NEW DELHI: India is set to begin sea trials of its first nuclear-powered submarine later this month, joining an elite club that includes neighbouring giant China, Defence Ministry officials said on Monday.
The Indian-developed submarine, which would provide the South Asian nation with an underwater ballistic missile launch capability, will begin trials in the Bay of Bengal, off the southern Indian city of Vishakapatnam.
This will be the start of a series of strenuous trials which will continue for several months, said one official who declined to be named.
The induction of the 7,000-ton vessel will put India alongside Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States in the club of nations with nuclear-powered submarines.
The Press Trust of India, quoting unnamed sources, reported the submarine would carry a ballistic missile system first tested in February 2008, but ministry officials declined to confirm or deny the report.
The submarine is the first in a planned fleet of five.
Domestic media last month quoted Vyacheslav Dzirkaln, deputy chief of Russia's federal service for military-technical cooperation, as saying Moscow had agreed to lease a 12,000-ton Akula class nuclear submarine to India.
India is also in the final stages of negotiations for a refurbished Russian aircraft carrier. The vessel, Admiral Gorshkov, is scheduled to be delivered for sea trials by 2012.
New Delhi has also signed contracts worth 2.4 billion euros ($3 billion) with Armaris and European defence firm MBDA to acquire six Franco-Spanish Scorpene submarines. afp