What Happened
- The Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) is set to consider the procurement of six additional Boeing P-8I Poseidon maritime patrol and anti-submarine warfare aircraft for the Indian Navy
- The deal, estimated at close to $4 billion, has faced delays due to a 50% price increase driven by supply chain costs and trade friction over US tariff policies
- The six additional aircraft would supplement the 12 P-8I aircraft already operational with the Indian Navy, bringing the fleet to 18
- The procurement assumes significance in the context of growing Chinese naval presence in the Indian Ocean Region
Static Topic Bridges
P-8I Poseidon — Long-Range Maritime Patrol and Anti-Submarine Warfare Aircraft
The P-8I is the Indian variant of the Boeing P-8A Poseidon, a militarised version of the Boeing 737-800ERX commercial airliner. It is designed for long-range maritime patrol, anti-submarine warfare (ASW), anti-surface warfare (ASuW), and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) missions.
- Based on the Boeing 737-800ERX airframe; manufactured at Boeing's facility in Renton, Washington
- Maximum speed: 907 km/h (490 knots); cruise speed: 833 km/h; mission radius: over 1,200 nautical miles; endurance: over 10 hours
- Sensor suite: Raytheon APY-10 multi-mission surface search radar, magnetic anomaly detector (MAD), electro-optical/infrared (EO/IR) turret, and Telephonics APS-143 OceanEye aft radar (India-specific addition)
- Can deploy up to 129 sonobuoys (active and passive) for submarine detection and classification
- Weapons: Mk 54 lightweight torpedoes, Harpoon anti-ship missiles (Block II), free-fall bombs, and depth charges
- Indian-origin components: BEL Data Link II communication suite, BEL IFF Interrogator, Avantel mobile satellite service system, ECIL speech secrecy system
- India's first batch of 8 P-8Is was contracted in 2009 for $2.2 billion; 4 more ordered in 2016; all 12 delivered and operational
Connection to this news: The additional six P-8I aircraft would significantly enhance the Indian Navy's ability to monitor and respond to submarine threats across the Indian Ocean, particularly along major sea lanes of communication.
Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) — Procurement Decision-Making
The DAC is the apex decision-making body for all capital acquisition proposals for the Indian Armed Forces. It was constituted in 2001 as part of the post-Kargil defence reforms.
- Chaired by the Defence Minister; members include the CDS, three Service Chiefs, Defence Secretary, Secretary (Defence Production), Secretary (Defence Finance), and Chairman DRDO
- The DAC grants Acceptance of Necessity (AoN), which is the first formal approval step in the procurement process
- Procurement chain: Statement of Case → AoN by DAC → RFP → Technical Evaluation → Field Evaluation Trials → Commercial Negotiation Committee (CNC) → CFA (Competent Financial Authority) → Contract
- For Foreign Military Sales (FMS) from the US, procurement follows the US government-to-government FMS route through the Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA), with pricing set by the US government
- Recent major DAC approvals include submarines under Project 75(I), additional Su-30MKI aircraft, and Tejas Mk1A fighters
Connection to this news: The P-8I procurement is expected to be processed through the Foreign Military Sales route, and the DAC's consideration of this proposal comes amid price renegotiations driven by the 50% cost escalation.
India-US Defence Partnership and Maritime Cooperation
India-US defence cooperation has expanded significantly since the signing of foundational agreements: LEMOA (2016), COMCASA (2018), BECA (2020), and the Initiative on Critical and Emerging Technology (iCET, 2023).
- LEMOA (Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement, 2016): Allows reciprocal use of military facilities for refuelling and replenishment
- COMCASA (Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement, 2018): Enables sharing of encrypted communication equipment; critical for platforms like the P-8I
- BECA (Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement, 2020): Allows sharing of geospatial intelligence for military targeting and navigation
- iCET (2023): Covers co-production of jet engines (GE F414 for Tejas Mk2), AI, quantum computing, semiconductors, and space
- India-US MALABAR naval exercise (with Japan and Australia) and bilateral PASSEX exercises enhance interoperability
- Major US defence equipment in Indian service: C-17 Globemaster III (11), C-130J Super Hercules (12), CH-47F Chinook (15), AH-64E Apache (22), P-8I (12), MH-60R Seahawk (24)
Connection to this news: The P-8I procurement is a significant component of the deepening India-US defence trade relationship, though it also highlights vulnerabilities to price escalation and trade policy shifts.
Key Facts & Data
- Current P-8I fleet: 12 aircraft (8 contracted in 2009 for $2.2 billion; 4 ordered in 2016)
- Proposed additional procurement: 6 aircraft; estimated cost: ~$4 billion (after 50% price escalation)
- P-8I endurance: 10+ hours; mission radius: 1,200+ nautical miles; speed: 907 km/h max
- Total India-US defence trade since 2008: Over $25 billion (from near-zero in 2005)
- P-8 operators globally: US Navy (~130), Indian Navy (12), Australia (12), UK (9), South Korea (6), Norway (5), New Zealand (4), Germany (5)
- Indian Navy's fleet of 12 P-8Is has logged over 29,000 flight hours since induction in May 2013