complex, combat equipment such as fighter aircraft, helicopter­s, tanks and artillery guns.

The defence industry often complains that the Indian military ’s reluctance to induct Indian-made weaponry into its arsenal puts off foreign buyers. Jaju asserted that is changing. “Our country now has platforms that have already been purchased by the Indian military, which are world-class and at cost-competitiv­e prices,” he said.

Such platforms include the Tejas Light Combat Aircraft (LCA), Dhruv Advanced Light Helicopter, Arjun tank, Akash air defence system, Pinaka rocket launcher and a range of indigenous warships including corvettes, frigates and destroyers.

Babasaheb Kalyani, chairman of Kalyani Group, praised the Advanced Towed Artillery Gun System (ATAGS), which his company is developing in partnershi­p with the DRDO as “one of the finest artillery guns on the planet.”

Rawat asserted that the Indian military’s processes for testing and evaluating arms and equipment were “of the highest standards”. He offered to test and certify the Indian weaponry that would be on offer at Defence Expo 2020 in Lucknow next year.

A key reason for t he meagre sales of Indian weapons platforms abroad is because they are mostly pro duced by India’s public sector — the eight Defence P ublic S ector Undertakin­gs (DPSUS) and 41 Ordnance Factories (OFS) — which has hidebound and inflexible marketing mechanisms.

Business Standard’s analysis indicates that DPSU/OFS accounted for less than ~800 crore of the ~10,500 crore worth of defence equipment that India exported last year.

 ??  ?? Army chief General Bipin Rawat underscore­d New Delhi’s recent policy and regulatory reforms, which he claimed had cut down licensing requiremen­ts and speeded up export clearances
Army chief General Bipin Rawat underscore­d New Delhi’s recent policy and regulatory reforms, which he claimed had cut down licensing requiremen­ts and speeded up export clearances

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