Popular Articles

Handset maker Coolpad plans R&D unit in India
Coolpad Communications, a subsidiary of the Hong Kong-listed China Wireless Technologies that manufactures dual handsets, is planning an R&D unit in India by 2011. The company will decide on the exact location in India where the proposed R&D centre will be located towards the end of 2010, Coolpad’s managing director Sami Al-Lawati said here on Tuesday.

Bharti Airtel not to call MTN again
Telecom wizard Sunil Mittal has said Bharti Airtel would not call South Africa"s MTN again, after renewed merger talks between the two companies failed for want of government approval.

News of the day

A single readership survey
Business Standard / New Delhi August 27, 2009, 0:13 IST
Public Company

Indian IT firms eye IAF's combat aircraft project

Six global vendors have been shortlisted. - Samtel cockpit displays for Sukhoi-30MKI - Astra air-to-air missile to make its first flight - IAF's $11-bn order may become larger - Indian IT firms lift lid on hiring - Suryakirans to enthrall Dasara crowds - CBI begins probe into copter crash, visits Nallamala forests Indian information technology companies are eyeing the $10-billion medium multi-role combat aircraft deal, up for grabs from the Indian Air Force. Of this, about $1-1.5 billion (Rs 4,600-6,900 crore) is the size of the total IT integrated services pie, that would include engineering services and IT services, said industry sources. One of the largest deals, the $10 billion budget by the Indian Air Force for 126 multi-role combat aircraft is being eyed by global players. Six global vendors — Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Mirage, Russian Aircraft Corp’s MiG, Saab and Eurocopter — have been shortlisted and field trials for the aircraft have already begun. “The field trials have already begun. The final decision will be taken before the end of next year and then the project will be open for financial deals,” said Minister of State for Defence Pallam Raju. This is also a project that has an offset of 50 per cent. According to India’s offset policy, the manufacturer that wins the contract will either have to invest 50 per cent of the contract value or source the same amount through Indian industry. India’s defence budget for 2010 is $28 billion (around Rs 128,800 crore), of which 30-40 per cent has already been spent. Sensing the opportunity, many of the Indian IT companies have started entering into tie-ups. India’s largest IT company, Tata Consultancy Services, already designs jets for Swedish aerospace major Saab. TCS also works with Boeing, the US major. Similarly, Mahindra Satyam recently announced its tie-up with Saab to pursue defence opportunities. The tie-up is initially looking at the global defence and homeland security market. The company also said the centre of excellence being set up will look at the Indian government’s large investment plans on nationwide security. Wipro Technologies, India’s third largest IT company, is also looking at partnering with local players for this deal.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):