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The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) has been
given the go-ahead by the government to take up an offer of French
firm Snecma to partner with the Gas Turbine Research
Establishment (GTRE) for jointly developing the Kaveri aero engine.
Senior GTRE officials told The Hindu that talks with Snecma could
start early next year. The Kaveris eventual user, the
Indian Air Force now appears to have softened its opposition to
the tie-up, they said.
The Rs. 2,839-crore Kaveri engine programme was launched in 1989,
specifically to power the Light Combat Aircraft, Tejas, now under
development at the DRDOs Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA).
In 2005, the GTRE indicated that it would not be able to develop
the Kaveri engine on its own.
Interestingly, the governments nod, which is expected to
cost the exchequer at least Rs 1,000 crore, comes nine months after
a team, headed by Air Vice-Marshal M. Matheswaran and comprising
officials from the ADA, the IAF and the Hindustan Aeronautics Limited,
submitted a report that stated that an engine developed jointly
by Snecma and the GTRE would not meet the IAFs performance
requirements. The IAF also wanted the Kaveri project delinked from
Tejas programme.
According to informed sources, members of the Matheswaran team
were critical of the French passing off their existing and fully
developed Eco engine core. This, the team felt, would
not give India the engine core design knowledge or even control
over it. It also pointed out that the design technology being handed
out would take years to come.
Based on the report, the French offer was put on the backburner
with even officials from Snecma stating that the chapter was
closed. But the IAF for reasons not yet clear, appear to have
reversed its stand.
Snecma, which indicated that an engine run of at least 250 is required
to make their offer economically viable, agrees that an existing
core would be at the heart of the Snecma GTRE Kaveri engine.
It, however, denies it would take years for handing over the design
technology. It will take at least five years before the first production
engine comes out.
Snecma chairman and chief executive officer Philippe Petitcolin
told The Hindu: Yes we first stated a 15-year period to hand
over the design technology, but now we have indicated that the technology
can be given as fast as the Indians can assimilate it.
Source: DNA
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