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Strategic national producer Midhani on high growth curve
American, Japanese and European nuclear non-proliferation officials are keenly aware that Hyderabad-based Mishra Dhatu Nigam (Midhani), supplies key materials for Indias nuclear, space and missile programmes. Midhani figures on all these countries Entity Lists, which have legally blocked supplies of materials, know-how and equipment.
But this international blockade has been in vain, I learn, during an exclusive visit to this most secretive of defence PSUs. Despite the sanctions, says Chairman and Managing Director (CMD), K Narayana Rao, Midhani today manufactures the worlds best maraging steel, a critical component in nuclear reactors, fuel enrichment centrifuges, missiles and space rockets. The Indian Space Research Organisations GSLV rockets are clad in Midhanis maraging steel.
Such breakthroughs in strategic materials have placed Midhani in an unusual position. With international sanctions still in place, Midhani has joined one of the worlds most challenging, futuristic and expensive projects: The International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, or ITER, a $10 billion, multinational project that aims to generate electricity through nuclear fusion by 2018. India joined the project in 2005.
We have produced a material called Low Activation Ferretic Martinsitic Steel, which the ITER project urgently needs, explains a Midhani scientist. This steel must have very low activation, allowing it to be placed in a highly radioactive environment (e.g. inside a reactor) without becoming highly radioactive itself. The ITER authorities are presently evaluating it at the Institute of Plasma Research in Gandhinagar.
This foray into ITER is a one-time thing. Midhani remains a boutique manufacturer, focused exclusively on high-performance materials for Indias space, nuclear and defence programmes, to save these from being hostage to a supplier abroad. This is production at the cutting edge, groping in the dark, mixing and matching elements to develop materials that users have defined only as a set of properties.
We experiment, we play with Molly, explains Narayana Rao, describing the search for special alloys. Noting my startled look, he elaborates, Molly is short for molybdenum, an element that gives special properties to steel.
Midhani works in close partnership with the Defence Materials Research Laboratory (DMRL), located next door. DMRL, focusing on fundamental research, develops new alloys and materials; Midhani scales up DMRLs laboratory production into industrial production.
Set up in 1972, Midhanis mandate was to indigenously produce materials for Indias strategic programmes, without regard to cost or profitability. Today, Midhani delivers not only critical materials but hefty profits as well. Midhani is now a Mini Ratna, Category-1 company; its profits have gone up six-fold in the past four years, to Rs 40 crore in 2008-09.
With Midhanis regular customers ramping up operations, that bottom line is poised to grow. From an average of four to five launches a year, Indian Space Research Organisation is stepping up to eight launches per year. And since nuclear power generation is a growth sector, the demand for reactor materials is likely to rise sharply. BHEL and L&T have got a steam generator order for the Indian 700 Mw Pressurised Heavy Water Reactor (PHWR), says Narayana Rao. I need to be ready with my equipment and materials.
The older Indian reactors, such as those at Kalpakkam, are also replacing critical components. Only Midhani supplies the metals needed for this.
Midhani has begun a Rs 200-crore expansion plan, with Rs 100 crore from its internal accruals, supplemented by Rs 100 crore of equity participation by the MoD. It is adding a high-tech, 10-tonne vacuum arc refining (VAR) furnace, in which molten metal is purified by dripping it, drop-by-drop, through vacuum. The impurities, which become gas at those temperatures, are sucked away by the vacuum.
Also being procured is a 6,000-tonne forge press, to press steel into sheets as thin as four millimetres, needed for Indias rocket programme.
Today, Im running 2,000 tonnes of products per year, says Midhanis CMD. When the expansion plan is completed by 2010-2011, our output will double to 4,000 tonnes. Turnover will go from Rs 300 crore to Rs 500 crore.
Strategic national producer Midhani on high growth curve
American, Japanese and European nuclear non-proliferation officials are keenly aware that Hyderabad-based Mishra Dhatu Nigam (Midhani), supplies key materials for Indias nuclear, space and missile programmes. Midhani figures on all these countries Entity Lists, which have legally blocked supplies of materials, know-how and equipment.
But this international blockade has been in vain, I learn, during an exclusive visit to this most secretive of defence PSUs. Despite the sanctions, says Chairman and Managing Director (CMD), K Narayana Rao, Midhani today manufactures the worlds best maraging steel, a critical component in nuclear reactors, fuel enrichment centrifuges, missiles and space rockets. The Indian Space Research Organisations GSLV rockets are clad in Midhanis maraging steel.
Such breakthroughs in strategic materials have placed Midhani in an unusual position. With international sanctions still in place, Midhani has joined one of the worlds most challenging, futuristic and expensive projects: The International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, or ITER, a $10 billion, multinational project that aims to generate electricity through nuclear fusion by 2018. India joined the project in 2005.
We have produced a material called Low Activation Ferretic Martinsitic Steel, which the ITER project urgently needs, explains a Midhani scientist. This steel must have very low activation, allowing it to be placed in a highly radioactive environment (e.g. inside a reactor) without becoming highly radioactive itself. The ITER authorities are presently evaluating it at the Institute of Plasma Research in Gandhinagar.
This foray into ITER is a one-time thing. Midhani remains a boutique manufacturer, focused exclusively on high-performance materials for Indias space, nuclear and defence programmes, to save these from being hostage to a supplier abroad. This is production at the cutting edge, groping in the dark, mixing and matching elements to develop materials that users have defined only as a set of properties.
We experiment, we play with Molly, explains Narayana Rao, describing the search for special alloys. Noting my startled look, he elaborates, Molly is short for molybdenum, an element that gives special properties to steel.
Midhani works in close partnership with the Defence Materials Research Laboratory (DMRL), located next door. DMRL, focusing on fundamental research, develops new alloys and materials; Midhani scales up DMRLs laboratory production into industrial production.
Set up in 1972, Midhanis mandate was to indigenously produce materials for Indias strategic programmes, without regard to cost or profitability. Today, Midhani delivers not only critical materials but hefty profits as well. Midhani is now a Mini Ratna, Category-1 company; its profits have gone up six-fold in the past four years, to Rs 40 crore in 2008-09.
With Midhanis regular customers ramping up operations, that bottom line is poised to grow. From an average of four to five launches a year, Indian Space Research Organisation is stepping up to eight launches per year. And since nuclear power generation is a growth sector, the demand for reactor materials is likely to rise sharply. BHEL and L&T have got a steam generator order for the Indian 700 Mw Pressurised Heavy Water Reactor (PHWR), says Narayana Rao. I need to be ready with my equipment and materials.
The older Indian reactors, such as those at Kalpakkam, are also replacing critical components. Only Midhani supplies the metals needed for this.
Midhani has begun a Rs 200-crore expansion plan, with Rs 100 crore from its internal accruals, supplemented by Rs 100 crore of equity participation by the MoD. It is adding a high-tech, 10-tonne vacuum arc refining (VAR) furnace, in which molten metal is purified by dripping it, drop-by-drop, through vacuum. The impurities, which become gas at those temperatures, are sucked away by the vacuum.
Also being procured is a 6,000-tonne forge press, to press steel into sheets as thin as four millimetres, needed for Indias rocket programme.
Today, Im running 2,000 tonnes of products per year, says Midhanis CMD. When the expansion plan is completed by 2010-2011, our output will double to 4,000 tonnes. Turnover will go from Rs 300 crore to Rs 500 crore.
Strategic national producer Midhani on high growth curve