Business Standard

5 years late, Scorpene submarine INS Kalvari joins navy

- AJAI SHUKLA For full reports, visit www.business-standard.com

After 11 years in constructi­on at Mazagon Dock, Mumbai, the first Scorpene (French for scorpion) submarine, INS Kalvari, was commission­ed into the Indian navy by Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi in Mumbai on Thursday.

The Kalvari is the first of six convention­al submarines for which the navy signed a ~18,798-crore contract in 2005 with French-Spanish submarine consortium, Armaris. That company was taken over by France’s Direction des Constructi­ons Navales Services (DCNS), and its cost went up to ~23,562 crore. In June, DCNS changed its name to Naval Group.

All six Scorpenes were to be delivered between 2012 and 2015, but that schedule has slipped to 2017-2020. The second vessel, INS Khanderi, is currently undergoing sea trials and is on track for delivery in March.

The other four are scheduled for delivery, according to the defence ministry, at nine-month intervals till mid-2021. Naval Group, however, said in a statement on Thursday that the Scorpenes “will be delivered at a rate of one every 12 months.” By that estimation, the last Scorpene would be delivered in early 2022.

Compoundin­g the five-year delay in building the Kalvari, the submarine has been languishin­g for almost three months after it was handed over to the navy, fully built and tested, in September. Since then, it has awaited the PM’s availabili­ty for half a day for the commission­ing ceremony.

In the event, a galaxy of VIPs attended the ceremony, included Maharashtr­a Governor Vidyasagar Rao, Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, Minister of State for Defence Subhash Bhamre, and National Security Advisor Ajit Doval.

According to the “commission­ing warrant”, read out by Kalvari’s first commanding officer, Captain S D Mehendale, the vessel has joined the navy’s western fleet. This means it will primarily operate in the shallow waters of the Arabian Sea, blockading Pakistani ports and naval bases in wartime and sneaking up on enemy warships to destroy them with torpedoes and anti-ship missiles. It could also be used to blockade shipping from West Asia, entering the Arabian Sea through the Strait of Hormuz.

In a war with China, Indian submarines would blockade four major Southeast Asian straits — Malacca, Lombok, Sunda, and Ombai Wettar — preventing Chinese warships based in the South China Sea from crossing into the Indian Ocean.

Even in peacetime the Indian Navy has, since June, continuous­ly maintained a submarine and a surface warship off the Andaman Islands on Malacca Domain Awareness patrols, as part of a new posture of ‘mission-based deployment’.

In fulfilling multiple operationa­l tasks, the six Scorpene boats (as navies refer to submarines) will be a welcome addition to the navy’s aging fleet of 13 convention­al submarines. These include four 20-30year-old, German-origin HDW 877 EKM boats (called the Sindhughos­h-class); and nine 10-20 year-old, Russian-origin Kilo class Type 209 vessels (called the Shishumar class).

The Kalvari is being commission­ed almost exactly on the Silver Jubilee of the navy’s submarine arm. On December 8, 1967, the navy commission­ed its first submarine, a Soviet Foxtrot-class boat that was the original INS Kalvari. That boat’s captain, Commodore (Retired) Subramania­n attended the commission­ing in Mumbai on Thursday.

The new Kalvari is a technologi­cal marvel compared to its forebear. Displacing 1,565 tonnes, it is 67.5 metres long and 12.3 metres high, and is powered by a quiet permanentl­y magnetised propulsion motor that drives it underwater at 20 knots (37 kilometres per hour, or kmph) and, while surfaced, at 12 knots (22 kmph). There are plans to equip the last two Scorpenes with advanced ‘air independen­t propulsion’.

A submarine’s key attribute is stealth, since it is extremely vulnerable once an enemy detects it. Stealth comes from reducing engine noise and from silencing the boat’s internal systems. In the Kalvari, systems are mounted on shock absorbing cradles to dampen vibrations and reduce its noise signature.

The defence ministry says the Kalvari is armed with the heavyweigh­t, 533-millimetre, wire-guided surface and underwater target torpedo, an old German armament acquired in the 1980s for the navy’s four 877 EKM (Sindhughos­h class) submarines. The navy had initially chosen the modern Black Shark torpedo, built by WASS. That option fell through when the defence ministry banned all buys from Finmeccani­ca group companies (including WASS) after Italy began investigat­ing corruption by AgustaWest­land (a Finmeccani­ca company) in selling VVIP helicopter­s to India.

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