Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

If we don’t plan, we won’t be in position to produce even a toy plane: Prabhu

- Neha LM Tripathi neha.tripathi@htlive.com

MUMBAI: For quarter of a century, India has been working towards indigenous­ly manufactur­ing passenger aircraft with little or no success despite the country’s large aviation market.

This ambition once again got a boost in February this year when Hindustan Aeronautic­s Limited (HAL) received a modificati­on document of its manufactur­ed 19-seater multipurpo­se light transport Dornier228 (upgraded) civil aircraft from the Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) for UDAN scheme. The aircraft is currently being used by the defence forces. Recently, the aviation regulator gave ‘certificat­e of airworthin­ess’ to this aircraft paving the way for its civil use.

India is home to the world’s ninth largest $16-billion civil aviation market.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi while addressing the joint Indo-US business conclave in July last year had said India needs at least 1,000 mediumcapa­city aircraft for regional air connectivi­ty and invited investors to come forward.

Before this, former civil aviation minister Suresh Prabhu had in early 2019 announced that India would roll out a road map for manufactur­ing aircraft in the domestic market, and was open to join hands with top global players.

Aviation experts said the idea to produce local passenger aircraft has become all the more significan­t given the Centre’s thrust on local manufactur­ing with missions like Makein-India and Aatmanirbh­ar Bharat.

However, a former DGCA official said the main issue is that the country till date does not have a design for any narrow-body or medium range turboprop except the Dornier aircraft.

“Manufactur­ing of an aircraft is a later stage, firstly we need to come up with a prototype. Take the design approval from DGCA, build the prototype, get it certified and then start manufactur­ing,” he said.

“Cost is also a major issue as each Dornier 2 certified aircraft (of HAL) came up at a massive cost of ₹55 crore, an amount in which a scheduled or nonschedul­ed operator can bring in three aircraft,” the official said.

Even as a section of experts say this is the best time for the country to take a plunge and realise its long-cherished dream of having its aircraft, another section is of the view that the plan will not pay-off unless India achieves critical mass for such a high-capital intensive industry.

“It (domestic manufactur­ing of aircraft) is a great idea but there are numerous challenges. It is important to build the Indian civilian aerospace industry by removing a large number of entry barriers which are a big challenge,” said Dhiraj Mathur, former partner at PwC, a global consultanc­y firm.

“We have tried to manufactur­e these planes. Various efforts have been made over a period of time by NAL or National Aerospace Laboratory (to make a passenger plane) but the attempts have not been successful as designing and manufactur­ing aircraft is not easy.”

Story of indigenous aircraft developmen­t

The idea of giving a thrust on aircraft developmen­t in the country was mooted by former

President late Dr APJ Abdul Kalam during his associatio­n with the premier Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on (DRDO).

The project took of the ground in 1991 with NAL teaming up with a Russian partner. The foreign entity however pulled out of the project midway, leaving it in a limbo.

In 1999, the then Government gave its go-ahead to NAL, under Council of Scientific & Industrial Research (CSIR) to build on its own a multi-purpose aircraft, Saras, named after an Indian bird.

NAL designed and developed the first prototype of the aircraft from scratch, which made its first flight on May 29, 2004. This marked the beginning of the indigenous civil aircraft program in the country. However, after an improved version of the aircraft met with an accident in 2009, the project was once again put on a pause button.

In 2010, the then Government set up a 15-member highlevel committee under former ISRO chief G Madhavan Nair to explore feasibilit­y of manufactur­ing a passenger aircraft locally, which submitted its report in 2011.

In 2017, the government announced a programme for developmen­t of a 90-seater aircraft in two phases- design and developmen­t, and manufactur­ing with private sector participat­ion with an estimated budgetary requiremen­ts of ₹7,555 crore, reviving Saras project after approving certain modificati­ons to the cockpit and cabin formation.

On January 2, an upgraded Saras undertook high-speed taxi trial at Bangalore’s HAL airport.

According to the revived plan, Saras will be used as a test aircraft for the developmen­t of Saras Mk2, a 19-seater transport aircraft.

CSIR has already started working on the design of the indigenous next-generation commuter transport aircraft to be used for the Government’s UDAN scheme.

What will it take to manufactur­e an indigenous aircraft?

According to Prabhu, the aviation ministry had prepared a roadmap in 2019, presenting a broad overview on how aircraft manufactur­ing should happen in India because Boeing had said it might manufactur­e aircraft in India.

Admitting that manufactur­ing aircraft is not an ‘easy task’ as millions of components go into it, he said, “The idea was that we need to develop an ecosystem in the form of manufactur­ing various parts of an aircraft which finally get into the end-product. The plan, to begin with, was that original equipment manufactur­ers would be manufactur­ing the components at the companies overseas and may sell them too.”

Prabhu added, “Once that critical mass comes in, then the eventual assembly will happen for a simple reason that the market is here,” he said.

Prabhu said he had personally gone to Airbus in France to discuss the plan in detail with them, adding, “It (these talks) needs follow up actions, but I am not aware if it was done,” he said.

“Aircraft making needs 10-15 years of planning as the ecosystem has to be developed. So, the present state of the economy cannot be looked at if you are looking at 10-15 years ahead in time. If you don’t plan today, knowing today’s economic situation, then you will never be able to manufactur­e even a toy aircraft,” Prabhu said.

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