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Indian Airborne Early Warning Aircraft On Track
India’s Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO) says its homegrown Airborne Early Warning & Control System (AEW&CS), integrated on a modified Brazilian Embraer EMB-145, will fly by the end of 2011.
Dr. Prahlada, head of DRDO, tells AVIATION WEEK the first EMB-145 will land in India by January 2011, and the integration work is set to begin by the middle of next year.
“Once operational, the indigenous AEW&CS will be a very cost-effective one and in many ways it will be the cheapest in the world. We are monitoring its progress very closely,” he says.
The Bengaluru-based Center for Airborne Systems (CABS) is handling development, with the program’s total cost pegged at Rs 1,800-2,000 crore ($389.3 million-$432.6 million).
India and Brazil signed a deal in 2008 under which Embraer will modify its EMB-145 to carry the Active Array Antenna Unit on the aircraft’s fuselage.
“Three modified EMB-145s would be developed under the agreement and will be delivered in phases,” Prahlada adds. “The indigenous AEW&CS would detect, identify and classify threats present in the surveillance area and act as a command-and-control center to support air operations.”
The first Indo-Brazil joint defense committee met in New Delhi on Aug. 25 to expand its existing bilateral defense cooperation accord. A high-level delegation from Brazil also visited CABS on Aug. 27 as part of Joint Defense Committee proceedings. “The visit was to familiarize with the indigenous Embraer EMB-145-based AWE&CS program of DRDO, with CABS being the nodal agency for the Indian air force [IAF],” a source says. The IAF wants 20 more such platforms.
India’s Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO) says its homegrown Airborne Early Warning & Control System (AEW&CS), integrated on a modified Brazilian Embraer EMB-145, will fly by the end of 2011.
Dr. Prahlada, head of DRDO, tells AVIATION WEEK the first EMB-145 will land in India by January 2011, and the integration work is set to begin by the middle of next year.
“Once operational, the indigenous AEW&CS will be a very cost-effective one and in many ways it will be the cheapest in the world. We are monitoring its progress very closely,” he says.
The Bengaluru-based Center for Airborne Systems (CABS) is handling development, with the program’s total cost pegged at Rs 1,800-2,000 crore ($389.3 million-$432.6 million).
India and Brazil signed a deal in 2008 under which Embraer will modify its EMB-145 to carry the Active Array Antenna Unit on the aircraft’s fuselage.
“Three modified EMB-145s would be developed under the agreement and will be delivered in phases,” Prahlada adds. “The indigenous AEW&CS would detect, identify and classify threats present in the surveillance area and act as a command-and-control center to support air operations.”
The first Indo-Brazil joint defense committee met in New Delhi on Aug. 25 to expand its existing bilateral defense cooperation accord. A high-level delegation from Brazil also visited CABS on Aug. 27 as part of Joint Defense Committee proceedings. “The visit was to familiarize with the indigenous Embraer EMB-145-based AWE&CS program of DRDO, with CABS being the nodal agency for the Indian air force [IAF],” a source says. The IAF wants 20 more such platforms.