Avro replacement: $2.5 billion buy of 56 Airbus C-295 transport planes cleared - Broadsword by Ajai Shukla - Strategy. Economics. Defence.

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Wednesday 8 September 2021

Avro replacement: $2.5 billion buy of 56 Airbus C-295 transport planes cleared

40 of these aircraft are to be built in India by Tata Aerospace and Defence

 

By Ajai Shukla

Business Standard, 9th Sept 21

 

The Union Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) on Wednesday cleared the acquisition of 56 C-295MW medium transport aircraft from Airbus Defence and Space, Spain, in a deal worth $2.5 - 3 billion.

 

The acquisition will be done under the ‘Buy & Make’ category of the Defence Procurement Procedure. Of the 56 aircraft, 16 are to be delivered in flyaway condition from Spain within 48 months of signing the contract, while the remaining 40 will be built in India by the Tata group within 10 years of contract signature.

 

The C-295 is powered by Pratt & Whitney PW-127 engines, a part of the PW-100 family. This is likely to form a substantial part of the cost.

 

The Indian Air Force (IAF) has been pressing for years for the acquisition of medium transport aircraft (5-10 tonne lift capacity) to replace its 56 ageing Avro HS-748. 

 

The IAF already operates a large fleet of transport aircraft. These include over 100 AN-32s (being upgraded), ageing Russian IL-76s and two new US aircraft – C-130J Super Hercules and C-17 Globemaster III. However, the IAF believes it requires additional utility and transport aircraft, for tactical use and for disaster relief and emergencies.

 

The reactivation of advanced landing grounds (ALGs) along the Sino-Indian border would create a requirement of rugged aircraft like the C-295 to operate off them, including for the UDAN programme. 

 

The C-295 is a transporter that performs almost like a fighter. It requires just 700 metres of runway to lift off and climbs rapidly to mission altitude. It has multiple mission capability: transporting 71 persons, lifting 7.25 tonnes of cargo or monitoring the sea for 11 hours non-stop, using sophisticated radar and infra-red scanners. It requires just 350 metres to land. 

 

The C-295 has a rear ramp door for quick loading and unloading and for para dropping of troops and cargo. 

 

Of the 40 C-295s that Tata Aerospace and Defence (Tata A&D) will build, eight will be from semi-knocked down (SKD) kits; and another eight from completely knocked down (CKD) kits. The remaining 24 are to be built in India by Tata A&D, incrementally indigenizing the assemblies and sub-assemblies. 

 

Given that only 24 aircraft will be built in India, meeting the 50 per cent indigenization requirement could be a challenge. However, Airbus expects India will order more C295s for its military and central armed police forces.

 

Before completion of deliveries, ‘D’ Level servicing facility (Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul) for the C-295MW aircraft are scheduled to be setup in India. It is expected that this facility will act as a regional MRO hub for various variants of C-295 aircraft.   

 

Airbus welcomed the decision of the Cabinet and said it looked forward to signing and executing the contract jointly with the Tata group.


5 comments:

  1. Good to see progress on a longstanding plan. Hope to see C295 successfully used for special mission and surveillance applications too, as was originally envisaged.

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  2. Whether to order it or not- decision making appears to have improved by leaps and bounds under the current government.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Why are transport aircraft like the C-295 turboprop aircraft, and not jet propulsion aircraft? There must be a good reason, if Airbus is behind its manufacture. What is the advantage of one over the other?

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  4. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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