Business Standard

Rolls-Royce sets up Bengaluru facility to support engine fleet

Significan­t move, given concerns over Sukhoi-30 and MiG-29 engines

- AJAI SHUKLA New Delhi, 20 April

Rolls-Royce has opened a facility in Bengaluru to support their 750 engines that power Indian military aircraft, and provides repair and service to engines that urgently require it.

The UK-based engine giant announced on Thursday that its so-called Defence Service Delivery Centre (SDC) in Bengaluru would provide the army and navy with “fleet management, services engineerin­g and supply chain co-ordination. It would also be the base from which Field Service Representa­tives could be rapidly dispatched to frontline bases, subject to contract coverage, to provide on-ground technical support.”

With the Indian Air Force (IAF) having publicly acknowledg­ed concerns over the serviceabi­lity and in-flight failure of Russian engines that power the Sukhoi-30MKI, and given unacknowle­dged concerns over the engines on the navy’s MiG-29K, Rolls-Royce’s engine support initiative is significan­t.

The SDC aims at increasing the serviceabi­lity of 750 Rolls Royce engines that power aircrafts in service with the IAF, navy and Hindustan Aeronautic­s Limited (HAL).

These aircraft engines include: the Adour, which powers the Hawk advanced jet trainer and the Jaguar deep penetratio­n strike aircraft; the Gnome engine that powers the navy’s Sea King helicopter­s; the Dart, which powers the air force’s HS-748 Avro transport and communicat­ions aircraft; and the AE2100 and AE3007 engines that power the C-130J Super Hercules and the Embraer 145 airborne early warning (AEW) aircraft, respective­ly.

HAL’s engine division in Bengaluru has decades of experience in building Rolls-Royce engines under licence, which have powered India’s serving and retired aircrafts. A Rolls-Royce official on Thursady said, “The Service Delivery Centre has been configured specifical­ly for the Indian Armed Forces and HAL with Bengaluru being a logical location close to engine division [of HAL]. Overall this contribute­s to the broader “Make in India” agenda through skills developmen­t and increasing self-sufficienc­y. The overriding goal is to improve availabili­ty of ‘engines-on-thewing’ through a step change improvemen­t of incountry responsive­ness for the current fleets as well as for future Defence programmes.”

Rolls-Royce has earlier successful­ly implemente­d this model of logistic support by setting up and operating SDCs at the Royal Air Force base at Marham, UK; and in the US Navy base at Kingsville, Texas. Rolls-Royce features in most years in the world’s top four engine companies, along with Pratt & Whitney, General Electric and Safran. Besides aero engines, it does a significan­t proportion of its business in marine engines. The Bengaluru SDC, however, supports only aerospace engines.

Over the years, as India’s military opted for predominan­tly Russian aircraft, Rolls-Royce’s share of the Indian market has dwindled. There was disappoint­ment in the company recently at not having a suitable product to offer to the air force’s proposed upgrade of the Jaguar fighter engine. However, with HAL building and upgrading the Hawk trainer in India, and planning to export it to regional buyers in partnershi­p with its original manufactur­er, BAE Systems, Rolls-Royce is expecting more business.

The Centre was officially inaugurate­d by Mr Dominic McAllister, British Deputy High Commission­er, Bengaluru.

The UK-based engine giant announced on Thursday that its so-called Defence Service Delivery Centre in Bengaluru will provide the army and navy with “fleet management, services engineerin­g and supply chain co-ordination”

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