What's new

Indian firms tool up for defense orders on Modi's 'buy India' pledge

Daedalus

BANNED
Joined
Aug 8, 2012
Messages
842
Reaction score
2
Country
India
Location
China
Some of India's biggest companies are pouring billions of dollars into manufacturing guns, ships and tanks for the country's military, buoyed by the new government's commitment to upgrade its armed forces using domestic factories.

India, the world's largest arms importer, will spend $250 billion in the next decade on kit, analysts estimate, to upgrade its Soviet-era military and narrow the gap with China, which spends $120 billion a year on defense.

Under the last government, procurement delays and a spate of operational accidents - especially dogging the navy - raised uncomfortable questions over whether India's armed forces are capable of defending its sea lanes and borders.

Even before his landslide election victory in May, Prime Minister Narendra Modi promised to assert India's military prowess and meet the security challenge posed by a rising Chinaand long-running tensions with Pakistan.

Within weeks of becoming prime minister, he boosted defense spending by 12 percent to around $37 billion for the current fiscal year and approved plans to allow more foreign investment into local industry to jump-start production.

Launching a new, Indian-built naval destroyer last week, Modi said: "My government has taken important steps in improving indigenous defense technology ... We can guarantee peace if our military is modernized."

This build-up comes as Southeast Asian nations expand their own defense industries, spurred by tensions with China. India, reliant on a state defense industry that often delivers late and over budget, risks being caught flat-footed.

"The opportunity is huge," said M.V. Kotwal, president (Heavy Engineering) at Larsen and Toubro Ltd, one of India's biggest industrial houses.

"We really expect quicker implementation. There are signs that this government is very keen to grow indigenisation," added Kotwal, referring to increasing domestic production.

Tata Sons [TATAS.UL], a $100 billion conglomerate, said last month it will invest $35 billion in the next three years to expand into new areas with a focus on a handful of sectors including defense.

Larsen is putting $400 million into a yard to build ships for the navy, while Mumbai-based Mahindra Group is expanding a facility that makes parts for planes, including for the air force, and investing in armored vehicle and radar production.

The companies are being lured by the prospect of lucrative returns on their investments as the Modi government has pledged to make "buy Indian" the default option for future orders.

Larsen is targeting a fourfold increase in annual defense revenue to $1 billion within the next five years.

Critics of indigenisation argue that producing gear - especially in the lumbering state sector - is more costly than buying from abroad. Such deals can add layers of bureaucracy, increasing risks of corrupt dealings.

Indian industry is renowned for its ability to adapt, yet questions remain whether the private sector can come up with the solutions needed to bring armed forces into the 21st century without sufficient access to world-class foreign technology.



DELAYS

Some companies are also skeptical of the government's commitment to grow the private market given New Delhi's history of delays and order cancellations, and the traditionally strong ties between the military and state-run manufacturers.

They cite the case of a $10 billion Future Infantry Combat Vehicle (FICV) program. Conceived in 2009, the defense ministry invited three private players and the Ordnance Factory Board, a state entity, to bid for the 2,600-vehicle contract but suddenly withdrew the letter of intent in 2012.

Bidders included Mahindra and Tata, which is developing a vehicle along with Lockheed Martin Corp and General Dynamics Corp that could compete for a future contract, said Rahul Gajare, an analyst at Edelweiss Securities.

A quick decision to relaunch the program would demonstrate Modi's resolve, said S.P. Shukla, who heads Mahindra's defense business. Past tenders have stalled amid wrangling over whether or not to allow state manufacturers to bid and under what terms.

Larsen's Kotwal said its Kattupalli shipyard in south India has yet to receive any orders for warships or submarines despite being designed to do just that and despite past government pledges to build at least two submarines in private yards.

In the meantime, the yard has switched to constructing and repairing commercial vessels.

"The policy in India has been right since 2006. The problem has been implementation," said Rahul Chaudhry, CEO at Tata Power SED, which makes rocket launchers, sensors and radars.

Local firms have captured a fraction of the Indian defense market since it first opened to private participation in 2001. Consecutive governments have handed orders to state factories or to foreign giants like Boeing, Lockheed and BAE Systems.

