Project 15 & 17: GoI Funds Plan to Build New Stealth Destroyers

ahmedsid

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On board the Shivalik

Ajai Shukla / New Delhi March 21, 2009, 0:04 IST

In the high-security Mumbai Port Trust, through the clutter of freighters, tugs and dredgers in the distance, the sleek lines of INS Shivalik stand out distinctively. This is India’s newest, most advanced frigate, currently receiving its finishing touches from public sector shipyard Mazagon Dock Limited. It is also being put through harbour and sea trials, a rigorous process to ascertain that all systems, weapons and sensors are working in perfect synchrony before the Shivalik is commissioned as a frontline naval warship.

Business Standard is here to take a look at the first stealth warship that India has built. A stealth warship is designed to be near-invisible to the electronic sensors that navies use to scan the oceans. It’s very shape evades detection by radar; it is engineered to give off minimal infra-red emissions; and every piece of equipment on board, from engines to toilet flushes, are designed to work silently so that the ship cannot be heard by the enemy’s sonar and acoustic sensors.

This stealth will allow the Shivalik to sneak up undetected and to destroy the enemy with a range of high-tech weaponry. The warship was born of a growing concern over India’s 7,516 km of coastline, and an exclusive economic zone of 2 million sq km. India’s trade interests — 90 per cent by volume and 77 per cent by value is transported by sea — demanded a more powerful navy. Policymakers believe that a rising India must be able to protect major international trade routes (100,000 freight vessels annually; one billion tons of oil) which transit close by Indian shores. And so, following a policy of indigenisation, India has launched a major warships building programme. Currently, 42 naval vessels are under construction; 38 of them, like the Shivalik, are being built in Indian shipyards.

Arriving at the Shivalik, it is hard not to be impressed. Even by the bristling standards of warships, the 142 metre-long Shivalik looks menacing. Conspicuous by its absence is the friendly sight of sailors going about their business on the decks; all that is hidden behind a wall of steel that covers the ship all the way up to the mast. The sloped steel plates absorb and scatter radar waves, preventing them from bouncing back to betray the presence of a warship.

Overall, the Shivalik conveys a dangerous beauty, a hallmark of Indian-designed warships. When the Indian destroyer, the INS Mysore, participated in an international fleet review in the UK in 2005, the Duke of Edinburgh — a Royal Navy officer himself — came on board to congratulate the crew on what he called “handsomest ship in the review”.

To receive us at the gangway is Captain R S Sundar, the superintendent of Project 17, the Navy’s Rs 8,000-crore project to build three stealth frigates. INS Shivalik is the first of the three; also nearing completion at Mazagon Dock are INS Satpura and INS Sahyadri, which are scheduled for completion in late 2009 and 2010 respectively. The Shivalik is the first Indian warship to be built with Indian steel. The Steel Authority of India Limited has finally mastered the art of mass-producing specially toughened, warship-grade steel; no longer will India shop abroad for thousands of tons of steel for each warship it builds.

Captain Sundar escorts us with an enthusiasm that comes from working at the cutting edge of warship technology. Only a handful of countries — the US, Russia, France, Sweden, Germany, the UK and Italy — have mastered stealth technology. It is extremely difficult to hide a 5,000-ton behemoth like the INS Shivalik. There are stealthier warships than the Shivalik but they are smaller vessels. The Swedish Visby class vessels, amongst the stealthiest in the world, are mere corvettes, at 600 tons. The French Lafayette class frigates, almost as hard to detect, weigh in at 3,600 tons. Russia’s Krivak class stealth frigates, three of which fly Indian Navy flags, also weigh just 3,600 tons. In contrast, the Shivalik — 4,900 tons when empty, 5,600 tons when fully fuelled, watered, victualled, crewed and armed — is significantly bigger, packing a heavier weapon punch than its smaller rivals.

A walk around the Shivalik’s weapons stations shows up true all-round capability. Its complement of weapons caters for enemy threats from all three dimensions. What makes this mix of weaponry unique is the extraordinary level of electronics engineering that allows all their radars and control systems, located in close proximity to one another, to function together without interference or jamming.

