By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 26th June 2015
The international maritime boundary line (IMLB) between India
and Sri Lanka, frequently violated by fishermen, gun-runners and smugglers,
will soon be under tighter watch by the Rustom-1 unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)
--- a drone developed by the Defence Research & Development Organisation
(DRDO).
The DRDO is working with the navy to fit an Automatic
Identification System (AIS) on the Rustom-1, to identify Indian fishing vessels
along the IMLB. The AIS transmits an “interrogator” signal that reflects back from
transponders fitted on every Indian fishing boat.
That would allow the Rustom-1 to identify Indian fishing boats,
and to quickly detect those straying into Sri Lankan waters. In such an event,
or if it detects an unidentified boat in Indian waters, the UAV alerts a ground
control station (GCS) on the Indian coast through a real-time digital data
link.
Currently, the Indian Navy monitors this maritime boundary ---
running across the Palk Strait and Gulf of Mannar --- with Dornier-228 manned
aircraft, and Israeli-built Heron and Searcher UAVs. These operate from INS
Parundu, a naval air base near Ramanathapuram District, Tamil Nadu. Since these
aircraft do not have AIS systems, they cannot differentiate Indian vessels from
Sri Lankan.
Colombo complains that Tamil Nadu fishermen deliberately poach
from Sri Lanka’s rich fishing grounds, which are exploited by fewer fishing
vessels than India’s crowded waters. Earlier this year, Premier Ranil
Wickramasinghe controversially threatened Indian fishermen that they could be
shot if they poached on the livelihood of fishermen from Jaffna, Sri Lanka’s
northernmost province.
According to figures submitted by the government to the Madras
High Court in 2012, the Sri Lankan Navy has fired 167 times on Indian fishing
vessels over the preceding two decades, killing 85 and injuring 180 fishermen.
Sri Lanka also arrested 746 Indian fishermen, duly releasing all but five.
Tamil Nadu’s fishing community demands the Indian navy and coast
guard must protect them from the Sri Lankan Navy.
For that reason, the navy has welcomed the DRDO’s plan to modify
the Rustom-1 for this task by fitting it with AIS. The Rustom-1 was never
intended to enter service; it was meant to be a “flying test bed” for proving
sensors and data links meant for the Rustom-2, which would be operationally
deployed as a system much like the successful US Predator drone.
Now, however, the navy has agreed the Rustom-1 could conduct
maritime surveillance, after the DRDO enhances it to fly missions of 8-10
hours. “We are replacing the existing data link, which weighs about 14
kilogrammes, with a newer data link that weighs just 4 kilogrammes. We will
shave off another 25 kilogrammes from the flying package. That will give us the
‘persistence’ we need, which the means the ability to remain for long over the
mission area”, explains a senior DRDO project manager.
The DRDO’s key operational challenge is to transmit data from
the UAV all through an 8-hour surveillance mission, during which the Rustom-1
would fly about 1,500 kilometres. The data link with the GCS, however, has a
range of just 200 kilometres. Before the Rustom-1 goes out of range from one
GCS, it would have to transfer the data link, in mid-flight, to another closer
GCS. The DRDO says this challenge has already been met.
What remains unresolved is the task of fitting AIS transponders
in the tens of thousands of fishing boats that operate from Tamil Nadu. After
the 26/11 Mumbai terror attack, a national coastal security task force had
decided to fit AIS transponders on all of India’s two lakh fishing vessels.
This has not been done.
“We will take 6-8 months to fit the Rustom with an AIS and make
it lighter. Six months more will go in testing the final platform. So the
government has about a year to fit all fishing vessels with AIS. Without that,
the initiative would serve no purpose”, says the DRDO project manager.
DRDO’s Bangalore-based Aeronautical Development Establishment
(ADE) is leading the Rustom project. The Rustom-1 flying platform is a
commercially purchased kit from Rutan. However, the Rustom-2 has been developed
from scratch with a Rs 1,540 crore budget sanctioned in February 2011. It is
intended to remain on station for up to 24 hours with a payload of over 350
kilogrammes. Private firms, Taneja Aerospace and Trivan Industries are
developing the Rustom-2 airframe.
Why don't they use airships or blimps as they can stay up in the air for far longer?
ReplyDeleteNice initiative from DRDO, an organization that faces challenges far more complex and difficult than those faced by ISRO, one of the most successful institution in the nation and perhaps in the world.
Good utilisation of rustom UAV. The task will be completed when rustom 1 can fire anti surface missile against sea vessel or land targets.
ReplyDeleteHope the AIS cannot be tampered with once fitted Indian vessels. Else it will cause a whole new set of problems.
ReplyDeleteOn top of that it should be a GOI law to to make it illegal to tamper with the AIS instrument. There should also be a device to notify tampering as soon as it takes place.
Did the Rustom ever fly?? What is the timelines for achieving Operational Clearances??
ReplyDeletefine with rustom... power unit... concept & design... medieval... compared... predator...
ReplyDelete