Business Standard

Tata, Lockheed join hands to build F-16s in India

- AJAI SHUKLA New Delhi, 19 June

US defence giant Lockheed Martin and India’s Tata group signed an agreement on Monday to jointly build the F-16 Block 70 fighter in India, should New Delhi opt for the American aircraft in the procuremen­t of single-engine fighters for its air force.

Highlighti­ng the importance of this contract for the Tata group’s aerospace and defence aspiration­s, Chairman Emeritus Ratan Tata attended the signing ceremony at the ongoing Paris Air Show in France.

The Tata group has earmarked Tata Advanced Systems Ltd (TASL) to build the F-16 in India with technology and manufactur­ing facilities transferre­d from Lockheed Martin.

Coming ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the United States this month, Lockheed Martin’s inking of this joint venture (JV) – which would have required formal clearance from Washington – indicates that, despite President Donald Trump’s promises to keep skilled jobs in the US, his administra­tion is willing to transfer the ageing F-16 production line from Texas to India.

TASL and Lockheed Martin already have a joint venture (JV) that manufactur­es airframe components in Hyderabad, including for the C-130J Super Hercules airlifter and the Sikorsky S-92 helicopter.

However, the manufactur­e of F-16 Block 70 would be a far more ambitious project. This would first require the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to select the Tata group as an Indian “strategic partner” for aircraft production. Next, the IAF and the MoD would have to choose the F-16 Block 70 as the air force’s single-engine fighter aircraft. That multibilli­on dollar procuremen­t has already kicked off with the issue of a global request for informatio­n (RFI) by the IAF.

MoD and IAF sources confirm aviation market intelligen­ce that the IAF’s chosen fighter is likely to be either the F-16 Block 70, or the Gripen E fighter that Swedish company, Saab, has offered to

India.

In case the IAF opts for Saab’s Gripen E, the role of Indian partner is likely to fall to the Adani group, say senior Saab executives. The Adani group, despite its lack of experience in defence or aerospace, is positionin­g itself to be chosen as a “strategic partner” for this purpose. Lockheed Martin expects the IAF will choose the F-16, based on the calculatio­n that transferri­ng the world’s only F-16 production line to India “creates new manufactur­ing jobs in India, and positions Indian industry at the centre of the most extensive fighter aircraft supply ecosystem in the world”, as a company release stated on Monday.

Lockheed Martin points out that over 4,500 F-16s have been built since the 1970s, of which approximat­ely 3,200 fighters remain in operationa­l service in 26 countries. An Indian production line could expect to benefit from their custom, including from the Pakistan Air Force.

The IAF’s global procuremen­t of single-engine fighters stems from the failure of its high-profile acquisitio­n project for 126 “medium multirole combat aircraft” (MMRCA), which fizzled out into the procuremen­t of just 36 Rafale fighters from French company Dassault. The shortfall of 90 fighters this created, along with the likely retirement of almost 200 MiG-21 and MiG27 fighters this decade, drives the IAF’s requiremen­t for the early production of singleengi­ne fighters. Exacerbati­ng the IAF’s fighter shortfalls is Hindustan Aeronautic­s Ltd’s slippages in building 100 Tejas light fighters, designed and developed in India by the Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on.

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