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India To Limit Ship Buys to Domestic Yards
By Vivek Raghuvanshi 12:58 p.m. EDT May 2, 2015


NEW DELHI — The Indian Ministry of Defence has directed future warship and submarine building orders be given only to domestic shipyards.

The Navy has potential orders worth more than US $50 billion over the next 10 years for ship and submarine builds, said a Defence Ministry source.

However, the $12 billion purchase of six conventional submarines with air independent propulsion, for which a request for proposals is being prepared, will still allow foreign participation in the design phase, although the subs will be built only by domestic shipyards, the MoD source added.

As state-owned shipyards have their hands full, private sector yards, which have the facilities but fewer orders, are likely to be the biggest beneficiaries under the new directive, analysts said.

"Private shipyards have not been given adequate opportunity to prove their mettle. There is no doubt that they are more modern and perhaps more efficient and given an opportunity will perhaps outperform the state-owned shipyards. It is too early to judge them as the state-owned shipyards have a five-decade lead in shipbuilding," said Anil Jai Singh, retired Indian Navy commodore.

Navy officials and defense analysts said India has the capability to build warships from the design stage, but will have to rely on imports to meet its weapon needs.

"We have enough first-rate shipyards in India to deliver the ships and submarines that the Navy and Coast Guard need. There is no case for buying from abroad at all," said Sujeet Samadda, a retired Indian Navy commodore.

MoD has asked the Navy to upgrade its design facilities so it can effectively build submarines in the future, the MoD source said.

"It is little known that the Indian Navy has its own in-house warship design organization whose capability has been refined over the years from 1960 onward. Today, the Indian Navy can design and supervise the construction of the most sophisticated warships, all done in-house. Our capability is the envy of other world-class navies," said retired Adm. Sushil Kumar, former chief of the Indian Navy.

An Indian Navy official said 17 different designs, ranging from small craft to destroyers, have been developed by the warship design organization from which more than 80 warships have been built. These include stealth frigates under the Project 17 Shivalik class, three destroyers of the Kolkata class under Project 15A, and anti-submarine warfare corvettes.

In February, the government cleared a proposal to build seven stealth frigates and six nuclear attack submarines worth $16 billion to be designed and built in India. In addition, the Navy will build 16 anti-submarine warfare craft worth $2.5 billion and 12 mine countermeasures vessels (MCMVs) for $5 billion; all of these orders will be placed with domestic yards, the Navy official said.

Last year, MoD scrapped the proposal to award the MCMV deal to Kangnam of South Korea and instead gave the order to state-owned Goa Shipyard when it was found that the South Korean company had used defense agents in pursuing the deal, which is not allowed under Indian defense procurement law.

Indian warship building traditionally has been plagued by delays and cost overruns, but deliveries have improved in recent years, analysts said. Delays related to imports of special steel from Russia have been eliminated because India has begun producing the steel for warship building itself.

"It is not only the Indian Navy which has the problem of delays and cost overruns," said S. Navaneetha Krishnan, a retired Indian Navy commander and naval architect. Timely decisions and delivery of material also are key for shipbuilding projects, he added.

Despite its ability to build ships and subs, India will need to import several systems, especially weapons, analysts said.

"Indigenization [in warship building] has been in the field of hull and metal work, power generation and distribution, motors and pumps, and communication systems," said Shyam Kumar Singh, retired Indian Navy captain. "BrahMos [supersonic anti-ship cruise missile] is the only indigenous missile system. Considering all of this, my guess would be that indigenization would be around 50 percent in warship building."

According to Krishnan, the degree of indigenization is increasing ship after ship being built in India.

Birinder Singh Randhawa, a retired Navy vice admiral, said that while he favors restricting orders to domestic yards, even the homemade systems have some imported content.

"Systems and equipment supplied by Indian suppliers have imported content of varying amounts, especially in the case of weapons and sensors and propulsion systems. Hence the content imported can vary substantially. In the case of destroyers being built under Project 15-B, the propulsion system, main gun, radars and surface-to-air missile systems would have substantial imported content."

Adm. Sushil Kumar admits that shipbuilding will continue to have imported content, but said the Navy is fully capable of ship and sub design and construction.

"No Navy in the world equips its warships with exclusively indigenously developed weapon systems. This is because technology in weapon systems is rapidly changing. So there is need for the Indian Navy to also depend on certain imported systems," he said. "But the Indian Navy can integrate these imported systems because we have our own design capability. If the Indian Air Force or state-owned military aircraft manufacturer Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. had the type of capability which the Indian Navy has developed over the past 50 years, then the need to purchase a Rafale fighter from France would have been a different story."

