By Ajai
Shukla
Chennai
Business Standard, 11th Apr 18
The blue
waters of the Bay of Bengal glitter invitingly to our left all through the sweltering
drive from Chennai’s famous Marina Beach to Kovalam, 45 kilometres south of the
city. There is no missing that this is the road to Defexpo 2018 – every 200
metres, Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi’s image beams out from hoardings,
welcoming visitors to India’s premier land and naval systems exhibition.
This will
be the 10th edition of Defexpo, first held in 1999. It continued as a biennial
event in New Delhi until 2016, when Manohar Parrikar hosted it in his home
state, Goa.
Now Defence
Minister Nirmala Sitharaman is putting on a show for the PM in her own home
state, and no stone is being left unturned to impress him. Labourers are
sweeping the helipad where Modi will land, and washing the two-kilometre road
on which he will drive to the Defexpo. To smoothen his ride, highway crews are
ripping out the rubberized rumble strips on this stretch.
Modi’s
programme can accommodate a visit to Chennai only on Thursday – the second day
of the four-day show. So Sitharaman will “open” the show on Wednesday, and then
the PM will “inaugurate” it on Thursday.
Secretary
for Defence Production, Ajay Kumar, has talked up the beauty of the seaside
location. “A big attraction is that this venue is close to nationally important
tourist sites. It is 10 kilometres from Mahabalipuram and close to the
Cholamandalam Artist Village.
Kumar claims
this year’s Defexpo is different from earlier editions, which foreign original
equipment manufacturers (OEMs) attended to showcase their weaponry. This time,
says Kumar, “the message we are sending out through Defexpo is that India is
emerging as a major defence manufacturing hub.”
The MoD claims
that almost 600 Indian companies have bought exhibition space in Defexpo 2018,
the largest ever participation. The number of foreign exhibitors, however, has declined
since the last Defexpo, to about 155 firms.
Defexpo
will host 47 official foreign delegations, 18 ministerial delegations and 20
countries with large delegations. There will also be 75 business delegations.
A notable
feature of the exhibition area is the large seaside space reserved for live
demonstrations by various weapon systems. The defence ministry says Defexpo
2018 has nearly 2,90,000 square feet of exhibition space compared to 2,25,000
square feet in the last edition.
To
encourage micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) to participate, the
defence ministry has given them a 50 per cent discount. Consequently, 20 per
cent of the display space has been taken by MSMEs.
The defence
ministry’s picture of record breaking Indian participation appears rather less
convincing after scrutinizing the attendance. As The Print brought out on
Saturday, public sector enterprises have registered in multiple names,
apparently to create the impression of a successful Defexpo.
For
example, Bharat Electronics (BEL) has registered as ten entities, and the
Defence R&D Organisation’s (DRDO’s) 50-plus laboratories have each
registered individually. The Aeronautical Development Agency, which oversees
the Tejas fighter project, has listed itself as 10 exhibitors, and the Tejas
fighter is listed as five entities. Even Starbucks, which will sell coffee at
the exhibition, has listed itself as an exhibitor.
Strolling
through the exhibition halls, where teams of workers are rushing to ready displays
for the opening, it is apparent that most of the display space has been bought
up by Indian defence public sector entities. The largest displays are by the
DRDO, BEL, the Ordnance Factory Board, Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) and the
public sector shipyards.
For the
first time, HAL was given charge of organizing the Defexpo, sidelining the
Defence Exhibitions Organisation. In turn, HAL hired event management firm,
Wizcraft, which is organizing all the functions and the crowd management.
Ultimately
the success of Defexpo, unlike most international defence exhibitions, will not
be measured by deals struck or high profile contracts signed. Most of that
happens in the defence ministry in Delhi. Instead, the measure of success will
be alliances that Indian MSMEs strike with foreign OEMs, leading to skill
creation and the building of a defence industrial eco-system.
designing aircraft takes years to master. i find it strange that you advocate that the air force start designing aircraft. it is better that each organisation should play their respective roles in making tejas a success. we need to work together in the interest of the nation and not look at convenient prescriptions.
ReplyDeleteI think it is better to have this outside delhi. A lot of delhi babudom must be missing the Daaru and kebab parties. So,this will be more professional. Just hoped Govt would sign a deal for 200 Arjun MkII
ReplyDeletecan you please do a write up on how this event was overall.
ReplyDeleteI know it was great show and helped immensely the tourism and service and logistics industry but I doubt any global news agency or reputed portal even covered this?
They did a terrific job in making this show grand photo op but did it achieve anything worthwhile like MoU's or JV's or contracts. I guess not!!
next time they should plan in Kerala :))