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The Indian space scientists are expected to
launch the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle C-31 from the Satish Dhawan Space
Center (SDSC) at Sriharikota here on January 20. This is aimed at putting the
Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System 1E satellite into a geo-synchronous
orbit. The initial launch preparations have been started with the scientists
likely to announce the launch date officially once the weather forecasts are
found favourable for the mission. The IRNSS 1E is the fifth satellite in
the navigation constellation with its objective being to provide navigation,
tracking and mapping services in the region.
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The Defence Acquisition Council has approved a revised Defence
Procurement Procedure (DPP), aimed at boosting indigenous defence procurement
and encouraging better participation from the Indian private sector. The
Council is headed by Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar and includes key
stakeholders of the defence establishment. Among its key decisions is a
proposal to introduce a new category of acquisition termed Buy Indian (or IDDM,
indigenous design development and manufacturing), which would become the most
preferred acquisition category. Under Buy Indian, domestically designed
equipment with 40 per cent indigenous components or foreign-designed equipment
with 60 per cent local components will be considered. The new DPP has
significantly increased the offset threshold for foreign contracts from Rs. 300 crore to Rs. 2,000 crore (with
30 per cent of the contract value to be procured from within India), while it
has certain provisions for encouraging Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises. At
first glance, the DPP is an incremental improvement over recent efforts to
reduce India’s import dependence, which stands at 65 per cent of total defence procurement,
to help create a robust military industrial complex within the country. It is
imperative that India succeeds at the earliest in creating a cutting-edge
domestic military industrial base: no major nation state has transitioned to
becoming a developed economy without one. Such a complex would create not only
latest war machines but also hothouse innovations and technologies to improve
overall scientific capabilities, and make India self-reliant at least in
critical areas. If the ambition is to truly make Make in India a reality in the
defence sector, then the DPP falls significantly short of expectations. Many
private sector participants have been flagging a host of issues, and inbuilt
biases against indigenisation. There are two key impediments to India’s private
sector becoming active participants in defence R&D and production: the
monopoly enjoyed by defence public sector units, and the favours that foreign
suppliers enjoy. DPSUs are the workhorses of the sector as well as the biggest
drag on indigenous military research. A significant number of them are merely
assembling foreign kits. Given India’s over-dependence on foreign military
vendors, several biases have crept in favouring them in procurements. A foreign
vendor gets most of his payment on self-certification of project progress,
while Indian vendors have to wait for a government inspector’s certification,
which can delay payments by several months. A foreign vendor enjoys upfront
customs duty exemption, while the excise duty exemption for a local supplier is
a reimbursement months after he has supplied an item. The new DPP may work
towards expanding the number of participants in military tenders, but it may
not help dramatically improve the present environment for all participants.
Going by the present trend, the $100 billion and more that India will spend
over the next decade will mostly end up in foreign markets. Political boldness
and radical reform are needed in defence procurement. Neither is visible in the
new DPP.
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