India To Limit Ship Buys to Domestic Yards
 
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Your work?


Yep, Arts provided by my friend Saurav, and Presentation by myself . :(

I think Vishal will have two islands. Just like French PA2.
Both will be very similar in many aspects.

Seems like most new generation carrier outside US comes with two Control Centers , QE also a good Example

But the INS vishal design yet to started, may be if US helped us We have Single CC, otherwise chances of dual CC. ;)
 
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Pitch to build subs in Bengal

Buoyed by a Rs 20,000-crore order from the Centre to build three stealth frigates called the P17A, defence public sector Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers (GRSE) has said in the blueprint that it will build a yard in the resort town of Raichak, set on a bend in the river 50km south of Calcutta.

A workshop, a dry dock, an assembly and fitting-out jetty, and a "slipway" in Raichak will launch the submarines into the Hooghly's waters before they sail out to sea.

The part of Raichak where the yard has been planned has a draft, or depth, estimated at eight to 10 metres, which will allow the boats to be built, the GRSE chairman and managing director, Rear Admiral (retired) A.K. Verma, told The Telegraph. The boats will be built under the navy's Rs 60,000-crore Project 75 India (P75i).

The Hooghly is largely non-navigable for vessels requiring great depths because of silt as well as berms on the riverbed that often emerge at low tide.

In February this year, GRSE presented the blueprint to an eight-member committee headed by the navy's Controller of Warship Production and Acquisitions, Vice-Admiral Ashok Subhedar. The Subhedar committee had been tasked to recommend which Indian shipyard(s) should be considered for the P75i programme.

The P75i is India's biggest military acquisitions programme, estimated to cost Rs 60,000 crore. Last October, the government decreed that all six submarines in the project should be built in India.

The selected Indian yard(s) would be expected to tie up with one of six global submarine majors: DCNS of France, Rubin Amur (Russia), Navantia (Spain), Thyssenkrupp or HDW (Germany), Kockums (Sweden), and Soryu (Kawasaki, Japan). The Subhedar committee is yet to submit its recommendations.

GRSE was initially ruled out because the Hooghly is not known to allow a draft of more than four to five metres at best.

But GRSE convinced the government to take a serious look at its capabilities after delivering two major warships - the anti-submarine warfare (ASW) stealth corvette INS Kamorta and the Barracuda offshore patrol vessel, India's first warship export (to Mauritius) - in time last year. It also disclosed its plans for Raichak.

A Telegraph team that was given a guided tour of GRSE's restricted-access facilities saw two more ASW corvettes of the P28 Kamorta class being readied for deliveries to the navy at the fitting-out jetty and the main yard, and an amphibious ship, which can beach with troops and armoured vehicles, at a dry dock that slopes into the Hooghly.

Towering above the yards was a Goliath crane, recently built as part of a Rs 600-crore modernisation programme.

"With the technology available today, any yard that can build a warship can build a submarine," GRSE chief Verma said.

"We have just got a Rs 20,000-crore contract for three P17A (stealth frigate) ships that will go on for ten years, and we are transiting from a medium-level shipyard to a major builder capable of meeting international standards - witness our export."

For the submarine-building programme, GRSE is in competition with Mazagon Docks (Mumbai), Goa Shipyard, Hindustan Shipyard (all under the defence ministry), Cochin Shipyard (under the shipping ministry), Pipavav and Larsen & Toubro (both in the private sector).

Only Mazagon Docks and L&T have some experience with submarine-building. French firm DCNS is building six Scorpene submarines at Mazagon Docks; L&T has supplied the hulls for India's Arihant-class nuclear submarines.

In Raichak, the defence shipyard has acquired 100 acres. It is also in talks with the Odisha government to acquire land at Dhamra in Bhadrak district. Verma says the modular design of shipbuilding will allow submarines to be built block by block and integrated in Raichak.

For the Kamorta class, which requires the fitment of underwater sonar (submarine-detection equipment), the yard takes the ship to Visakhapatnam.

A warship-overseeing team from the navy monitors each stage of the shipbuilding process. Its offices are by jetties on the east bank of the Hooghly, concealed by high walls and the dirt and grime and heavy trucks that trundle through the Calcutta suburb's broken roads.

In Raichak, GRSE has planned a workshop for the manufacture of blocks up to 200 tonnes each that would be lowered to the jetties for assembly. The assembled boat would then be taken to a slipway to be launched into the water.

