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India is Sharing Secrets of Its Predator-Like Drone to Boost Military
India is opening up the designs of its first indigenously developed drones to domestic private companies, seeking to spur further technological advances and encourage manufacturing as Prime Minister Narendra Modi modernizes the military.
Previously secret blueprints for the Rustom drones are being made available under a drive to boost the defense industry, a break from the past practice of relying on state-run companies, according to K. Tamilmani, aeronautical director general at the Defense Research & Development Organisation in New Delhi.
"We’re now talking of sharing everything that we develop," Tamilmani said in an interview. "The concept of public-sector defense companies alone making everything that the Indian armed forces need is gone."
Modeled on General Atomics’ U.S. Predator aircraft, Rustoms are designed for surveillance and target-tracking in areas such as India’s disputed borders with China and Pakistan. Modi’s wider vision is to develop a defense-industrial complex that can improve India’s sometimes poorly equipped forces and curb its reliance on overseas acquisitions.
While Modi has eased restrictions on joint ventures between Indian and foreign defense companies to gain much-needed expertise, Asia’s third-largest economy has a long way to go.
The armed forces can improve the speed at which they get equipment by transferring the defense research organization’s technological know-how, said K. V. Kuber, an independent defense consultant in New Delhi.
One variant of the Rustom that’s already flying will be made by private companies, Tamilmani said in the Sept. 9 interview. He declined to identify which businesses the government is talking to.
Airframe
Taneja Aerospace & Aviation Ltd. and Trivan Industries make the airframe of another version that’s yet to become fully operational, he said, with overall assembly handled by state-run Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd., India’s largest defense contractor.
The Rustom drones took between five and 10 years to develop, according to S. Christopher, who heads the Defense Research & Development Organisation, which is part of India’s Defense Ministry.
Larsen & Toubro Ltd., India’s biggest engineering company, paid a 140-million-rupee ($2.1 million) fee this year for an unmanned aircraft that provides aerial targets for training -- the first defense technology transfer by the government to the private sector, according to Tamilmani.
Larsen & Toubro can export the product if the government approves, as well as use the existing technology to develop a new vehicle, according to the defense research unit. The Mumbai-based company will pay a royalty for each aircraft made under the deal.
Debojyoti Chatterjee, a spokesman for Larsen & Toubro, declined to comment.
$60 Billion
Modi’s government has approved $60 billion of defense purchases since taking office in May last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The Cabinet this week cleared deals for 15 Chinook and 22 Apache helicopters from Boeing Co. for about $3 billion.
About $1 billion from the Boeing deals is set to be recycled back to India under a so-called offset rule, Defense Minister Manohar Parrikar said in New Delhi on Wednesday.
Boeing, Airbus Group SE and BAE Systems Plc are among the companies seeking to profit from Modi’s push to improve India’s military. The government is also in talks with Dassault Aviation SA for the purchase of 36 Rafale fighter jets.
The move to transfer technology to private businesses is long overdue, said Amber Dubey, the New Delhi-based head of aerospace at KPMG.
"Our huge import dependence for defense equipment has a lot to do with the systematic sidelining of the private sector," he said.
India is Sharing Secrets of Its Predator-Like Drone to Boost Military - Bloomberg Business
India is opening up the designs of its first indigenously developed drones to domestic private companies, seeking to spur further technological advances and encourage manufacturing as Prime Minister Narendra Modi modernizes the military.
Previously secret blueprints for the Rustom drones are being made available under a drive to boost the defense industry, a break from the past practice of relying on state-run companies, according to K. Tamilmani, aeronautical director general at the Defense Research & Development Organisation in New Delhi.
"We’re now talking of sharing everything that we develop," Tamilmani said in an interview. "The concept of public-sector defense companies alone making everything that the Indian armed forces need is gone."
Modeled on General Atomics’ U.S. Predator aircraft, Rustoms are designed for surveillance and target-tracking in areas such as India’s disputed borders with China and Pakistan. Modi’s wider vision is to develop a defense-industrial complex that can improve India’s sometimes poorly equipped forces and curb its reliance on overseas acquisitions.
While Modi has eased restrictions on joint ventures between Indian and foreign defense companies to gain much-needed expertise, Asia’s third-largest economy has a long way to go.
The armed forces can improve the speed at which they get equipment by transferring the defense research organization’s technological know-how, said K. V. Kuber, an independent defense consultant in New Delhi.
One variant of the Rustom that’s already flying will be made by private companies, Tamilmani said in the Sept. 9 interview. He declined to identify which businesses the government is talking to.
Airframe
Taneja Aerospace & Aviation Ltd. and Trivan Industries make the airframe of another version that’s yet to become fully operational, he said, with overall assembly handled by state-run Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd., India’s largest defense contractor.
The Rustom drones took between five and 10 years to develop, according to S. Christopher, who heads the Defense Research & Development Organisation, which is part of India’s Defense Ministry.
Larsen & Toubro Ltd., India’s biggest engineering company, paid a 140-million-rupee ($2.1 million) fee this year for an unmanned aircraft that provides aerial targets for training -- the first defense technology transfer by the government to the private sector, according to Tamilmani.
Larsen & Toubro can export the product if the government approves, as well as use the existing technology to develop a new vehicle, according to the defense research unit. The Mumbai-based company will pay a royalty for each aircraft made under the deal.
Debojyoti Chatterjee, a spokesman for Larsen & Toubro, declined to comment.
$60 Billion
Modi’s government has approved $60 billion of defense purchases since taking office in May last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The Cabinet this week cleared deals for 15 Chinook and 22 Apache helicopters from Boeing Co. for about $3 billion.
About $1 billion from the Boeing deals is set to be recycled back to India under a so-called offset rule, Defense Minister Manohar Parrikar said in New Delhi on Wednesday.
Boeing, Airbus Group SE and BAE Systems Plc are among the companies seeking to profit from Modi’s push to improve India’s military. The government is also in talks with Dassault Aviation SA for the purchase of 36 Rafale fighter jets.
The move to transfer technology to private businesses is long overdue, said Amber Dubey, the New Delhi-based head of aerospace at KPMG.
"Our huge import dependence for defense equipment has a lot to do with the systematic sidelining of the private sector," he said.
India is Sharing Secrets of Its Predator-Like Drone to Boost Military - Bloomberg Business