Besides the weaponry on board, the Shivalik’s two Sea King helicopters — which operate from a flight deck to the rear of the frigate — search for and destroy enemy submarines anywhere within their radius of operation. Flying slowly, at low altitudes, they drop a “dunking sonar” into the water to detect submarine sounds; submarines are then finished off with depth charges or torpedoes.

Captain Sundar takes us into the bowels of the Shivalik through a series of waterproof hatches and ladders. There are four deck levels above water and four below, making the ship as tall as an eight-storey building. Two French-made Pielstick diesel engines in the lower decks power the warship for normal running. When quick bursts of speed are required, especially in battle, two General Electric (GE) gas turbines kick in, powering the Shivalik at speeds in excess of 30 knots (over 55 kmph).

Unfortunately, the new US administration has ordered GE — pending a review of relations with US allies like India, the UK and Australia — to stop work on commissioning the turbines. The Ministry of Defence is searching for a way to bypass this ban, perhaps by using a non-US GE agent to commission the turbines. This could delay the Shivalik’s commissioning by up to three months. But Mazagon Dock remains optimistic: a blackboard on the deck counts down the days left till the ship’s commissioning.

The Indian Navy is waiting.

The Shivalik in battle: In the days of cannon and sail, a warship’s captain directed the battle from the ship’s bridge, from where he could observe what was happening as the combatants closed, raking each other with cannon-fire. Today it all happens at far longer ranges. Battle, for the Shivalik’s captain, would be a high-stakes video game conducted from an operations room, the enemy only a blip on a radar screen.

The nerve centre of the Shivalik’s battlefield capability is an indigenous design triumph called the AISDN (short for ATN-based Integrated Services Digital Network) that allows electronic information from the Shivalik’s systems and sensors — engines, navigation devices, radars, weaponry, radio sets and control systems — to be transmitted digitally in real time over the warship on a common data base. “This is as good, if not better, than comparable systems on any warship in the world,” says Captain Sundar. “On earlier warships, weapons had a separate data bus, sensors had their own bus, and so on. Now, the AISDN integrates all that, and also information coming from sensors outside the Shivalik, such as Unmanned Aerial Vehicles or Airborne Warning and Control Systems.”

Taking feed from AISDN is another network, the Computer-aided Action Information Organisation (CAIO), which brings to the captain a complete electronic picture of the battlefield. This is the heart of the weapons exploitation system, laying out for the captain all the information about targets being picked up by the warship’s sensors and radars. This is also transmitted to the ship’s executive officer (XO), the second-in-command after the captain, and the man responsible for the ship’s weaponry. From his console, the XO electronically assigns each detected target to one of his weapons.

When the Shivalik’s radars detect an enemy aircraft, the CAIO will show it up on the consoles automatically. The CAIO includes a decision support system that will suggest what to use to shoot down the aircraft; the final decision, though, is that of the commanding officer. He could decide to use the 76mm gun; the command will go electronically from his console to that of the gunnery officer controlling the gun. Alternatively, he could choose to use a missile. Either way, the detection, the information, the allocation of a weapon to the target and the actual engagement itself would all be done electronically.

Assisting the captain in managing the battle is a multi-function, touch-screen console, providing pinpoint navigational information, the ship’s course, position, and its engine parameters. The ship’s movements are controlled through an integrated machinery control system that links the ship’s engines and other auxiliary machinery via optic fibre cabling to various control points. The Shivalik’s four generators, which together produce 4 MW of power, enough to light up a small city, are controlled through an automated power management system that senses the requirement of power at all times.

The Shivalik is also equipped for the nuclear and chemical battlefield. It is the Navy’s first ship with an atmospheric control system that filters the air going into the ship at all times, including the air being used by the engines. This removes any radioactive, chemical or biological impurities, protecting the crew and the systems. For this reason, the Shivalik is centrally air-conditioned and has no portholes. There are also decontamination facilities on board in case the ship passes through an area where the radioactivity from a nuclear strike still lingers.

