Tenders soon for six new subs for Indian Navy

Tenders soon for six new subs for Indian Navy
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Tenders Soon For Six New Subs For Indian Navy. India will soon float a tender for a Rs.60,000-crore contract to build six advanced submarines for the navy for which six companies, including Larsen & Toubro, Pipavav Defence and the state-run Mazagon Dockyard Ltd, are contenders, informed sources said.

New Delhi: India will soon float a tender for a Rs.60,000-crore contract to build six advanced submarines for the navy for which six companies, including Larsen & Toubro, Pipavav Defence and the state-run Mazagon Dockyard Ltd, are contenders, informed sources said.

"The RFP (request for proposal) for Project 75i will be called soon. It is intended to build six submarines over eight years. These will be next-generation submarines with air independent propulsion systems," a senior official in the defence ministry told IANS.

"A high-level committee has already inspected the shipyards of several companies, both in the private and public sectors. Based on the committee's recommendation, all I can say is L&T, Pipavav and Mazagon Docks are among the strong contenders," the official added.

"Project 75 (under which six submarines are being built with French collaboration) has already been delayed by nearly 50 months. It is being brought on track. This will call for reduced delivery schedules," the official said.

As for the budget, of the Rs.1.23 lakh crore (Rs.1.23 trillion/$19 billion) cleared late last year for defence purchases, a whopping Rs.60,000 crores was set aside for the six stealth submarines under Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Make in India initiative.

In April, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar had said that private players will also be invited for the P75 Project with incentives for early execution. But he also warned that if it is not completed in the stipulated time, heavy penalties will be imposed.

The government had given its clearance three years ago for six submarines with AIP capability and subsequently decided last year to build them on Indian yards as part of the Make in India initiative.

The orginal plan was to import two submarines. But it was later decided to make all six in India so that the domestic defence infrastructure is strengthened while allowing Indian companies to tie-up with the best suited foreign collaborator.

"With AIP, a conventional submarine can stay under water for up to two weeks. Conventional ones need to some to the surface every three-five days for oxygen," said an official of the Defence Research and Development Organisation that developed the AIP system.

"We are the only non-Western nation to have developed the technology," the official added.

The official said the Naval Materials Research Lab at Ambernath in Maharashtra, which has developed the AIP, has tied up a host of Indian state-run and private firms as partners in the project.

L&T's mega shipyard, where the private company intends to execute the project, is at Kattupalli, about 40 km north of Chennai, on the east coast. This complex also includes a container port and a modular fabrication facility.

In March, the Reliance Group, led by industrialist Anil Ambani, announced it was acquiring from the promoters of Pipavav Defence their 18-percent holding in the company, apart from a 26-percent mandatory open offer.

Pipavav's facility is at the location by same name on the Gujarat coast and claims a modern, versatile engineering and fabrication facilities with shipbuilding infrastructure that is also suitable for the construction of a wide range of warships and submarines.

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