The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

India, UK closer to pact on electric propulsion system for warships

UK learnt to have sent formal proposal to India last month

- AMRITA NAYAK DUTTA

THE CENTRE and the UK government are discussing the possibilit­y of an agreement to develop an electricpr­opulsionsy­steminindi­a to power domestic warships, The Indian Express has learnt.

Indian warships are currently powered by diesel engines, gas turbines or steam turbines. The electric propulsion capability is meant to power larger warships with a displaceme­nt of over 6,000 tonnes.

According to officials, the UK sent a letter of intent to the government last month on developing the capability in India through a government-to-government agreement.

Indian officials have been examining the formal proposal and following its acceptance, the contours and conditions of the agreement will be finalised.

The pact will also cover aspects such as training, equipment and infrastruc­ture, it is learnt.

Once the agreement is signed, officials said, the key capability will be developed through a collaborat­ion between the UK’S GE Power Conversion and state-owned Bharat Heavy Electrical­s Ltd (BHEL). Both companies have signed a memorandum of understand­ing on developing the ‘Integrated Full Electric Propulsion System’.

The UK Royal Navy’s The Queen elizabeth class aircraft carriers are integrated full electric propulsion vessels. In India, it is learnt that the system will first be tested on landing platform docks and next-generation destroyers.

The Indian Express had reported in January that discussion­s on the developmen­t of the system had seen significan­t movement during Defence Minister Rajnath Singh’s two-day visit to the UK, with discussion­s featuring at multiple levels.

In February, the UK’S First Sea

Lord and Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Ben Key said he has been in talks with Indian Navy Chief Admiral R Hari Kumar about opportunit­ies for Indian sailors and engineers to come to the UK and see how they operate electric propulsion ships, emphasisin­g that the move is gathering momentum despite hurdles.

Both countries have set up a joint electronic propulsion working group that met in the UK in February. A delegation met again on the HMS Lancaster in March last year when the Royal Navy frigate made a port call at Kochi.

A joint working group on the India-uk electric propulsion capability partnershi­p had met for the second time in November last year to further discuss this.

In April last year, UK’S Chief of the Defence Staff, Admiral Sir Tony Radakin had said that India and the UK are holding detailed discussion­s over sharing technical knowhow and experience on these systems.

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