The Calcutta-based defence firm --- which built India's first warship, the INS Ajay, in 1961 --- is also looking at a Rs 2,000-crore order for "midget submarines" (also called "human torpedoes" or "chariots") that the Centre is trying as an experiment in Visakhapatnam. This is part of a 45-year-old navy programme that was recently revived.
 
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The Navy has asked the government to allow a fleet of six nuclear-powered submarines and is also looking at nuclear power as an option for the next sea-borne aircraft carrier, which will be the follow-on to the INS Vikrant currently being built in Kochi.

“We have proposed to the government that in lieu of the conventional submarines we would like to have more nuclear-powered submarines,” Navy Chief Admiral Robin Dhowan told The Tribune today. The decision is pending at the level of the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS), the Admiral said, adding that the number of nuclear-powered submarines sought was six.

The Admiral was referring to the existing submarine plan announced in 1999 which had spoken of having 24 conventional submarines by 2030. It is out of these 24 subs that the Navy wants six to be nuclear powered. At present, India operates 13 conventional vessels and a nuclear submarine, INS Chakra, leased from Russia, while the indigenous nuclear-powered INS Arihant is undergoing sea trials.

The Indian fleet is grossly inadequate to match China. The annual report to the Congress in the US, titled “Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China 2014”, says: “PLA Navy (PLAN) has more than 60 submarines (and) places a high priority on modernisation of its submarine force.”

On the submarine fleet, Admiral Dhowan listed out a multi-pronged plan. First is to ensure timelines are met in the ongoing construction of the six scorpene subs with the first one planned for commissioning next year; second is according “top priority” to the second lot of six such vessels and third is to carry out a refit to extend the life of existing vessels.

About the next sea-borne aircraft carrier, Admiral Dhowan said: “All options are open for the second indigenous aircraft carrier. Nothing has been ruled out. It could be nuclear powered or conventionally powered.”
The Navy, he said, was looking to having three sea-borne carriers in its fleet. “The first indigenous carrier, INS Vikrant, will be inducted by 2018 and now we can plan easily as we can now build such ships on our own,” he said.

Navy’s wish list: 6 nuke subs, N-powered carrier | idrw.org
 
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Ka-31. Source: Russia Helicopter

Russian Helicopters Holding Company has delivered the first batch of two refurbished Ka-31 helicopters to India. The Ka-31, an airborne early warning helicopter, is designed for radar surveillance of air and water spaces, the early detection of surface ships and low-flying targets at long distances (cruise missiles, helicopters and aircraft).

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The Russian Helicopters Holding Company, part of the Rostec State Corporation, has delivered the first batch of refurbished Ka-31 helicopters to India, manufactured by the Kumertauskoye Aviation Production Enterprise (KumAPP).

In 2004, KumAPP delivered nine Ka-31 helicopters to India. Six of these machines required refurbishing before their first scheduled overhaul, for which they were sent back to Kumertau for capital repairs. The first two of these have now been returned to India for further use. The remaining machines will be sent shortly.

A total of 14 Ka-31 helicopters were manufactured for India. To service these machines, a special base was built in the state of Goa. Every year, experts from KumAPP come to India to service these helicopters.

The Ka-31 is designed for radar surveillance of air and water spaces, the early detection of surface ships and low-flying targets at long distances (cruise missiles, helicopters and airplanes). The special equipment allows the helicopter to identify the detected targets, define the parameters and coordinates of their movement, and transmit this information to ships and command centers of the ground forces.

Refurbished Russian Ka-31 helicopters delivered to India | Russia & India Report
 
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Ministry of Defence
08-May, 2015 17:28 IST
Immediate Support Vessels

20 Immediate Support Vessels (ISVs) of the 23 ISVs planned have been commissioned in batches from January 2014 to March 2015 at Mumbai and Vishakhapatnam to patrol the off-shore development areas off the west and east coast respectively. The ISVs have been procured by M/s ONGC and transferred to Indian Navy. As these ISVs have been purchased by ONGC, no funds have been spent by Indian Navy.

This information was given by Defence Minister Shri Manohar Parrikar in a written reply to Shrimati Kothapalli Geetha in Lok Sabha today.
 
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Amazing video compilation of Mig29K operation from INS Viky in Russia.. I hope it's not repost
 
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Navy mulling docking options for repair of vessel - The Hindu
While the newly inducted Russian-origin aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya is undergoing a short refit at the Naval Ship Repair Yard at its homeport in Karwar, the Navy is weighing docking options within the country for the 45,000 tonne carrier’s underwater refit, due by the end of next year.