Crew comfort: Living conditions during extended deployments at sea have traditionally meant long watch duties, monotonous meals out of tins, and cramped living with little privacy. But now, officers and sailors on board the INS Shivalik can look forward to better conditions.

The first clear improvement will be in the food. Of the Shivalik’s crew of 35 officers and 222 sailors, some 24 sailors are employed in cooking, cleaning up and managing the stock of food in refrigerated compartments called “cold rooms” and “cool rooms”. The cooking arrangements on board are fully automatised. A McDonald’s-style deep fat fryer gleams in a corner. A stainless steel chapatti-maker turns out 500 chapattis per hour. A high-capacity dosa machine stands next to it, designed by the Central Food Technology Research Institute, Mysore. But one part of the design is clearly the Navy’s: the damper spring on which each machine is mounted. It would never do to be picked up by an enemy submarine because of vibrations from a chapatti maker!

In the living area, in place of the wooden bunk beds and rusty tin wash basins of earlier warship cabins, the Shivalik’s crew gets to enjoy modular furnishings custom-designed for warships by Korean companies and manufactured in India by the marine division of Godrej. And in a nod to gender correctness, the Shivalik is India’s first warship with a cabin especially built for two women officers. While similar in most respects to the men’s cabins, the significant difference is in having an attached bathroom, and also extra wardrobe space. It is also located right next to the captain’s cabin.

http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/on-boardshivalik/352430/
 

Pintu

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4 New Destroyers to built for Indian Navy

4 New Destroyers 'Kolkata Class' will be built by Mazagaon Dock, Mumbai

http://www.morungexpress.com/national/17931.html


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Home | National | Indian Navy to get 4 new destroyers
Indian Navy to get 4 new destroyers


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PTI
New Delhi, march 23 (PTI): To bolster the Navy’s combat capability, the government has approved building of 4 new power-packed destroyer warships.
Mumbai-based Mazagon Docks Limited (MDL) would soon get the “follow-on orders” for building the new destroyers of the ‘Kolkata’ class, top Navy sources said here on Tuesday. “The Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) has last month given in-principle approval to the Navy’s proposal for construction of four new Kolkata class destroyers,” they said.
The construction of the sophisticated ships under “Project 15B” would begin soon after the MDL completes building of the first three destroyers of the Kolkata class under “Project 15A”.These would be indigenous combat vessels built with advanced stealth features and would have land attack capabilities. “In all, the Navy proposes to have 7 Kolkata class destroyers,” the sources said.
Currently, the Navy has 3 Delhi class and 5 Rajput class destroyers among its fleet strength of about 140 warships that are in service. The Kolkata class destroyers are expected to join the Navy one each every year beginning with 2010. The MDL had begun construction of the Kolkata class ships in September 2003.
With a 6,800-tonne displacement, the Kolkata class of warship could achieve speeds of 30-plus knots. Mounted with ‘Nagin’ active towed array sonar and ‘Humsa-NG’ hull-mounted radar, the warships would be armed with Indo-Russian joint venture BrahMos cruise missiles and the Israeli Barak surface-to-air missiles.
On the Navy’s other future project, the sources said the building of 4 new guided missile stealth frigates, as a follow-on of the Shivalik class being built at MDL, has been approved and their construction would also be launched soon, taking the number in this class of warships to 7.
 

A.V.

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indeed a very good news the kolkata class is the most modern of destroyers and would help in adding muscle to the navy also the new shilalik class frigates is a great addition things going quick and fast for the navy
 

pyromaniac

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Good find....are these the ships that are propelled by the GE engines or is the Shivalik class frigates?
 

Pintu

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No, Pyromaniac they are totally different class.
 

Pintu

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Here are the another report on the same topic from domain-b.com in it power plant is mentioned ;

The link and the report are as follows :

http://www.domainb.com/defence/general/20090317_mazagon_docks.htm

Mazagon Docks to build 4 more 'Kolkata' class destroyers news
17 March 2009

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Mazagon Docks Limited (MDL) would soon get follow-on orders for building the new destroyers of the 'Kolkata' class, even as the first of the three stealth destroyers is floating around in Mumbai for want of a mooring to fit its turbines.

