Indian industries should join the sky party: DRDO Chief

The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) chief V K Saraswat fired a ‘guided and guarded missile’ during the opening of the Aero India Seminar here on Monday. “If the Indian aerospace industry has to grow, then one HAL (Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd) and ADA (Aeronautical Development Agency) is not enough. Private industries should step in a big way to propel the growth of aerospace. I have been hearing for many years that the private players are coming in a big way, but I am yet to see them marching in,” the missile expert said.

He said along with the industry, the academic institutions should join hands to grab the opportunities that defence sector offered. “The future technologies need indigenous support in a big way and I hope the private players rise to the occasion,” Saraswat said.

Interestingly, Saraswat’s speech had multiple mention of the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) programme, which was kept under wraps till recently. It was evident that the DRDO will use Aero India to put spotlight on the AMCA, which is currently maturing at the ADA. “We have `80,000 crore worth of our own programmes running in India, including the AMCA, UAVs (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles), and UCAVs (Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicles). The AMCA needs special stealth material, radar-observing structures, paints and many more. The opportunities are huge,” Saraswat said.

Later, speaking to Express, the DRDO chief said he could not figure out as to why the Indian private industry is still not inspired by the aerospace activities. “Possibly, the profitability and concerns of immediate returns. If the Indian aerospace activities need to catch-up with the lost time and opportunities, the private industries must join hands with us. The AMCA and FGFA (Fifth Generation Fighter Aircraft) need next-generation systems. Today our missiles programme is 80 per cent indigenous and we would want the same or more to be achieved in the aerospace programmes as well,” Saraswat said.

To the queries by Express based on Saraswat’s call to the industry, Col (retd) H S Shankar, former BEL Director (R&D) and now CMD of Alpha Design Technologies Pvt Ltd, a private firm supporting India’s defence programmes, agreed that major industries are yet to take a plunge into defence programmes in a big way. “But, that is not the case with SMEs (small and medium enterprises) and MSMEs (micro, small and medium enterprises). We have been playing an active role in various DRDO projects,” Col (retd) Shankar said.

R Ramachandra Rao, CEO, Merlinhawk Aerospace Pvt Ltd, Bangalore, felt the SMEs have supported the Indian aviation industry for well over three decades in small, yet significant ways. “The SMEs have initiated new technologies and have participated in major development programmes of the aerospace industry, but have had to do so most of the times on a no-cost, no-commitment basis. The government should encourage the SMEs by extending financial support for development programmes, so as to sustain them,” Rao said.

Former Chief of Air Staff Air Chief Marshal (retd) Fali Major too felt that it is time the smaller private players be given more opportunities during shows like Aero India.

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