A top source in the Navy said the choice would be between Pipavav Defence and Offshore Engineering Company and the public-sector Cochin Shipyard, which has been maintaining the underwater package of the outgoing carrier INS Viraat.

“While Pipavav boasts of a dry-dock large enough to take on Vikramaditya for hull-inspection and underwater maintenance, Cochin Shipyard’s dry-dock too fits the bill. It will only require a bit of dredging at the mouth of the dry-dock to take the vessel in,” he said.
 
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NEW DELHI: In the run-up to PM Narendra Modi's visit to China this week, India has studiously kept Japan out of the initial planning for the major Indo-US Malabar naval combat exercise to be held in the Bay of Bengal in October.

Sources on Tuesday said the groundwork being done by India and the US for the Malabar exercise "did not as yet include Japan" despite the two Modi-Obama summits in September and January agreeing to "upgrade" the annual combat manoeuvres.
"The next Malabar planning conference between India and the US is slated for July. Japan does not figure in the talks till now," said a defence ministry source. Instead, the India-Japan naval exercise Jimex, which was held for the first time in 2012, is being separately planned for November.
To avoid provoking China, India leaves Japan out of drill with US - The Times of India
 
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Indonesian Naval Ship 'KRI REGEL' visits Kochi : News & Events : Indian Navy
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Exchange of mementoes between Chief of Staff, Southern Naval Command and Commanding Officer, KRI Rigel

A Hydrography Vessel of Indonesian Navy, KRI Rigel (993) is on a three day visit to Kochi from 29 Apr to 02 May 15. On 29 Apr 15, the Commanding Officer, KRI Rigel Lt Cdr Muhammad Wirda Prayogo called on Rear Admiral RB Pandit, Chief of Staff, Southern Naval Command. Various professional interactions have been planned between the visiting ship and the units of Southern Naval Command during the visit. These interactions include exchange of visits by specialist officers and men from both the navies to each other’s asset. The Indonesian ships staff officers were also hosted at lunch by the Chief of Staff.

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The Indonesian Ship KRI Rigel

KRI Rigel, constructed in France, is a new survey ship equipped with state of art Hydrographic sensors-equipment like Autonomous Underwater vehicle, Remotely Operated Underwater Robot etc. The ship is on a passage to Sabang, Indonesia, post her induction in France. The last port visited by the ship before arriving Kochi was Jeddah. She is scheduled to depart from Kochi on 02 May 15.

Yachting Championship - Navy Open Enterprise Class Conducted : News & Events : Indian Navy
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Navy Open Enterprise Class Yachting Championship 2014-15 was concluded on Friday, 01 May 15 at Indian Naval Watermanship Training Centre (INWTC), Visakhapatnam. The event conducted by INS Circars under the aegis of Eastern Naval Command was held from 28 April to 01 May 15.

A total of 28 participants including 05 ladies took part in this coveted annual competition. A total of eight preliminary races were held to select the finalists. The final race was conducted on 1st May 2015 in which BR Verma Petty Officer (helm) and V Singh LAM (crew) adjudged the runners up while Imolemnok Petty Officer (helm) and SS Yadav MCPO (crew) emerged as winners.

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Rear Admiral Ajendra Bahadur Singh Flag Officer Commanding Eastern Fleet, the Chief Guest at the closing ceremony gave away the prizes to the winners. Speaking on the occasion, Rear Admiral AB Singh stated that the competition stayed true to its cause of encouraging Watermanship activities among the naval fraternity. He also lauded all participants for displaying a high level of sportsmanship and professionalism during the course of the championship and congratulated the prize winners.

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The Enterprise class boat is a two-man sloop-rigged hiking sailing dinghy with distinctive blue sails. One of the largest classes of sailing boats in the world, this Jack Holt design owes its popularity to its excellent qualities both as a cruising and a racing boat. It has an ideal combination of size, weight and power which appeals to men and women of all ages.
 
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This is about $5 million USD, right? What exactly will this money be used to do in starting the IAC-2 project? This much has not become clear, obviously they aren't cutting the steel for her immediately and the final design should already have been completed so that's not going to require any more (significant) funding.

The MoD/IN are still yet to clarify the IAC-2's roadmap i.e. when will her keel be laid? When will she be floated out? When will she be fitter out? When will she undergo trails? When will she be commissioned? We don't even know yet if she is to be nuclear powered (a pretty basic element).


@sancho @Penguin @MilSpec @Capt.Popeye @Water Car Engineer @Chanakya's_Chant @nair @Dillinger
 
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