Manas Dasgupta
NEW DELHI, Jan 8: The Chief of Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal AP Singh, flagged delays in the delivery of the Tejas fighter aircraft into service, calling for increased private partnership in developing defence products and providing more funds for Research and Development (R&D).
Speaking at the 21st Subroto Mukherjee Seminar on ‘Atmanirbharta in Aerospace: Way Ahead’, the Air Chief Marshal AP Singh talked about the emphasis on R&D and how it “loses its relevance if it is not able to meet the timeline.” Air Chief Marshal Singh also flagged the delay in procurement of the first batch of the Tejas fighter jet ordered by the Indian Air Force.
“Capacity building is important, we may not need it every time but we need to be flexible and production agencies have to invest in their advanced manufacturing processes to increase speed and upskill their manpower,” Air Chief Marshal Singh said at the seminar.
“Tejas, we started inducting it in 2016…We should go back to 1984 when the project was conceived. The aircraft flew 17 years later in 2001. Then, the induction started another 16 years later in 2016. Today we are in 2024 and I (Indian Air Force) do not have the first 40 aircraft…This is the production capability. We need to do something and I’m very convinced that we need to have competition, we need to have multiple sources available so that people are wary of losing their orders, otherwise, things won’t change,” he added.
The Tejas fighter jet is manufactured by the Bengaluru-headquartered Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL). The Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) programme was envisioned in the late 1980s to replace the MiG-21 and Su-7 fleet. The programme got a boost in the late 90s and on January 4, 2001, the Technology Demonstrator-1 (TD-1) version of the LCA was airborne and rechristened ‘Tejas’, a significant moment in the Indian Air Force’s history.
The Second Series Production (SP2) Tejas Aircraft was given initial operational clearance in 2016. The Tejas Mk1 version was inducted in the Air Force’s No. 45 Squadron – ‘The Flying Daggers’. Later, another Tejas squadron, the No. 18 Squadron – ‘The Flying Bullets’ began operating the Mk1 variant.
Mr Singh stressed the importance of having private players in defence manufacturing and production and said, “R&D loses its relevance if it is not able to meet the timeline. Time is a very important thing. We need to give greater leeway to the researchers. There will be failures, let’s not be scared of failures. I think we are losing a lot of time because we are scared of failure…Defence is one sector where time is very important. If we don’t meet the timeline, technology is of no use. So we need to learn from our failures, move on and not be scared of those failures.”
“R&D funds are woefully short. We are just about at 5%, and it should be at 15% (of the defence budget). We have to make sure that these funds are increased and they are available to private players also…We need to increase the schemes to have more private players, and maybe have a competitive approach.”
The Air Force chief’s concerns over the delay in Tejas’ procurement comes amid China’s development of its 6th Generation stealth fighter jet’ and its recent trials that took the internet by storm. “As far as defence is concerned, we have concerns from our northern and western adversaries. Both of them are increasing their forces at a rapid pace. As far as China is concerned, it is not just numbers. The technology is also growing at a rapid pace. We just saw the flight of the latest new generation aircraft that they have pulled out, the stealth fighter,” the Air Chief Marshal said.
China is the second country in the world after the US to have at least two types of stealth fighter jets — J-20 and J-35 — have been developed in China in record time.
The Indian Air Force has ordered 83 Tejas Mk1A variants in a Rs 36,468 crore deal with Hindustan Aeronautics Limited. In November last year, the Defence Acquisition Council cleared the project to acquire 97 more Tejas jets for the Indian Air Force. The Tejas fighter jets will be powered by US-made General Electric’s F404 fighter jet engines.
The Tejas MK1A variant, the advanced version of the MK1, which is already operational in two squadrons, took to the skies on March 28 last year for a historic test flight.
The air force plans to raise the first squadron of the indigenous LCA Mark 1A fighter aircraft squadron at the Nal air base in the Bikaner district of Rajasthan near the Pakistan front. The Tejas will replace one of the two MiG-21 squadrons already stationed.
The new variants are expected to be delivered by July but reports said the HAL would be able to deliver only two to three Tejas MK1A instead of the 16 promised to the IAF in the 2024-2025 fiscal under the deal to procure 83-such fighter jets. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Defence Minister Rajnath Singh have flagged the delay in delivery of 99 GE F404 engines during their visit to the US and GE has promised to begin supply by March 2025, already two years behind the schedule.
Media reports said the Centre has imposed penalties on GE Aerospace over the two-year delay. The first timeline to deliver the engines was March 2023. “We are working with our partner HAL and suppliers to resolve constraints and deliver F404-IN20 engines for the LCA Mk1 programme,” GE Aerospace said.
Tejas has proven to be one of the best multi-role fighters of its weight and class and has an impeccable safety record since its first flight in 2001. The 4.5 generation aircraft can be used for multiple roles like ground attack, interception, air-to-air combat and air defence. Nigeria, Philippines, Argentina and Egypt have shown interest in procuring indigenously-developed Tejas Light Combat Aircraft.
Forty-two is the sanctioned squadron strength for the Indian Air Force but currently, only 31 are active. A fighter squadron has typically 18 aircraft including two trainer aircraft. The defence experts said the IAF needs at least 180 fighter jets under the present circumstances. The strength may further deplete after the phasing out of the ageing MiG-21 which has been in service since 1963 and has undergone multiple overhauls over 60 years. The MiG-29s, SEPECAT Jaguars, and Mirage-2000s are other aircraft procured in the 1980s.
“This (falling squadron strength) will be addressed in the long run by the timely induction of Multi-Role Fighter Aircraft (MRFA) and LCA Mark II. Critical combat enablers like the airborne early warning aircraft, flight refuellers and special electronic intelligence and surveillance are an integral element of modern-day combat,” defence sources said.