A view of Mazagon Dock's modular yard in which it will build four frigates under Project 17-A
By Ajai Shukla
Mazagon Dock, Mumbai
Business Standard, 23rd July 12
On Sunday, a day after handing over a
brand new stealth frigate, INS Sahyadri, to the Indian Navy, Mumbai-based
warship builder Mazagon Dock Ltd (MDL) has announced the formation of two joint
venture companies, which would help it liquidate an order book that is too
large for it to handle on its own.
A press release from the company today
says that MDL “has signed Share Holder Agreements (SHA) for setting up Joint
Venture (JV) with private shipyards - M/s Pipavav Defence & Offshore
Engineering Co. Ltd. (PDOECL), Mumbai, and M/s Larsen & Toubro, for
construction of surface warships and conventional submarines respectively.”
The release says that the JVs “will
leverage the strengths of the respective JV partners in the public and private
sectors to work out a collaborative strategy for taking the nation towards self
sufficiency in warship construction.”
The release also specifies that MDL may
explore additional JVs “with other leading shipbuilders” for “diversifying its
product profile.”
MDL’s order book would be the envy of
any warship builder. Under construction in MDL’s berths are three destroyers of
Project 15A --- INS Kolkata, Kochi and Chennai --- which would begin joining
the navy’s fleet early next year. Also on order are four more destroyers of
Project 15B, which will be followed soon by four stealth frigates of the
so-called Project 17A.
Meanwhile, in its highly secured East
Yard, MDL is fabricating six Scorpene submarines, all of which are scheduled
(after three years of delay) to join the navy between 2015 and 2018. Also
looming on the horizon is Project 75I, which involves building six more
conventional submarines in parallel with Project 75.
But India’s premier defence shipyard has
neither the space nor the manpower to handle this workload. And so MDL wants to
farm out work to the private sector, capitalising on newly created warship
building capacities in shipyards built by Pipavav and L&T.
“We will synergise our capabilities with
the infrastructure and expertise in the private sector. MDL began identifying a
suitable JV partner last year. Some major players were dissatisfied with the
process (protests from shipyards last year led the MoD to cancel MDL’s
announced JV with Pipavav, and to issue guidelines for forming JVs in
February). We restarted the process, following the MoD’s guidelines… and our
team has now identified L&T as a partner for submarine building, and
Pipavav for surface ships,” says MDL’s chairman, Rear Admiral (Retired) Rahul
Kumar Shrawat.
MoD sources tell Business Standard that
another defence shipyard, Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers, Kolkata
(GRSE), is also exploring JVs with the private sector. GRSE is full to capacity
with building four anti-submarine corvettes in Project 28. It will also built
three stealth frigates (in cooperation with MDL) in Project 17A.
Observers of India’s shipbuilding
programmes regard this shift of production to the private sector as inevitable.
The Indian Navy, the fastest growing of the three services, has a growing
requirement of warships as South Block pays increased attention to India’s
maritime interests, a focus that is intensified by Washington’s “pivot to Asia”
and China’s growing assertiveness in the Western Pacific. In line with this
trend, several private shipyards --- including L&T, Pipavav and ABG ---
have built capabilities.
But L&T, with its proud engineering
pedigree and its accomplishment in the Arihant programme, hardly regards itself
as a junior partner to MDL. L&T has long coveted the long-delayed Project
75I, which involves building six more conventional submarines for the navy in
parallel with the Scorpenes. Says MV Kotwal, who oversees L&T’s defence
business: “The JV can assist MDL with its current orders, but L&T is not
foreclosing its options to pursue submarine orders independently. The MoD knows
that India has two independent entities that are capable of building
submarines: MDL and L&T.”
L&T also challenges the navy’s
insistence on building the first two submarines of Project 75I abroad, with the
next four being built in India. “L&T has invested heavily in skills and
capital and the government must realize that the navy’s requirements can be met
in this country. So the MoD should drastically cut down on importing naval
platforms.
We have what can be called inherent self kill property. At time when these(private) well build shipyards are sitting idle, we are outsourcing our frigate need(Krivak) crying "we don't have enough dry docks to build so many frigates in parallel". I don't get this we don't hire freshers attitude towards these shipyards, specially towards L&T which has experience in building ship no less comples than SSBN.
ReplyDeleteThis is a very good news hope this helps bolster our undrwater force
ReplyDeleteI wonder why government is not considering giving projects to L&T. Its chennai shipyard kattupalli is capable of producing submarines. Giving projects to abroad, i never understand why?
ReplyDeleteThat is a BIG GOLIATH crane at MDL. Did it get installed as part of the modernization drive in the last 2 years?
ReplyDeleteI might be mistaken but at a glance, MDL looks more cleaner, the buildings new and painted and that towering GOLIATH crane...awesome.
Hopefully, we will see changes in shipbuilding too...and the lead time to finish the P-17A will be much lesser than taken for P-15A.
Mr. Ajai Shukla, shame on you for being such a paid writer. How much does L&T pay you.
ReplyDelete