Source : IDRW
India is all set to dash through the last lap in its quest to buy 126 medium multi-role combat aircraft, estimated to be worth $10.4 billion, when the defence ministry Friday opens the commercial bids of Eurofighter Typhoon and Rafale to take a final call on the lowest bidder.
The four-year-long winding tendering process that began in August
2007 will reach its most crucial moment when the Indian bureaucrats and
the Indian Air Force (IAF) officers open the tender papers in the
presence of representatives from the manufacturers — European consortium
from Germany, Britain, Italy and Spain EADS Cassidian and the French
Dassault, defence ministry officials said here Thursday.
This is but one last step before the lowest bidder is identified, as
the Indian officials will peruse the commercial offers to see what the
fly-away cost of the aircraft will be and then work for the next
fortnight to arrive at the life cycle cost and the technology transfer
cost on set parameters.
The offset offers of the two companies too will come under scrutiny, a
clause included in the tender as per Indian Defence Procurement
Procedures (DPP) of 2006. This requires the winner of the tender to
invest 50 percent of the deal amount back in Indian defence industry in
an effort to energise it.
The offset clause, an accepted norm in global military purchases,
under the Indian DPP mandates that any foreign firm that wins a defence
deal worth over Rs.300 crore will have to plough at least 30 percent of
the contract amount back into Indian defence industry.
All the four aspects of the commercial offer — fly-away cost, life
cycle cost, technology transfer cost and offsets — will be taken into
account when the final winner of the contract is identified, according
to officials.
The Indian contract is critical for both the firms, as it would help
in keeping the production lines of their respective aircraft alive for
at least the next half-a-decade.
India had in April this year down-selected Eurofighter Typhoon and
Rafale and asked them to extend their expiring commercial bids till
middle of December this year.
By that act, India effectively rejected the other aircraft that were
on offer — American firms Lockheed Martin’s F-16 and Boeing’s F/A-18,
Russian United Aircraft Corporation’s MiG-35 and Swedish SAAB’s Gripen.
The shortlist had taken place after a rigorous flight and weapons
trials of the six aircraft held at different terrains — Bangalore in
South India, Leh in Jammu Kashmir’s high altitude Ladakh region and in
Rajasthan’s desert under searing heat conditions.
After losing out in the MMRCA race, the Americans openly expressed
their displeasure and are now pitching their new F-35 Joint Strike
Fighter ‘Lightning-II’, reportedly a fifth generation combat plane, from
the Lockheed Martin stable under their foreign military
government-to-government sale if India cancels the MMRCA tender.
This, when India has already signed a deal with Russia for the joint
development of a fifth generation fighter aircraft or FGFA on the Sukhoi
T-50 plane design.
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