The INS Kolkata, the Indian Navy's `stealth' guided-missile destroyer, is floating around with no berth available in the Mazagaon Docks where it is to be fitted with four gas turbines to propel it.

An upgraded version of INS Delhi, the Kolkata class destroyer will also have a landing deck and a hangar for two helicopters, 16 missile silos in addition to its torpedoes.

The government has approved building of four more of these power-packed destroyer warships in order to bolster the Navy's combat capability, Navy sources said.

"The Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) has last month given in-principle approval to the Navy's proposal for construction of four new Kolkata class destroyers," reports quoted sources as saying.

The construction of the sophisticated ships under 'Project 15B' would begin soon after the MDL completes building of the first three destroyers of the Kolkata class under `Project 15A'.

The Navy proposes to have seven Kolkata class indigenous combat vessels built with advanced stealth features, which would have land attack capabilities as well.

The Navy has three Delhi class and five Rajput class destroyers among its fleet of about 140 warships.

The Kolkata class destroyers were expected to join the Navy one each every year beginning with 2010.

Classified as Project 15Alpha, the first of the 6,700-tonne INS Kolkata class destroyers, with four Ukrainian M-36 Gas Turbine propulsion systems, should have been ready for sea trials by now.

These advanced destroyers would have an updated weapons package and new-look exteriors and improved stealth (making it difficult to detect), according to official literature distributed by the directorate of naval design.

According to conservative estimates, the INS Kolkata will be ready only in 2013, at least three years behind schedule. Its keel was laid in September 2003 when it was announced that it would be commissioned in 2010.

Not only the INS Kolkata, but almost all of the Navy's projects, including over 30 ships and submarines being built at home and overseas, are running behind schedule.

Mazagaon Docks (MDL) simply does not have the manpower, design capability and berths to meet project schedules. With no other shipyard available in the country to undertake these projects, this has resulted in huge cost overruns in all projects, including the strategic Scorpene submarine venture.

The INS Shivalik stealth frigate project has also been hit by the new Obama administration's asking GE to stop work on a pair of gas turbine engines.

The Indian Navy is now trying to work around the US intransigence by drawing in consultants from Italy and Germany. The INS Shivalik is likely to be delayed by at least nine months.
 

Pintu

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Can any body post the picture of M36E gas turbines please ?
 

EnlightenedMonk

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Advanced warship programme: Navy says build abroad

Advanced warship programme: Navy says build abroad

The Indian Navy’s Project 17 is nearing completion; three Indian-designed-and-built stealth frigates of the Shivalik class are on track to enter service. Now, attention has switched to Project 17-A, the country’s biggest-ever naval purchase, a Rs 17,000 crore plan to build seven stealth frigates that are even more advanced than the Shivalik class.

The Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) has long cleared the project, but no order has yet been placed by the Ministry of Defence. Business Standard has learned that the order is held up by a difference of opinion between the shipyards and the navy on where these frigates should be built.

The two defence shipyards capable of manufacturing 5000-tonne frigates — Mazagon Dock Limited, Mumbai (MDL) and Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers, Kolkata (GRSE) — argue that Project 17-A should be built entirely in India. The Indian Navy insists that the first two frigates should be built in a foreign shipyard. After the Indian shipyards have observed how it is done, they can build the next five vessels.

At the heart of the disagreement is a new, highly advanced building method — modular shipbuilding — that India will use for Project 17-A, and for all projects thereafter.

Conventional shipbuilding was relatively simple: first weld together a steel hull, and then put in the engines, piping, electrical wiring, fitments, weaponry and electronics that make it a fighting platform. Modular shipbuilding is far more complex, akin to a giant Lego game. The warship is built in 300-tonne blocks, each block complete with all the piping, electrical wiring and fitments that form a part of the ship. Then these 300-tonne blocks are brought together by giant cranes and assembled into a complete warship.

This creates an entirely different set of design challenges. Each bulkhead wall, each pipe, each cable, and each electronic component in a 300-tonne block must precisely connect with its counterpart in the neighbouring block. Each block is designed separately, but all of them must come together in perfect alignment.