Gajare at Edelweiss estimates total India private sector revenues from defense, including overseas orders, at below $2 billion last year, less than 6 percent of the country's defense spending.

Indian firms tool up for defense orders on Modi's 'buy India' pledge| Reuters
 
. . . . . . .
At least the new GOI is talking about defense industry, someone has to bring it out of the slumber the Saint put it into.

:disagree: Oh please, did you missed out the last years with change of procurement policy to include Indian privat industry, increased ToT and offsets? FICV, howitzer, Avro replacement..., all competitions where foreign vendors have to team up with Indian industry and produce in India. That's not a new invention now, nor is the idea of developing India to a defence production hub. All that is new now, is the hike in FDI (which had come anyway no matter who had won the election) and the loosen up in the banning of firms under corruption charges (although not related to this matter). So it is indeed a follow on to the policy that India has for years, the only difference is, that the privat industry with the FDI hike finally seems to get interested in the market and putting more own effort in to. That however is long overdue, the Avro replacement could had been fixed by now, if the privat industry had shown more interest, instead of demanding a bigger order.
 
. .
Within weeks of becoming prime minister, he boosted defense spending by 12 percent to around $37 billion for the current fiscal year

Interim Defence Budget 2014-15
At `2,24,000 crore (approximately $37.333 billion, assuming exchange rate of `60 to a US dollar), the interim defence budget for 2014-15 accounts for 12.70 per cent of the total central government expenditure, up 0.47 per cent from the last year. This is as good as it gets.

..:: India Strategic ::. MoD Updates: Interim Defence Budget 2014-15


So much for boosting, but again, the new governmeant took nearly the same budget that the older proposed, with some minor differences.
 
.
India's new defence policy to open $100 bln market

30.10.2009

Indian defence companies will gain access to a potential $100 billion market over the next 10 years, following a new policy that allows domestic firms to bid for large defence contracts, officials said on Friday...

...Indian companies until the policy change were not invited by the government to bid for big government defence projects and were left to supplying locally made non-combative equipment for the defence forces...

With foreign countries reluctant to share advanced technology with India, the government wants to encourage private defence companies to enter the arms market, officials say.

"The field is now open for them to come and bid for any project along with the world's best. The government is giving them an opportunity to expand their capabilities," Sitanshu Kar, the defence ministry spokesman said.

Local companies are free to bid for projects involving tanks, artillery and aircrafts, Kar said.

"This move can also save costs and help us turn India into a major production hub in the near future," Kar said...

..."The current review is primarily focused on two essential areas of promoting and facilitating wide participation of defence industry and enabling transparency and integrity in all acquisitions," defence minister A.K. Antony said at a conference...

...Foreign defence companies have welcomed the government move.

"The government is very forward leaning and the steps we view as a sign of the government's confidence in the maturity of the Indian industry," Vivek Lall, India country head for Boeing Integrated Defense Systems said on Friday.

India's new defence policy to open $100 bln market
 
.
Searching for the ideal FDI in defence production

...Mr. Jaitley was also in consonance with the policy sentiment that has evolved within the government over many years. As far back as in 2004, key economists argued before the Planning Commission that 100 per cent FDI in high technology would enable India to reduce or limit its technology imports; in 2008, the National Manufacturing Competitiveness Council constituted by former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had recommended FDI to facilitate technology transfer and enhance manufacturing in strategic sectors like aerospace; four years back, the Commerce Ministry had recommended 74 per cent FDI (a recommendation that remains despite the exit of the United Progressive Alliance government). But former Defence Minister A.K. Antony had vetoed this, deeming it “politically unwise...

Searching for the ideal FDI in defence production - The Hindu
 
.
ANd this bloody sonia says that they follow our policy and take credit of our work.



You CONgress keeps putting its foot in its mouth! Talk is cheap. It doesn't matter what you say or dream of, the only thing that matters is EXECUTION of that idea or plan. That's what Sonia doesn't understand. HEr family has been yapping for decades with very little done. ANd whateverid done is mired in controveresy, corruption and inefficiency. How come they never mention the fact that they never cleaned up corruption all these decades?
 
. . .

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom