Thursday, April 25, 2024 | Shawwal 15, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
27°C / 27°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Third made-in-India submarine joins navy

1238606
1238606
minus
plus

Mumbai: The third indigenously-built diesel-electric Scorpene-class submarine, ‘Karanj’, was launched at the Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Ltd (MDL) here on Wednesday morning by Reena Lanba, wife of Indian Navy chief Admiral Sunil Lanba. Another three Scorpenes, being built by MDL in collaboration with DCNS of France under a Transfer-of-Technology contract, are in the pipeline.


The first of the vessels, INS Kalvari, was commissioned into the Indian Navy on December 14, 2017 while the second, ‘Kandhari’, was launched in January of that year and is undergoing sea trials. Admiral Lanba said the launch of ‘Karanj’ marked a significant departure from the manning and training philosophy adopted for the first two submarines, adding that from now onwards the Navy would be fully self-reliant in the training and certification processes.


The previous INS Karanj served the nation for 34 years until 2003 and also participated in the 1971 war, he added. The state-of-the-art technology utilised for constructing the Scorpene class submarines has ensured superior stealth features such as advanced acoustic silencing techniques, low radiated noise levels, hydro-dynamically optimised shape and the ability to launch a crippling attack on the enemy using precision guided weapons.


The attack can be launched with both torpedoes and tube launched anti-ship missiles, while underwater or on surface. The stealth of this potent platform is enhanced by the special attention given to various signatures.


These stealth features give it an invulnerability, unmatched by most submarines. A sophisticated and state-of-the-art Shore Integration Facility has been developed at MDL for integration and simulation of various equipment of the Scorpene submarine combat system for which there was no facility available in the country. However, in a setback to the programme, the indigenous AIP will not be incorporated in vessels five and six as originally planned but retrofitted on all six boats at a later stage. Air Independent Propulsion (AIP), being developed by the Maharashtra-based Naval Materials Research Laboratory (NMRL), is a fuel cell that replaces diesel in the conventional submarines. — IANS


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon