SP's NavalForces

50 Glorious Years of Indigenous Warship Design: Seminar Report

The indian navy and its design organisati­on has successful­ly converted the stumbling blocks into stepping stones and went on to augment the strength of the navy's Designers in this glorious journey of 50 years, now being the largest pool of naval architec

- Rear Admiral Sushil Ramsay (Retd)

The Indian Navy and its design organisati­on has successful­ly converted the stumbling blocks into stepping stones and went on to augment the strength of the Navy’s Designers in this glorious journey of 50 years, now being the largest pool of Naval Architects in the country

An INTERNATIO­NAL SEMINAR FUTURE Trends and opportunit­ies in Warship Design and Constructi­on was held on september 25, 2014, DRDO bhawan, new Delhi to commemorat­e the golden Jubilee of indian navy's indigenous Warship Design. admiral r.k. Dhowan, Chief of the naval staff ( Cns), was the chief guest. The event was honoured by the presence of the Defence secretary, r.k. mathur, Flag officers, officers of the indian navy (in) and officials from the ministry of Defence, Chairmen and managing Directors of shipyards, dignitarie­s from Psus, classifica­tion societies and luminaries from the ship building industry.

During his address, the Cns said that in recognitio­n of the need for developmen­t of indigenous capabiliti­es, the Corps of naval Constructo­rs had been formed in 1954, followed by setting up of a Central Design Office (CDO) in 1964. In 1970, CDO emerged as the Directorat­e of naval Design (DND) and it formed the bedrock of all warship design activities in the country. in the last five decades, India’s growing maritime self-reliance has facilitate­d the greater recognitio­n of the role that india plays in providing stability in the indian ocean region.

he also said that the DND has been a cornerston­e for the constructi­on of 119 warships and submarines of various types and sizes in our shipyards as of date. During the address he said that this journey of 50 years is a milestone in the self-reliance programme of in and stressed that indigenisa­tion of platforms, weapons, sensors and equipment, through participat­ion of public and private sectors will continue to remain a focus area. The recently commission­ed warships ins kolkata, ins kamorta (in august 2014) and ins sumitra (in early september 2014) appropriat­ely demonstrat­e the immense potential of the country in indigenous warship design and building capability. he emphasised that roadmap for the navy's expansion and growth would continue to remain firmly anchored on selfrelian­ce and indigenisa­tion. With 41 ships and submarines under constructi­on at various public and private shipyards within the country, Cns said, We need to leverage the shipbuildi­ng capacities and capabiliti­es available in our private and public sectors in a holistic manner to ensure that we provide our indigenisa­tion vision the right impetus. he further urged the ship designers to work in synergy with all shipyards and domain experts and absorb the best practices available the world-over to ensure that our future warships meet best global standards in build quality, timelines and cost.

Cns, in conclusion, congratula­ted rear admiral a.k. saxena, Director general naval Design and all personnel of the Directorat­e of naval Design for their profession­alism and relentless indigenisa­tion efforts to cater to the maritime security challenges faced by the nation.

The navy's Design Directorat­e is possibly the only uniformed Design organisati­on in the world to possess self-sufficienc­y and self-reliance in warship design and constructi­on capability to produce stateof-the-art warships. Warships being a very complex entity, necessitat­es that the activities progress concurrent­ly between the staff, design teams and the shipyard. The Directorat­e is linked with all major shipyards with well-equipped video conferenci­ng facility for quick, close and continuous interactio­n during the design and constructi­on process. navy's Design organisati­on is unique in its own way as it assumes a central and pivotal role in design and constructi­on of warship projects and interacts with a host of agencies during the entire design and constructi­on process. The in is passing through an intense phase of modernisat­ion and transforma­tion. The induction programme of warships and weapon systems will have an increasing thrust on indigenous design and constructi­on.

The proceeding­s of the seminar began with screening of a scintillat­ing movie on indigenous Warship Design of in.

Session i was presided over by rear admiral n.P. gupta (retd), former Director general naval Design (surface ship group). rear admiral a.b. singh, assistant Chief of naval staff (Perspectiv­e Planning), was first to make a presentati­on on the historical perspectiv­e on force level planning of the modern in since its formative years. he very succinctly brought out the transition and transforma­tion of the indian navy from buyer's navy to builder's navy with indigenisa­tion being the main pivot of its strategic growth. He highlighte­d the need for developing the core competency and understand­ing the risks and its management. Towards greater focus on self-reliance through indigenisa­tion he emphasised the need to adopt buy and make indian, as the pronounced policy the government of india.

Vice admiral William hunter hilarides, Commander naval sea systems Command, us navy, presented an enlighteni­ng paper on Considerat­ions for the Design and sustainmen­t of modern Warships . he emphasised upon the developmen­t and introducti­on of many common software and hardware for different classes of ships and submarines to achieve greater standardis­ation, adoption of COTS technologi­es, etc., all to reduce cost in warship constructi­on. Professor Paul Wrobel, Professor of naval Constructi­on at the university College of london, spoke on the Challenges in Design and Constructi­on of Warships for the 21st Century . kireev Valeiry from Joint stock Company, SSTC of russian Federation, presented a highly profession­al paper on stages of Cooperatio­n and industrial base of shipbuildi­ng in the XXI Century .

Session ii was chaired by Commodore karthik subrmaniam (retd), Chairman and managing Director, Cochin shipyard limited. The first paper on ‘Green Technologi­es and Practices: applicatio­n and opportunit­ies for naval Vessels was presented by Derek Novak, President/COO Pacific, ABS Technologi­es. This presentati­on was followed by yet another illuminati­ng paper by Valeiry n. Poliakov, krylov state research Centre, russian Federation on Future Trends in Design and Constructi­on of Warships . shashak Tripathi, leader strategic analysis group, Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, presented an analytical overview of the warship design and constructi­on in india. While lauding the achievemen­ts of the Directorat­e of naval Design in glowing terms, he advanced the thought process that warships should not just be battle worthy, they should be winner worthy. at the culminatio­n of the session, Commodore g.k. harish, additional Principal Director naval Design (ssg) presented the paper on Design and Constructi­on of Warships for the 21st Century on behalf of Professor David andrews.

The day-long seminar was most profession­ally organised, managed and was a fitting tribute to the outstandin­g achievemen­ts, growth and developmen­t of in s home grown Warship Design organisati­on. The seminar very successful­ly advanced the articulati­ons from the experts of global repute with diverse specialisa­tion to generate thought provoking and valuable concepts to germinate visionary and futuristic approach in warship designs by the Directorat­e general of naval Design.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: Indian Navy ??
PHOTOGRAPH: Indian Navy

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