If no other vendor appears before July 6, IAF will find itself conducting
what experts disparage as MMRCA 2.0
By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 29th June 18
French aerospace vendor Dassault says it will
offer the Rafale in a global tender floated by the Indian Air Force (IAF) on
April 6, inviting vendor interest for supplying 110 fighter aircraft.
Dassault’s representative in India, Posina
Venkata Rao, confirmed to Business Standard on Wednesday that the Rafale would
be fielded in the contest.
That sets the stage for a re-run of the
failed “medium multi-role combat aircraft” (MMRCA) procurement that the IAF
conceived in 2000, officially tendered in 2007 and eventually abandoned in
2015.
With Airbus Defence and Space confirming on
Tuesday that Eurofighter GmbH would offer the Typhoon fighter to India the IAF
will have to choose from the same six vendors that participated in the aborted
MMRCA tender.
The other four contenders in that
procurement – Swedish company, Saab, Russia Aircraft Corporation (RAC), and US
vendors Lockheed Martin and Boeing have already signalled their eagerness to
participate in the new tender.
If no other fighter manufacturer makes a
surprise appearance before July 6, the date by which vendors must respond to an
IAF request for information (RFI), the IAF will find itself conducting what
aerospace industry experts disparage as MMRCA 2.0.
Aviation analysts wonder how the IAF will
go about flight-testing six aircraft, when it had already announced in 2011, at
the conclusion of the MMRCA testing process, that only two – the Rafale and
Typhoon – met its requirements. The F/A-18E/F Super Hornet, F-16 Super Viper,
Gripen C/D and MiG-35 were all rejected as inadequate.
After selecting the Rafale, negotiations
broke down over its price and “Make in India” terms. Eventually, the government
bought 36 Rafales, in fly-away condition, to alleviate the IAF’s dire shortfall
of fighter aircraft.
“Clearly, the IAF will have to scale down performance
expectations this time. Else it might be left with the same choices that it
found unacceptable in the MMRCA tender”, says one aviation expert.
Of the six vendors in MMRCA 2.0, Boeing is
offering the same aircraft, the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet, which it intends to
build in India with Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) and Mahindra. Like Dassault,
Boeing will leverage its offer with another simultaneous tender for 57
carrier-borne fighters for the Indian Navy (IN).
Lockheed Martin has offered the F-16 Block
70, a cosmetic improvement over the F-16 Super Viper it offered the last time.
It has tied up with the Tata Group to shift the F-16 production line to India,
provided it wins the contract. However, IAF pilots see the Block 70 as little
better than the Super Viper, and remain wary of buying an aircraft so closely
associated with the Pakistan Air Force.
RAC plans to offer the same MiG-35 as it
did for the MMRCA contest, with no indication yet about whom it will partner to
build the fighter in India. While it remains a dark horse in this race,
analysts point out that both the IAF and IN already fly the MiG-29 – the
baseline fighter for the MiG-35.
Only Saab is offering a significantly
improved fighter, the new Gripen E. In contrast to the Gripen C/D that Saab
offered in the MMRCA contest, the Gripen E has a more powerful General Electric
F-414 engine, newer avionics, more payload and greater range. If it meets the
IAF’s performance requirements, this single-engine aircraft (like the F-16, but
without that fighter’s drawbacks) will have the advantage of being priced more
cheaply than the larger, twin-engine F-18, MiG-35, Typhoon and Rafale.
Industry estimates
are that single engine fighters would cost about $80-85 million each, while
twin-engine fighters would be priced closer to $120 million apiece. Given
the Defence Procurement Procedure’s emphasis on cost, that could be a winning
advantage for a single-engine fighter that meets the IAF’s performance requirements.
The RFI of April 6 called for vendor proposals
for supplying 110 fighters, of which 75 per cent (82-83 fighters) would be
single-seat aircrafts, while the remaining 27-28 fighters would be twin-seat
variants.
The emphasis was on “Make in India”, with no
more than 15 per cent of the order – or 16-17 fighters – to be supplied fully
built. The RFI specified that a “Strategic Partner/ Indian Production Agency”
must build the remaining 93-94 aircraft in India.
That leaves the door open for both private
firms and HAL to be the Indian partner.
Delivery of the 16-17 ready built fighters
must begin within 36 months, and be completed within 60 months of the contract.
The fighters built in India must start being delivered 5 years from the
contract and delivery completed 12 years from the signing date.
In the RFI, the IAF has stated it wants a
“day and night capable, all weather, multi-role combat aircraft.” It must outperform
enemy aircraft in air-to-air combat, strike ground targets, and do reconnaissance,
electronic warfare and air-to-air refuelling. It must also be capable of
maritime strike, i.e. destroying targets far out to sea.
Based on the RFI responses, the IAF will
issue vendors a formal tender. That will be followed by a process – which in the
past has lasted years – of technical and flying trials, cost evaluation and
then price negotiation with the winning vendor.
Aviation analysts wonder how the IAF will go about flight-testing six aircraft, when it had already announced in 2011, at the conclusion of the MMRCA testing process, that only two – the Rafale and Typhoon – met its requirements.
ReplyDeleteOnce you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth -Arthur Conan Doyle
Therefore, Rafale is the only feasible choice; one that was made a long long time ago. What are these 'Aviation Analysts' thinking?! India will go through the entire downselect process and Dassault will allow a competitor to walk away with a humongous contract when both have already nailed down the T's & C's?!
Poor IAF , all they wanted was a 100 mirage 2000 post kargil. Now this is a big mess.
ReplyDeleteA single engine fighter should be enough given PAF has no 2 engine fighters. Then we are procuring so many attack helicopters, rockets up to 90 km & stand off weapons.
IAF also needs to think of operating cost per hour.