PARIKRAMA
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Dassault Rafale, tender | News & Discussions [Thread 2] | Page 120
A special emphasis on these 2 points
An update on this in news media...
Officially throwing open the contest for fighter aircraft once again, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar said that India will select one or two fighter aircraft which will be manufactured locally by a private company under Make in India initiative. This is in addition to the Light Combat Aircraft (LCA), the production of which is being scaled up.
India and France are in advanced stage of talks to conclude an inter-governmental agreement for the direct purchase of 36 Rafale fighter jets. This fighter aircraft will likely be other than the Rafale.
“Under the Make in India process we may have one or two more jet fighter plants in India by the private sector,” Mr. Parrikar said on Tuesday on the sidelines of a job creation summit organised by Wadhwani Foundation.
He said that several proposals are under consideration and “through proper process we may select them to make in India.”
While emphasising that there will be at least one or two fighter jets that may be selected, Mr. Parrikar said a decision is likely to be taken by year end.
“India has the need for that number of aircraft but this does not mean increasing defence budget to cater to the purchases. This can be done by reducing defence expenditure in other areas,” he stressed.
Mr. Parrikar said his ministry is in an advanced stage of giving approval to Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) for setting up a second assembly line for the LCA to increase the production rate from eight to 16 aircraft per year.
The Air Force is expected to induct over 100 of the improved LCA which will feature an Advanced Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radar, mid-air refuelling and improved electronic warfare suite in addition to other minor improvements.
Stating that HAL has currently streamlined the assembly line for production of eight aircraft per year, Mr. Parrikar said that this will absorb between 10,000 to 20,000 people in the full ecosystem.
Even as the Rafale talks are on, Mr. Parrikar had said that it is not a replacement for the much smaller MIGs which are now being phased out. With this, companies who lost out in the Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft contest (MMRCA) have been pitching their aircraft in anticipation of a comeback into the race.
Boeing and Lockheed Martin of the U.S. and Saab of Sweden have recently offered to establish manufacturing plants in India and transfer technology if their fighter aircraft were selected for the Indian Air Force.
India to select one or more fighter aircraft, to be built by private sector under Make in India initiative - The Hindu
+++
Observation
In line with what @randomradio has stated before, there is a scope for inducting 1 or 2 jets under MII
Two statements
“India has the need for that number of aircraft but this does not mean increasing defence budget to cater to the purchases. This can be done by reducing defence expenditure in other areas,”
and
"With this, companies who lost out in the Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft contest (MMRCA) have been pitching their aircraft in anticipation of a comeback into the race."
This seems to suggest that within the budget this permutation combination will be made.. So a question to ask is how will you accomodate another fighter within the budget unless you eat out part of Rafales and LCA budget..
An example is (all assumptions to understand)
if LCA was originally planned for say an hypothetical 250 jets you decrease 100 from there.
If Rafales were originally planned for say 200 jets you decrease 100 there too
You get something around USD 28 x 100 (LCA) + USD 100 x 100 = USD 13000
And buy instead 150 jets with this price for say USD 85 Mn approx
We actually replaced 200 jets with 150 but ensure this production line delivers much quicker and in parallel with others..
Now question comes in my mind,
If its F18 or EF how this does not scuttle Rafale line aspect and our benefit from it?
A third aspect.. Is it just a pressure tactic..after all, we want Dassault and French side to agree as per our requirements..
or a fourth aspect .. a repeat of 150 Mirages to be bought versus actually 51.. the story of early1980s..
@Abingdonboy @Taygibay @Vauban @MilSpec @anant_s @Picdelamirand-oil @randomradio @raktaka
I would love to hear all of your views.. This is getting a bit more murky unless i am missing something
++++++++++++++
Update... Source based..
Rafale deal is a big go....
(Take with bags of salt )
- Base year negotiation 2015 fixed finally from earlier negotiated 2011
- Price brought down to Euro 8Bn from initial Euro 11.5 Bn (with 2011 as base year)
- Further negotiations to trim down price to Euro 7.2-7.3 Bn implying another 700-800 Mn Euros
- The customizations may see some more cost trimming
- The support package + infrastructure package getting re negotiated.
- Jet+Weapons loaded is capped at Euro 100 Mn or Euro 3.6 Bn
- Effectively another 3.6 Bn is for support +infra+ training+ TCO+ spares+customizations+others
- Cost of infrastructure in terms of materials and manhours now being cited to reduce per base cost from earlier Euro 1.2 Bn per base
- Delivery schedule from 36 months from 2019 (3 years) and will be completed 2022 (5.5 years)
- MII part resolved. India has informed French Government MII needs to be done urgently owing to other competitive offers.. The surprise competitors are - Eurofighter (backed by Germany and UK) and F18s (USA/Boeing). Decision will be and implemented max to max by December 2016 for work to start immediately.. (any 1 of the 3 with first preference being Dassault)
- 10th point.. Shocker competition.... Angela Merkel on her last visit emphasized less on Submarines more on EF make in India.. Seems sweeter includes an AESA radar of NG for complete TOT + other considerable goodies with tech sharing for EJ 200 and EJ230 joint effort with TVC to power AMCA.
