Business Standard

Lockheed Martin gets $329-mn contract to maintain C-130J fleet

- AJAI SHUKLA

The Indian Air Force (IAF) has awarded US aerospace giant Lockheed Martin a $328.8 million, five-year contract to provide comprehens­ive maintenanc­e support for India’s fleet of 12 C-130J Super Hercules tactical airlifter aircraft.

Lockheed Martin manufactur­es the highly regarded Super Hercules transport aircraft, which is flown by 26 operators in 22 nations.

The arrangemen­t, announced on Tuesday, is called a “Follow On Support-ii” (FOS-II) contract. The IAF will pay the US aerospace and defence giant — the world’s biggest arms supplier — just under $5.5 million per C-130J, per year, in order to obtain a specified level of operationa­l readiness across the fleet. This is an extension of the initial FOS-I contract.

The new contract also requires the firm to provide additional services that include “supporting the C-130J airframe, contractor furnished equipment, peculiar and common spares, engines, propellers, software, publicatio­n services, ground handling equipment, ground support equipment and test equipment,” stated a Lockheed Martin release on Tuesday.

Such “performanc­e-based logistics” (PBL) contracts, which bind aerospace vendors to specified fleet availabili­ty levels, are becoming the norm for the IAF.

C-17 Globemaste­r III

When the IAF bought its fleet of 11 C-17 Globemaste­r III heavy lift aircraft, it ensured they were covered by a comprehens­ive PBL and training contract.

“Boeing provides onsite and multi-function support, with Boeing team members working closely with IAF operators and maintainer­s to ensure a high level of aircraft availabili­ty while reducing cost per flight hour,” Boeing told Business Standard.

Boeing also supports the C17 fleet with worldwide recovery support, emergency inflight technical assistance and 24X7 aircraft-on-ground parts response.

P-8I Poseidon

Similarly, Boeing also supports the Indian Navy’s fleet of P-8I Poseidon multi-mission maritime aircraft by providing PBL, spares, ground support equipment, field service representa­tives and on-site engineerin­g support. “Since induction, the Indian Navy P8I fleet has surpassed 30,000 flight hours,” says Boeing.

Rafale fighters

The IAF ensured that its fleet of 36 Rafale fighter aircraft was contracted with PBL provisions that require the manufactur­ers, Dassault and Thales, to ensure a minimum of 75 per cent fleet availabili­ty — or an average of 27 fighters available at all times from the 36-Rafale fleet.

For this package, which covers the Rafale’s first five years of service, the IAF paid Euro 350 million ($410 million), or an annual average of $2.25 million per Rafale fighter.

Lockheed Martin’s obligation­s

To fulfil its obligation­s, eight employees from Lockheed Martin (aircraft manufactur­er), General Electric (propeller manufactur­er) and Rolls-royce (engine manufactur­er) will be present as onsite technical support for the duration of the contract.

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