By Ajai Shukla
Chennai
Business Standard, 11 April 18
Tata Sons has formally announced consolidation of its sprawling aerospace
and defence businesses, which have developed under various group companies,
under a single entity, Tata Aerospace and Defence (Tata A&D).
Tata Sons Chairman N Chandrasekaran on Wednesday said: “The formation of
Tata A&D, a single unified entity, will allow us to better target emerging
opportunities in aerospace and defence, and engage holistically with customers
both in India and globally.”
Banmali Agrawala, Tata Sons chief for infrastructure, defence and
aerospace, has explained the rationale behind the merger: “Tata A&D, when
formed, will be better equipped to execute larger and more complex projects and
be more globally competitive as part of the global supply chain. We have moved
beyond providing individual products to develop integrated offerings across
land mobility, airborne platforms and systems, as well as weapons systems and
C4I (command, control, computers, communications and intelligence).”
Highlighting the group’s intention to become part of the defence
production establishment, Agrawala said: “In India, Tata has built an
industrial base in defence intentionally designed to complement and integrate
with the efforts of the Defence Research & Development Organisation (DRDO)
and defence public sector units (PSU).”
Sukaran Singh, who currently heads Tata Advanced Systems (TASL), will be
chief of Tata A&D. The statutory and regulatory approvals are being
obtained, said Tata Sons.
“Tata A&D proposes to bring together over 6,000 employees, and have
production facilities in Telangana, Karnataka, Jharkhand, and Maharashtra,” the
Tata Sons’ statement said.
The consolidation will bring together several significant defence
businesses — Tata Motors’ defence division, which is a strong competitor for
defence ministry projects to build tracked, armoured platforms such as the
futuristic infantry combat vehicle (FICV) and future-ready combat vehicle
(FRCV).
Also coming under Tata A&D will be Tata Power’s Strategic Engineering
Division, which has been the high-tech, innovation-based defence performer from
the Tata stable. An electronics-based firm, it won a global tender to modernise
air force air bases, won the “Make” procedure tender to develop the tactical
communications system, and built sub-systems for the Pinaka rocket launcher and
the Akash missile and strategic missiles.
On March 29, as part of this consolidation, Tata Power announced that its
board had approved the sale of its defence business to Tata Advance Systems for
~22 billion. Of this Rs ~10.4 billion will be payable to Tata Power on
closing the deal and the remaining Rs ~11.9 billion on achieving certain
milestones. This still needs ratification by the company’s shareholders.
Tata Power (SED) chief executive Rahul Chaudhry is likely to resign after
the merger, said sources.
You are correct about Rahul Chaudhry resigning. He did that after Sukaran and Banmali Agarwal upsurbed his invitation to Make In India pavilion where ATAGS was being displayed for PM Modi in a live demo.
ReplyDeleteI have worked with him in Tata Power SED. He is the sprit behind Tata’s Make in India and in particular ATAGS at Tata Power SED.
Sad ...