The SEP infantry combat vehicle developed by BAE Systems' Swedish arm for potential users. The FICV will be larger, more lethal and able to swim, something that no contemporary ICV does other than the Indian Army's BMP-2
By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 28th June 12
Last week, the MoD flagged off India’s
first competitive development of a major military system, the high tech
Tactical Communications System. Now all eyes are on the second, with the MoD
finalizing the two winners in the four-cornered contest to develop a Future
Infantry Combat Vehicle (FICV) for the army. While figures are tentative, this
is by far India’s biggest-ever land systems contract, the Rs 50-60,000 crore
production of 2600 FICVs to replace the army’s venerable Russian BMP-2.
Of the four contestants that submitted
proposals to the MoD in Oct 2010 --- Tata Motors; the Mahindra Group; L&T;
and the MoD-owned Ordnance Factory Board (OFB) --- the MoD will select two as
“Development Agencies,” or DAs, who will each design and build a prototype of
the futuristic vehicle. The better one will be selected as the final FICV
design, which will go into production.
The MoD is pursuing this project under the
“Make” procedure of the Defence Procurement Procedure of 2008 (DPP-2008), under
which Indian vendors develop major defence platforms. The MoD funds 80% of the
cost of developing a prototype that must be at least 30% indigenous; the Indian
DAs pays the remaining 20%.
The FICV will be a tracked, lightly
armoured, off-road vehicle that can zoom over sand dunes or across a river.
Operated by a three-man crew --- a commander, a driver and a gunner --- it will
also carry seven fully equipped infantrymen into battle protecting them while
they are aboard from bullets and shrapnel. The FICV’s strike power --- an
anti-tank missile; a rapid-fire cannon; a 7.62 mm machine gun; and a grenade
launcher --- will enable it to destroy enemy tanks, ICVs, missile carriers,
attack helicopters and infantry.
“The FICV will be a 22-24 tonne vehicle
with the strike power of a 45 tonne main battle tank (MBT),” predicts Brigadier
(Retd) Khutab Hai, who heads the defence business of the Mahindra Group.
The army’s insistence on an amphibious FICV
constitutes a key design challenge. The generals believe an ability to quickly
swim across rivers would be a battle-winning ability in the riverine Punjab
plains. The BMP-2, its current ICV, is fully amphibious. But not since the
Soviet Union days has any army inducted a fully amphibious ICV.
Since Oct 09, when the MoD approved the
FICV project, private sector aspirants like the Mahindras, Tata Motors and
L&T have put in place the designers and technical facilities needed for developing
the complex FICV in the MoD’s tight timeframes. Now there is concern that, 20
months after submitting their project proposals to the MoD in Oct 2010, the
winning proposals have not yet been announced. According to the MoD’s own
timelines, this evaluation should have been completed in 8 months.
“The Mahindra Group has invested Rs 30
crore in putting together our FICV team. For two years, we have trained our
people, working with our technology partners, BAE Systems, in Sweden; and
Rafael in Israel. We are looking for an early decision from the MoD. Keeping
this team idle costs us money,” says Brig Hai.
Business Standard visited the Mahindra
Group’s facility in Palwal, Haryana, where its joint venture company, Defence
Land Systems India (Mahindra, 74%: BAE Systems 26%), has set up a high-tech
Systems Integration Laboratory that will spearhead the FICV design process.
L&T, too, hopes for an early decision.
It has set up a design facility at Talegaon, and tied up with technology
partners like CMI of Belgium. Interestingly, L&T is looking to Indian
company, Ashok Leyland, to play a role in the automotive aspects of the FICV.
“L&T’s design strengths are well known. Many hours of skilled engineering
have gone into the innovative design that we have presented to the MoD,” says
MV Kotwal, L&T’s heavy engineering chief.
Meanwhile, uncertainty clouds the Tata’s
proposal, which has German giant, Rheinmetall, as a technology partner. MoD
sources say that at least one of Tata’s rivals has objected, pointing out that
the CBI is investigating Rheinmetall Air Defence for allegedly bribing former
Ordnance Factory Board chairman, Sudipta Ghosh. It is unclear whether the MoD’s
delay in finalising the DAs for the FICV is related to this.
The MoD has not responded to an emailed
query from Business Standard on this question?
The MoD says that programmes like the FICV,
under the “Make” category of the DPP, will be key to developing India’s private
defence industry. Vivek Rae, the MoD’s procurement chief, stated during the Defexpo
2012 international defence exhibition in New Delhi in March, that the MoD would
soon announce many more “Make” projects.
“There will be a list of 150-180 ‘Make’
projects that (the MoD) will put on the web. With Indian companies tying up
with one another and competing, I think we could energise the industrial base
of the country. The sheer act of design and development, sharing of risks and
sharing of costs (in an 80:20 ratio) will be a very significant move forward,”
said Rae.
sir why only tracked ICV's i thought there will be a wheeled version !!!!
ReplyDelete@ Ajai sir
ReplyDeleteWhat you are saying about FICV gives clear signal that Abhay ICV is now well and truly dead.
Also it looks like the FICV will be used as a light tank (for mountain warfare) considering the amount of firepower it will have.
By the way its a good omen for private defense players in India as after RM Antony removed a DPSU from preferred suppliers list, giving them a chance to gain foot.
But what needs to be seen is that whether exports of FICV will be allowed in future and if the loser is brought in for joint production.
Hope better sense prevails
thanks
Joydeep Ghosh
The FICV will be a 22-24 tonne vehicle with the strike power of a 45 tonne main battle tank (MBT),” predicts Brigadier (Retd) Khutab Hai
ReplyDeleteNo ICV can match a MBT... An ICV would always avoid a MBT not take it head on... It is far inferior in armour & weaponry...
The move in this "make" direction is welcome - reflects political will towards indigenisation of this massive arms industry
ReplyDelete20 months and running against an 'own timeline' of 8 months ?! Wonder wat our MOD guys do during Office hours!
ReplyDeleteJoydeep, clearly you didnt know that the Abhay was a TD program meant to demo technologies for a FICV program and not a product by itself!! It achieved its purpose and allowed the Army to see what was achievable and what was required, which is now in the FICV GSQR!! The pvt companies are likely to approach DRDO for systems developed by the Abhay IFV which is another spinoff of the program!!
ReplyDeleteDear Blogg owner.Clear ur thoughts..FICV will mostly have wheeled vehicles and small no. of tracked ones....Search the internet and u find it everywhere
ReplyDeleteoff road FICVs... ??
ReplyDeleteIndia and its Armoured Corps remains stuck with Pakistan !!
Its high time we out sourced the production to pvt sector, Fire power is inadequate . what about night fighting capability ?? An area where weare really blind !!!
ReplyDeleteBut i thought that Tata's were partnering Rhinemetall Land Systems and that RAD,Zurich is the black listed company.So whats the fuss about!!
ReplyDeleteThe Korean K21 IFV is amphibious.
ReplyDelete