By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 9th May 16
Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar has ordered an intensive
weekly interaction between his office and private defence industry to finalise,
by the end of May, a procedure for nominating “strategic partners” --- each one
a private company nominated as the preferred production agency for a specific
technology area like warships, submarines, aircraft, etc.
At a meeting in his office on April 25, Parrikar encountered
deep divisions within the ministry, industry and the military on the
methodology for choosing strategic partners (SPs), and whether such nomination
would be desirable at all.
On Friday, Parrikar told parliament that the new Defence
Procurement Procedure of 2016 (DPP-2016) was promulgated on March 28. However,
there remains a gaping hole in DPP-2016: an entire chapter on SPs remains to be
added.
Business Standard learns that continuing disagreements stand
in the way of an agreed policy. Ordnance Factories (OFs) and defence public
sector undertakings (DPSUs) see the nomination of private sector SPs as threats
to their long-held monopolies. Meanwhile, smaller private companies worry that
entry barriers --- like size of company, net worth, turnover, etc --- would
bias the selection of SPs in favour of large private sector players.
The idea of private sector SPs is the brainchild of the
ministry-constituted Dhirendra Singh Committee (2014-15). Subsequently, the VK
Aatre Task Force (2015-16) recommended designating one private sector strategic
partner (SP) for each of seven technology areas --- aircraft; helicopters; aero
engines; submarines; warships; guns and artillery, and armoured vehicles. It
recommends two strategic partners each for three other technology segments ---
metallic material and alloys; non-metallic materials; and ammunition, including
smart munitions.
The OF/DPSU establishment, tacitly backed by the Department
of Defence Production (DDP), argue that private sector SPs lack expertise and
experience; and that they could fold up, or exit the defence business, leaving
the equipment they built without life-cycle support.
Meanwhile, defence medium, small and micro enterprises
(MSMEs) told Parrikar that only limited indigenization could be expected by
limiting SPs to large private industry with heavy manufacturing capability but
no high-technology expertise.
HS Shankar, who heads an MSME, Alpha Design Technologies,
told Parrikar: “The hull and turret of a tank are just containers for the high-technology
combat systems inside. Large companies will manufacture the hull and turret,
but, if you want true indigenization, MSMEs that build the complex fire control
systems inside, must be a part of the SP. The current entry gates debar us from
being nominated SPs.”
The ministry is now considering whether private sector
consortiums, which bring together several companies with different skills,
should be SPs rather than individual companies with less diversified skills.
Smaller companies have also raised questions over the
calculation of entry gates. The Aatre Committee recommends that SPs must have
annual turnover of Rs 4,000 crore. It has now been asked whether joint ventures
(JVs) between small Indian companies (that do not meet the turnover requirement)
and global majors that comfortably do, should be eligible. The MoD is examining
the question.
In resolving these questions, there is little clarity even
within the MoD. At the meeting, Parrikar unexpectedly proposed that a company
selected as a SP for, say, helicopters, would not be allocated every helicopter
order. Instead, each helicopter project would be allocated on a case-to-case
basis.
“It is this MoD reluctance to provide assured orders to
private companies that invest in R&D, or in production facilities, that is
at the root of the problem,” complains a defence company chief.
The Aatre Task Force report mentions that the government
should reserve the right to first place orders on OFs/DPSUs; and only after
filling public sector capacity would orders go to the concerned private sector
SP.
MoD insiders believe that, given so many disagreements, the
nomination of SPs may eventually be truncated to fields like fighter aircraft
and submarine production, where contracts are imminent.
Bureaucrats also worry about future allegations of bias in
nominating SPs. “The decisions over nominating private sector companies in
spectrum and coal block allocations led to major scams. Why should the
nomination of SPs be any less contentious?” asks one industry chief.
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