Gustavo de Arístegui Puts a Stern No to the Illegal Commissions Made During Technology and Knowledge Transfer
Delhi- Make In India’ initiative presents the European country with an additional opportunity to strengthen its economic ties with India. Ambassador of Spain in India, Gustavo De Arístegui, took one step further and is of the view that they want to not only transfer tech, but develop it together.
Spanish companies are
pitching in sectors like infrastructure, transport and energy, areas in which
Spain has proven prowess. Spanish investment in India has been over $1.3
billion. India’s total investment in Spain is valued at around 605 million
euros. Seeking to give a strategic cast to bilateral ties, the two countries
have inked a defense pact that entails, among other things, exchanging defense-related
experience, information, encouraging visits of personnel, collaboration in the defense
industry and other similar areas of cooperation.
Gustavo de Arístegui is
excited and had done the planning very carefully. It is not only about
transferring technology and building together in India, it is about developing
technology together. He is very clear about this and wants this to be a
fulfilling partnership, based on trust, mutual respect and mutual beneficial
conditions. Many Spanish firms have shown an interest in selling high-tech
weaponry to India. Spanish defense companies such as Indra are already engaged
with the Indian armed forces in the areas of radar and communication.
The C-295, which is 100%
Spanish, that has got approval by the government for the Avro’s replacement in
the Indian Air Force. This is the first Make In India project. The Indian
authorities have noted that Spain is a world player in a lot of aspects that
have not been taken into account before. Spain is the sixth largest industrial defense
country in the world.
In today’s fast-paced
operational scenario, a supply ship can be a much-sophisticated combat support
ship, and due to Gustavo’s vision, Spain would be happy to be involved from the
design to the building stage. He believes that Navantia’s S-80 Submarine, which
is in the final stages of construction for the Spanish Navy, could be a good
reference for the P-75I. Navantia forms part of the Scorpene India consortium
with DCNS of France. It is providing design and transfer of technology to
Mazagon Dock Limited to build six Scorpene submarines for the Indian Navy under
Project-75.
The Indian Navy was
planning to build tankers to look after big ships like the aircraft carriers
and some LPDs like INS Jalashwa, as also six more diesel-electric submarines
with AIP. The Spanish submarines, designated S-80, are using an innovative AIP
system to charge fuel cells, similar to those in the US space shuttle programmes.
Navantia has an MoU with
Larsen and Toubro (L&T), which is already working with the Indian Navy in
heavy engineering and has built parts of the indigenous nuclear submarine INS
Arihant and the fast attack craft (FAC) built by Goa Shipyard. Navantia and
L&T are working jointly on building four LPDs like INS Jalashwa for
amphibious military operations and disaster relief for the Indian Navy.
The Spanish company Indra
has a presence in India.It has a significant presence in India, where its
radars control most of the air space. The company holds almost 90% of market.
It is the biggest player in air traffic controls systems. Indra is the biggest
in that sector in the world; even in Germany, they have an overwhelming share
and in Europe, it is 60 %; and in the US, 35%. Spain has some of the most
advanced systems of air traffic control, some of the most advanced civilian
radars and systems.
Additionally, the Airports
Authority of India (AAI) commissioned Indra to modernise Delhi’s air control
centre, one of the country’s most important centres and from which one of the
greatest air traffic areas is managed, including operations at Delhi’s Indira
Gandhi International Airport.
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