Hindustan Times (Noida)

Centre scans land near airports for aircraft assembly lines

- Anu Sharma anu.sharma@livemint.com

The government has initiated the groundwork for local manufactur­ing of passenger aircraft, two officials aware of the developmen­t said, a move that could help India cut its reliance on importing Airbus and Boeing aircraft.

“The government is looking at sites near airports. The idea is to have enough land available near an airport so that there is runway access for test flights. The aviation ministry is expected to identify 5-6 such airports for this purpose,” one of the two officials said, requesting anonymity.

The civil aviation ministry has been tasked with identifyin­g potential sites with adequate land as the facilities for aerospace manufactur­ing will need large space for assembly lines, aircraft parts, ancillary units and other storage requiremen­ts, the person added.

India can leverage its aircraft design and engineerin­g capacity to realize its ambition to build commercial liners, reducing the country’s reliance on foreign suppliers.

In September, China’s first locally designed and manufactur­ed narrow-body aircraft cleared got a certificat­e from the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China to begin carrying passengers.

On 30 October, Prime Minister Narendra Modi laid the foundation stone of the C-295 transport aircraft manufactur­ing facility, the country’s first in the private sector, in Vadodara, Gujarat. The facility will manufactur­e C-295 aircraft for the Indian Air Force (IAF) through a collaborat­ion between Tata Advanced Systems Ltd and Airbus Defence and Space SA, Spain. This ₹21,935 crore project is the first of its kind in which a private firm will manufactur­e a military aircraft in India. The aircraft can be used for civilian purposes as well.

In his address at the foundation-stone-laying ceremony, Modi said India would soon manufactur­e big passenger aircraft.

“The transport aircraft that will be manufactur­ed here will not only give power to our army but also develop a new ecosystem of manufactur­ing aircraft. Soon, India will witness the passenger aircraft that will be made with the tag of Make In India,” Modi said.

India has the third largest domestic aviation market in the world after US and China. Indian airlines have a fleet of over 700 planes, and the government expects it to grow by around 125 aircraft a year, leading to a capacity of almost 1,500 planes over the next decade.

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