The leaders of India and Spain launch India's first private military
aircraft plant
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[October 28, 2024] By
AJIT SOLANKI
VADODARA, India (AP) — Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his
Spanish counterpart Pedro Sanchez inaugurated India's first private
military aircraft plant on Monday, boosting New Delhi's ambitions of
growing local manufacturing in its defense and aerospace industries.
Sanchez was welcomed to the country with a roadshow in Gujarat state's
Vadodara city where hundreds of people cheered and waved banners.
The two leaders then launched the Tata Aircraft Complex, the
manufacturing hub that will produce the Airbus C-295 transport military
aircraft in collaboration with Airbus Spain and to be deployed by the
Indian air force.
Sanchez said the project was a triumph of Modi's vision “to turn India
into an industrial powerhouse and a magnet for investment and
business-to-business collaboration."
“This partnership between Airbus and Tata will contribute to the
progress of the Indian aerospace industry and will open new doors for
the arrival of other European companies,” he added.
The chairman of Tata conglomerate, Natarajan Chandrasekaran, hailed it
as a historic day for the country's defense sector and credited the late
Ratan Tata, the industrialist and former chairman who died earlier this
month, for conceiving the idea more than a decade ago.
Under a $2.5 billion deal signed in 2021, Airbus will deliver the first
16 of the aircraft from its final assembly line in Seville, Spain. Six
of them have been delivered to the Indian air force so far.
Tata Advanced Systems Ltd will produce 40 of the aircraft in the
Vadodara plant, which is expected to roll out the first C-295 aircraft
made in India in 2026. The aircraft can transport up to 71 troops or 50
paratroopers and will be able to access remote locations. It can also be
used for medical evacuations and to aid in disaster response and
maritime patrol duties.

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Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, center left, and his Spanish
counterpart Pedro Sanchez, center right, wave to greet people from a
vehicle in Vadodara, India, Monday, Oct. 28, 2024. (AP Photo)
 Since coming to power in 2014, Modi
has vowed to turn India into a global manufacturing hub, including
in infrastructure, pharmaceuticals and defense. As part of an effort
to modernize and reform military equipment, the government has
sought to grow the private defense manufacturing sector, a space
previously occupied solely by the government-run organizations, and
has eased foreign direct investment regulations to try and encourage
companies to establish themselves in India.
The visit marks the first by a Spanish leader to India in 18 years.
Modi and Sanchez have previously met on the sidelines of global
summits in 2018 and 2021. During the two-day visit, Sanchez will
hold talks with Modi to review ties between the countries and also
speak with Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.
On Tuesday, Sanchez will travel to Mumbai, India's financial capital
and home to Bollywood, where he is expected to interact with trade
and industry leaders, and also visit film studios in an effort to
grow collaboration between the Indian and Spanish entertainment
industry.
Their bilateral trade stood at nearly $10 billion as of 2023.
According to the Indian Foreign Ministry, more than 200 Spanish
companies actively operate in India and around 80 Indian companies
in Spain.
The two leaders are expected to sign agreements that will further
boost ties and cooperation in various areas such as trade,
information technology, renewable energy and defense, according to
an Indian government statement.
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