This method has never been used by either MDL or GRSE; they accept the need for a foreign design partner. But both shipyards, having successfully built frigates of the Brahmaputra and the Shivalik class, claim they already have the expertise needed to build Project 17-A, based on the foreign partner’s drawings. Admiral HS Malhi, Chairman and Managing Director (CMD) of MDL says, “We need to go abroad for the production drawings… But for actual modular construction, no technology is required to be transferred”

The Navy believes that if MDL and GRSE try to master this skill while they build the first Project 17-A frigates, the entire programme will be delayed unacceptably. Instead, the Director of Naval Design, Rear Admiral MK Badhwar, says the foreign design partner selected should built the first two frigates in his own shipyard, observed by Indian workmen who can thereby pick up the skills.

The DND says, “This will also make the vendor demonstrate “buildability”. He must demonstrate that his design can be actually built into a warship, using modular construction, in four years. That will create a demonstrated benchmark for GRSE and MDL; otherwise, if there are delays later, our shipyards could argue that the foreign yard too would have taken a long period to build each frigate.”

The MoD’s is finding it difficult to reconcile these two viewpoints, partly because a decision to build two frigates abroad would sharply escalate the cost of Project 17-A. Each Shivalik class stealth frigate, built in MDL, cost Rs 2000-2500 crores. The bill for a comparable frigate, built in a European shipyard for the Australian navy, has come to more than double that figure.

http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/advanced-warship-programme-navy-says-build-abroad/353083/
 

EnlightenedMonk

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Navy's destroyer project sets sail

Navy's destroyer project sets sail

The Indian Navy’s firepower is going to be significantly boosted with the addition of four heavy warships. The navy’s design chief, Rear Admiral MK Badhwar, has confirmed for the first time, to Business Standard, that the Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) — the top procurement body in the Ministry of Defence (MoD) — has cleared Project 15-B, the construction of four 6800-tonne destroyers by Mazagon Dock Ltd, Mumbai (MDL).

There was no competitive bidding for Project 15-B, since MDL is the only Indian shipyard large enough to build destroyers, which are significantly larger than frigates. MDL is currently completing Project 15-A, the construction of three destroyers of the Kolkata Class; Project 15-B (the class has not been named yet) is a “follow-on project”, i.e. it is only incrementally different from Project 15-A.

Asked when manufacture will begin, Admiral Badhwar said, “The Indian Navy has asked MDL for a quotation. Once that is received, an MoD Contract Negotiation Committee (CNC) will negotiate a price with MDL for the four destroyers. After the price is agreed upon, the MoD will accord final sanction for the project.”

The navy intends to drive a hard bargain with MDL. Admiral Badhwar explains, “The three Kolkata class destroyers built under Project 15-A cost about Rs 3800 crore each, i.e. about Rs 11,000 crore. Project 15-B should logically be cheaper.”

At that price, Project 15-B will save more than a billion dollars per warship. Australia bought its F100 frigates (at 3,000 tonne, significantly smaller and more lightly armed than the destroyers that will be built under Project 15-B) from Spanish shipyard, Navantia, for the equivalent of Rs 9,000 crore per frigate.

Crucial to how cheaply, and how fast, Project 15-B can be built is the issue of how different these warships will be from their predecessors in the Kolkata Class Project 15-A. Project 15-A has taken longer than anticipated because it incorporated significant changes and upgrades from its predecessor, Project 15 (three Delhi Class destroyers). But Project 15-B, MDL hopes, will have fewer design challenges; it will differ from its predecessor only in weaponry and sensors.

Vice Admiral HS Malhi, chairman and managing director (CMD) of MDL explains, “If there are no major changes in Project 15-B, we can definitely cut down the build time. If the vendors can use the same manufacturing equipment, if the same drawings can be used, it makes a big difference. Standardisation is the key.”

Admiral Malhi points, as an example, to the US Navy’s DDG-51 programme, in which 62 destroyers have already been churned out with standardised hulls and propulsion systems.

