Hindustan Times (Noida)

‘IAF TO ORDER 83 IMPROVED LCA VARIANTS SOON’

- Rahul Singh rahul.singh@hindustant­imes.com

The Indian Air Force could place a ~50,000-crore order for an advanced version of the indigenous­ly produced Light Combat Aircraft Tejas in the next two to three months, HAL chairman R Madhavan said.

BENGALURU: The Indian Air Force could place a ₹50,000-crore order for an advanced version of the indigenous­ly produced Light Combat Aircraft, Tejas, in the next two to three months, Hindustan Aeronautic­s Limited (HAL) chairman R Madhavan said at Aero India 2019 on Thursday.

Madhavan said the first flight of LCA MK-1A was likely to take place three years after the contract was signed, followed by production a year later. The air force plans to buy 83 MK-1A jets, taking the total number of LCA variants ordered to 123.

Of the 123 planes on order, 20 each are in the initial operationa­l clearance (IOC) and the more advanced final operationa­l clearance (FOC) configurat­ions. The LCA MK-1A will come with additional improvemen­ts over the FOC aircraft, making it the most advanced Tejas variant so far. The Tejas received FOC for induction into the IAF as a combat-ready fighter at a ceremony held here on Wednesday.

The MK-1A will come with digital radar warning receivers, external self-protection jammer pods, active electronic­ally scanned array radar, advanced beyond-visual-range missiles and significan­tly improved maintainab­ility. Madhavan said HAL was exploring opportunit­ies to export the LCA to countries in north Africa and the Asia Pacific. The IAF plans to order more than 210 LCA Mk-2 fighters in the long term.

Madhavan said the stateowned plane maker was also expecting an order for 18 more Sukhoi-30 fighters from the IAF. Compared to an optimum strength of 42-plus units required to fight a two-front war, the count of the IAF’S fighter squadrons has shrunk to 31, the lowest in over a decade. The IAF is planning to buy 21 MIG-29 fighters from Russia to arrest the steep decline in its combat potential.

Asked to comment on Congress president Rahul Gandhi’s allegation­s that the government had ignored and ill-treated HAL, Madhavan said that was not the case. “Had we been ignored, we wouldn’t have got orders. And we look forward to more orders,” he said. Amid a flurry of reports that HAL was facing a financial crisis and had been borrowing from banks, the company said it was financiall­y stable.

HAL’S director (finance) CB Ananthakri­shnan said the firm’s reserves were healthy and the only issue was pending payments from the armed forces. “That is being sorted out,” he said.

On the controvers­y surroundin­g the Rafale fighter jet deal, Madhavan said the issue was a fight between others and HAL didn’t want to be dragged into it.

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