A French-designed
submarine being built in India
is afloat as it enters advanced construction.
A Scorpene submarine operated by Photo: Mak Hon Keong. |
The Sunday Guardian
reported the vessel is now on schedule to be delivered to the Indian Navy in
September of next year, with the remainder of Scorpenes being handed over at
nine-month intervals.
"Both the
pressure and the outer hull of the first Scorpene are in place," an
unidentified Indian Navy source told the newspaper. "Much of the internal
fit is also progressing well.
"The submarine
will now be placed on a pontoon, and tugged out of MDL docks to the nearby
Indian Navy Dock. This will free one precious submarine-building dock at MDL,
and thus help in meeting deadlines for subsequent Scorpenes."
The Scorpene is a
French-designed submarine from DCNS, which is transferring technology to
Mazagon Docks Ltd under an agreement with Indian authorities.
Delivery of the
first Scorpene to the Indian Navy is scheduled for September 2016. Thereafter,
the delivery of the subsequent five has been promised at the rate of one every
nine months.
The Indian Navy
plans to arm the diesel-powered submarines with Exocet missiles and Black Shark
torpedoes.
The newspaper
described the construction of the submarines as a "desperately needed
relief for the Indian Navy, which has lost five submarines in the last 15 years
due to decommissioning or phase-out and accident, but not added a single new
conventional submarine.
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