Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘Production goals ambitious, but achievable’

- Rahul Singh rahul.singh@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The goals set in India’s draft defence production policy are ambitious but achievable if adequate budget is made available, bottleneck­s are removed and building an industrial ecosystem is top priority, industry leaders have said.

The draft Defence Production Policy-2018, released in March, visualises India as one of the top five countries in the aerospace and defence sectors in the coming years, with defence goods and services accounting for a turnover of ₹1.7 lakh crore by 2025.

According to the policy, achieving the target would require an investment of ₹70,000 crore and could create up to three million jobs. Another goal is to clock exports worth ₹35,000 crore by 2025.

“We believe that by laying down clear targets, the government has put forward an ambitious yet measurable plan for transformi­ng the defence industry,” said Emmanuel de Roquefeuil, who heads the French aerospace and defence firm, Thales, in India.

Roquefeuil said his company looked forward “to more details and directions” from the government on how foreign original equipment manufactur­ers (OEMS) could contribute to enhancing India’s defence preparedne­ss. “Adequate budget availabili­ty for capital acquisi- tions is an area that would need the government’s support.”

The draft policy comes at a time when India has been ranked the world’s largest importer of weapons for the 10th straight year by well-known think tank Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute.

So what will it take to reverse the trend and become an exporter?

“The products made in India are high-tech but mainly for local defence needs and they might need to be adapted to meet specific foreign requiremen­t,” said Rear Admiral RK Shrawat (retd), who heads the French Naval Group in India, which is helping build Scorpene submarines locally. “Indian manufactur­ers and integrator­s might like to team with foreign OEMS, from whom they are importing systems and equipment,” he said, adding India’s engineerin­g capabiliti­es and competence­s could be tapped to achieve export targets.

The policy seeks to cut down by 2025 India’s dependence on imported military hardware including fighter jets, helicopter­s, warships, combat vehicles and missiles.

“It’s a grand vision document with unambiguou­s goals…to realise the targets, it is imperative to have clear timebound plans for execution,” said Lieutenant General (retd) Subrata Saha, director general for Society of Indian Defence Manufactur­ers, and principal advisor, Confederat­ion of Indian Industry.

But what are the possible hurdles? “Process bottleneck­s and entrenched mindset are potentiall­y high hurdles. Organisati­onal security for well-meaning decisions could help overcome risk aversion,” Saha added.

 ?? HT FILE ?? The draft Defence Production Policy seeks to cut down by 2025 India’s dependence on imported military hardware.
HT FILE The draft Defence Production Policy seeks to cut down by 2025 India’s dependence on imported military hardware.

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