MDL’s CMD points out, “If you have that kind of production line, the speed of building and the cost of building comes down dramatically.”

This is the Catch-22 situation facing Indian warship-building. The shipyards want larger orders of warships with standardised designs. But the Indian Navy has tended to place smaller orders of 3-4 ships; the navy says construction delays by the shipyards mean that designs get outdated by the time the ships are rolled out.

This impasse, however, appears to be dissolving. The design similarities between Projects 15-A (three destroyers) and 15-B (four destroyers) could effectively combine those into a combined seven-destroyer order. Similarly, Project 17-A is being planned as an order for seven stealth frigates.

MDL believes that, since Project 15-B is a follow on of the 15-A, the design and planning period will be less than 1½ years. Once the design is finalised, the navy wants the first destroyer to roll out within four years, with the others completed at one-year intervals. By that ambitious timeline, if the order is placed on MDL by end-2009, the first 15-B destroyer would be commissioned in mid-2015.
 

shiv

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dint the Navy and MDL had a fight about the kolkata class destroyers where navy said that the first two will be made abroad to give MDL technical expertise in block construction of ships.
 

shiv

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how?? has MDL concurred to observing the construction of the two ships abroad ??
 

SATISH

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dint the Navy and MDL had a fight about the kolkata class destroyers where navy said that the first two will be made abroad to give MDL technical expertise in block construction of ships.
No that was the project 17A which are stealth frigates and a follow on to the Shivalik class. The Kolkata class destroyers are Project 15A and are the follow up for the Delhi class destroyers. The Project 15B is the follow up of the Kolkata class destroyers.
 

shiv

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but still cant the MDL take the tech from the coachin ship yard (which is making the ADS with the block tech) for the project 17a instead of observing and learning in the foreign docks???
 

shiv

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i am sure this thread has been already posted on this forum
 

ahmedsid

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Check the date Shiv, i think its not a double post. If you think there is a similar thread, Kindly report it or provide the Link.
 

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Navy seals 45,000-cr deal: seven warships

Navy seals 45,000-cr deal: seven warships

India has cleared its largest ever indigenous defence contract worth Rs 45,000 crore to manufacture seven advanced stealth frigates for the Navy at shipyards in Kolkata and Mumbai.
The P17A warship project, which will be India’s most advanced and stealthy frigates, has been cleared by the Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) on Friday.
Sources said that brushing aside a request by the Navy that two of the indigenously designed frigates may be manufactured abroad, the DAC has decided that all seven warships will be manufactured in India by the Mazagon Dock Limited, Mumbai (MDL) and the Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers (GRSE), Kolkata.
The Defence Ministry has allocated a budget of Rs 45,000 crore for the project and the work will be divided between the two shipyards. The P17A frigates will be even more advanced than the P17 Shivalik class warships that are currently being inducted by the Navy.
This will also be the first time that the two shipyards will construct warships in the modern way of modular manufacturing. The frigates will be put together using 300-ton blocks that will be fitted together, similar to the construction style being used to manufacture the Indigenous Aircraft Carrier (IAC) in Kochi.
This very concept of modular manufacturing had caused a divide between the Navy and the two shipyards with the former insisting that two ships be manufactured abroad so that Indian ship workers could absorb the required technology.
In 2006, the Navy had even issued a Request for Information (RFI) ¿ a prerequisite to a tender ¿ to international ship manufacturers including French DCNS, Italian Fincantieri, American firms Lockheed Martin and Northrop Gruman besides shipyards in Russia and Korea to manufacture the frigates.However, the two Indian shipyards had stood firm on their stand that all the frigates could be manufactured indigenously and there was no need to outsource even one of the warships. One argument put forward was that it would not be wise to manufacture the ship abroad as it incorporated advanced indigenously developed stealth features.



With the Defence Ministry taking the final call on the matter, the frigates will be manufactured in India and are expected to be inducted by 2021. The project is expected to start by 2011 when both GRSE and MDL complete an upgrade that will allow them to undertake modular construction. The first ship is expected to be delivered 3-4 years after work starts.
 

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