- It seems DM MP has personally informed Jean-Yves Le Drian about it when they met in New Delhi and said GOI wants a firm MII decision implemented by max Dec 2016 with start of work immediately. The EF offer in hush hush mode is the second trump card besides Russian FGFA program+ more MKI. DA seems to have fallen in line for threat of losing the lucrative 200+ jet market and that too to a European Rival...
So India's final cost working expected around Euro 7.2 Bn-7.3Bn or at Euro/INR 77 its Rs 55450 Crs - Rs 56210 Crs
++++++++++++++++++++++++
Dassault Rafale, tender | News & Discussions [Thread 2] | Page 120
A special emphasis on these 2 points
10. MII part resolved. India has informed French Government MII needs to be done urgently owing to other competitive offers.. The surprise competitors are - Eurofighter (backed by Germany and UK) and F18s (USA/Boeing). Decision will be and implemented max to max by December 2016 for work to start immediately.. (any 1 of the 3 with first preference being Dassault)
An update on this in news media...
Officially throwing open the contest for fighter aircraft once again, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar said that India will select one or two fighter aircraft which will be manufactured locally by a private company under Make in India initiative. This is in addition to the Light Combat Aircraft (LCA), the production of which is being scaled up.
India and France are in advanced stage of talks to conclude an inter-governmental agreement for the direct purchase of 36 Rafale fighter jets. This fighter aircraft will likely be other than the Rafale.
“Under the Make in India process we may have one or two more jet fighter plants in India by the private sector,” Mr. Parrikar said on Tuesday on the sidelines of a job creation summit organised by Wadhwani Foundation.
He said that several proposals are under consideration and “through proper process we may select them to make in India.”
While emphasising that there will be at least one or two fighter jets that may be selected, Mr. Parrikar said a decision is likely to be taken by year end.
“India has the need for that number of aircraft but this does not mean increasing defence budget to cater to the purchases. This can be done by reducing defence expenditure in other areas,” he stressed.
Mr. Parrikar said his ministry is in an advanced stage of giving approval to Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) for setting up a second assembly line for the LCA to increase the production rate from eight to 16 aircraft per year.
The Air Force is expected to induct over 100 of the improved LCA which will feature an Advanced Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radar, mid-air refuelling and improved electronic warfare suite in addition to other minor improvements.
Stating that HAL has currently streamlined the assembly line for production of eight aircraft per year, Mr. Parrikar said that this will absorb between 10,000 to 20,000 people in the full ecosystem.
Even as the Rafale talks are on, Mr. Parrikar had said that it is not a replacement for the much smaller MIGs which are now being phased out. With this, companies who lost out in the Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft contest (MMRCA) have been pitching their aircraft in anticipation of a comeback into the race.
Boeing and Lockheed Martin of the U.S. and Saab of Sweden have recently offered to establish manufacturing plants in India and transfer technology if their fighter aircraft were selected for the Indian Air Force.
India to select one or more fighter aircraft, to be built by private sector under Make in India initiative - The Hindu
+++
Observation
In line with what @randomradio has stated before, there is a scope for inducting 1 or 2 jets under MII
Two statements
- “Under the Make in India process we may have one or two more jet fighter plants in India by the private sector,”
- This fighter aircraft will likely be other than the Rafale.
“India has the need for that number of aircraft but this does not mean increasing defence budget to cater to the purchases. This can be done by reducing defence expenditure in other areas,”
and
"With this, companies who lost out in the Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft contest (MMRCA) have been pitching their aircraft in anticipation of a comeback into the race."
This seems to suggest that within the budget this permutation combination will be made.. So a question to ask is how will you accomodate another fighter within the budget unless you eat out part of Rafales and LCA budget..
An example is (all assumptions to understand)
if LCA was originally planned for say an hypothetical 250 jets you decrease 100 from there.
If Rafales were originally planned for say 200 jets you decrease 100 there too
You get something around USD 28 x 100 (LCA) + USD 100 x 100 = USD 13000
And buy instead 150 jets with this price for say USD 85 Mn approx
We actually replaced 200 jets with 150 but ensure this production line delivers much quicker and in parallel with others..
Now question comes in my mind,
- this jet owing to a price similar to Rafale or say 15-20% cheaper offers what % in terms of capability of Rafale?
- the other question if the said jet is double the cost of LCA or more, what additional capability it brings above LCA?
If its F18 or EF how this does not scuttle Rafale line aspect and our benefit from it?
A third aspect.. Is it just a pressure tactic..after all, we want Dassault and French side to agree as per our requirements..
or a fourth aspect .. a repeat of 150 Mirages to be bought versus actually 51.. the story of early1980s..
@Abingdonboy @Taygibay @Vauban @MilSpec @anant_s @Picdelamirand-oil @randomradio @raktaka
I would love to hear all of your views.. This is getting a bit more murky unless i am missing something