The P-8I interior, where five crew members monitor the aircraft's sensors for enemy contacts during each mission
By Ajai
Shukla
Seattle,
USA
Business Standard, 23rd Nov 16
In 2012,
the Indian Navy became the first non-US military to field the Boeing P-8
Poseidon, paying $2.1 billion for eight of these cutting-edge multi-mission
maritime aircraft that patrol vast stretches of ocean to detect and destroy
enemy submarines and warships.
Yet, India
has lost the advantage of being first-mover. Australia’s new P-8 aircraft,
which arrived in that country last Wednesday, is significantly more capable
than the Indian version. So too will be the British version of the P-8.
The reason:
poor contracting by New Delhi. The Australian and British contracts with Boeing
provide for automatic upgrade of their P-8s, in tandem with each new upgrade of
the US Navy P-8s, a process that continues round the year through the
aircraft’s service life. India’s contract for the P-8I has no such provision.
Australia’s
and the UK’s automatic upgrades are embedded in what is termed a “spiral upgrade
programme”. Without the upgrades this provides for, India’s P-8Is are steadily lagging
behind the technology curve.
A
follow-on Indian contract signed in July 2016 for four more P-8I aircraft, which
are to be delivered by 2020, will belatedly make up some of this technology lag.
Mark Jordan, chief engineer of the P-8 project, said in Seattle last Monday
that the Indian Navy had provided “a long list of upgrades” for the new aircraft.
Some of those upgrades would also be fitted retrospectively into the first
eight P-8Is.
But
subsequent upgrades and improvements would not be passed automatically to
India’s P-8Is, while Australia and the UK will continue to benefit.
With no
contractual provision for even informing India about new upgrades developed by
the American vendors, the navy would only learn about upgrades from open
sources, such as the internet, and information shared during joint exercises.
From the
start, the navy’s P-8Is were handicapped by Delhi’s refusal to sign up for an
Indo-US communications security agreement called the “Communications and
Information Security Memorandum of Agreement” (CISMOA). Without this the US
cannot legally part with any “CISMOA-controlled equipment”.
Instead,
the navy opted for commercially available equipment that does not permit such secure
networking.
Of all
the weaponry that India has contracted from the US in the last decade --- including
the C-130J Special Operations transporter, C-17 Globemaster III heavy lift
transporter, P-8Is, CH-47F Chinook heavy lift helicopter and AH-64E Apache
attack helicopter --- the P-8I has arguably contributed the most towards strengthening
India’s defence.
With naval
pilots flying long, eight-to-ten hour surveillance missions in the Bay of
Bengal, Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean, India knows exactly what is happening in
these waters. To deal with enemy warships and submarines the P-8I detects, it
has seven tonnes of weaponry on board, including the Harpoon missile and
heavyweight torpedoes.
Even so,
there may be a cost to keeping the P-8I fleet lagging in technology.
The root of
the problem is New Delhi’s out-dated approach to buying weaponry, which acquires
equipment separately from upgrades. Currently, several Indian platforms are
undergoing exorbitantly expensive “upgrade” programmes that cost several times
more than the original purchase. These include Kilo-class submarines; and the Mirage
2000 and MiG-29 fighters.
In
contrast, buyers like Australia and the UK incorporate continuous upgrade programmes
into the procurement contract, keeping the equipment current rather than paying
for “upgrading” several decades down the line. This involves sharing the cost
of upgrade development with the vendors. In return real-time upgrades translate
into a continuous technology edge.
For
example, Australia’s 24 F/A-18 Super Hornets, which began delivery in 2010,
have been kept at the same cutting edge as the US Navy’s Super Hornets through
a “spiral upgrade programme” included in the contract.
The P-8I, which
is engineered on a Boeing 737-800/900 airliner, is built to cater for continuous
upgrades through its service life. Boeing engineers point to its 60 per cent
power reserve, 25 per cent cooling reserve and 200 cubic feet of unutilised space.
Its software has “advanced modular architecture that allows for quick expansion
and affordable growth of capabilities.”
Says
Jordan: “As threats evolve, you can modify and upgrade the mission systems and
stay in front of the threat for a very long time.”
All the military equipment sourced from USA will meet yhe same Fate without cismoa
ReplyDeleteAjai,
ReplyDeleteThe continuous upgrade is an OEM scam, where one has to pay an AMC fees annually.
The Indian approach is smarter, wherein we choose what upgrades we want, instead of paying for all superfluous stuff that we may not need.
One time upgrades cost less than paying an annual fees.
With regards to CIMOSA, that involved proprietary US Technology, and as Wikileaks saga indicates, its the US that snoops on its allies. India choosing BEL communication equipment keeps our communication out of US hands.
In my opinion: Buy some with complete upgrade package as other navies. Contract base jetliners (commercial stock with military grade built) and install our own equipment and compete to keep it uprated by half a generation ahead of the original. This is what Indians can do best and this is what we should do. after all we are the core of this world's R&D in any company you can think of today.
ReplyDeleteNSR says ---
ReplyDeleteSpiral and Evolutionary upgrades are a must to keep the product free of bugs and operating smoothly...
All the softwares and even some hardware requires periodic upgrades...
India and its contracting personnel must learn a lot...
USA may ask for signing of CISMOA but it is worth keeping $20 billion worth of P-8I, C-17, C-130J, Apaches, etc in fighting condition...
Good article and everyone must learn something from it...
This may not be anything to be alarmed about. This is where Make in India comes in. The automatic upgrades comes at a price. It will keep India eternally shackled to foreign purchases. DRDO and smart dedicated private designers must be encouraged to develop the new systems which will be required 10 years down the road.
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