Defence minister Rajnath Singh said that together,
Indian and US companies will co-develop and co-produce for the world.
Defence minister Rajnath Singh on
Friday interacted with captains of several American defence companies in
Washington and outlined the emerging co-development and co-production
opportunities in India while enumerating reforms initiated by the government to
make the country an attractive destination for foreign original equipment
manufacturers and an alternative export hub.
“Singh highlighted that ‘partnership and joint
efforts’ are the two keywords that differentiate India’s defence industry from
other nations,” the defence ministry said in a statement on Saturday.
US-India Strategic Partnership Forum organised the
industry roundtable.
The companies
represented at the event included General Electric, Boeing, General Atomics, General Dynamics Land Systems, L3Harris,
Lockheed Martin, Raytheon Technologies and Rolls Royce. India is negotiating key deals with some of
them.
“Had fruitful
interaction with leading US defence companies. Invited them to work with Indian
partners to accelerate our Make in India program towards achieving
Atmanirbharta in defence sector. Together, Indian and US companies will
co-develop and co-produce for the world,” Singh wrote on X.
Last year, Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) and
GE signed a memorandum of understanding for transfer of technology (ToT) and
manufacturing of F414 aero-engines for the future light combat aircraft (LCA
MK-2).
The joint production
of GE’s F414 engines in India, for which negotiations are in full swing, will
help the country overcome a striking technology gap, lay the foundation for
indigenous development of bigger jet engines, and possibly open doors to
exports. However, the current LCA Mk-1A programme is running behind schedule
and one of the main reasons for that is the lingering delay in the supply of
the F404 engines to HAL by the US firm. The
delivery of the engines is delayed by around 10 months.
Deepening defence industrial cooperation was high
on the agenda during Singh’s meetings with US national security advisor Jake
Sullivan and secretary of defence Lloyd
Austin.
India’s defence
landscape has transformed in the last few years.
The value of exports
in 2023-24 was 32.5% higher than what it was in the preceding year when it
stood at ₹15,920 crore. Defence exports have grown 31 times in the past 10
years, the data shows.