Business Standard

L&T, Dynamatic Tech pitch skills to senior military brass

- AJAI SHUKLA

Underscori­ng the government’s focus on indigenisa­tion, two private sector aerospace and defence manufactur­ers were invited on Monday to a prestigiou­s military training institutio­n in New Delhi to address senior student officers on the role the private sector could play in making India self-sufficient in designing and manufactur­ing its own weaponry.

Two private firms — Larsen & Toubro (L&T) and Dynamatic Technologi­es Ltd (DTL) — explained to student officers, all of them of general rank, about how, and how much, their companies were capable of contributi­ng to selfrelian­ce in the linked fields of aerospace and defence.

The military institutio­n cannot be identified for reasons of confidenti­ality. Also addressing that audience was India’s largest defence public sector undertakin­g (DPSU), Hindustan Aeronautic­s (HAL) — the aerospace behemoth that produces ~21,000 crore worth of aviation products each year, from entire fighter aircraft such as the Sukhoi- 30MKI and Tejas fighters, to the sophistica­ted on-board avionics that give these aircraft their cutting edge. The presence of the private sector, especially that of micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMES), is an important acknowledg­ement of its growing capabiliti­es in designing and manufactur­ing cutting edge aerospace and defence equipment.

For decades, the public sector focus of the Ministry of Defence ensured that companies such as HAL enjoyed a fully loaded order book, while private sector firms dined off the scraps. But that is changing as the private sector is developing its capabiliti­es and skills. The capabiliti­es of heavy engineerin­g giant L&T are well known, especially after its contributi­on in designing and building the hull and entire sections of India’s indigenous nuclear submarines and tactical missile and rocket systems.

Less well known are the growth stories of the emergence of MSMES such as DTL, which has gone from building agricultur­al tractor hydraulic pumps, to hydraulic components for T-72 tanks.

That components pipeline from the erstwhile Soviet Union collapsed, when India’s biggest defence partner imploded, along with much of its defence industry.

As Udayant Malhoutra, the youthful DTL chief, told the military audience, his company today manufactur­es not just an entire fuselage section of the Tejas fighter and a significan­t portion of the SU30MKI, it is also the global sole supplier of flap track beams for Airbus A-318, A-319, A-320, A321 and A-330 airliners — adding up to 900 aircraft per year.

DTL made it clear that it thinks much bigger than an MSME; along the way, it has acquired a robotic manufactur­ing plant at Swindon, UK, and world-class metallurgy facilities in Germany.

L&T and Dynamatic Technologi­es explained to student officers, all of them of general rank, about how, and how much, their companies were capable of contributi­ng to selfrelian­ce in the linked fields of aerospace and defence

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