India, France unveil defence industrial roadmap; Airbus and Tata agree on helicopter deal
New Delhi, January 26
India and France sealed an ambitious industrial roadmap to co-develop critical military hardware, firmed up a space situational awareness programme while Airbus SE and Tata Advanced Systems Ltd agreed to jointly build H125 helicopters following talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and French President Emmanuel Macron.
Foreign Secretary Vinay Kwatra, announcing the outcomes of Thursday’s Modi-Macron talks in Jaipur, also said a scheme for exchange of professionals in the age bracket of 18 to 35 years and activation of Schengen visas with a five-year validity for Indian post-graduate alumni were among other key decisions.
At a media briefing on Friday, Kwatra said both sides deliberated on various aspects to advance civil-nuclear energy cooperation and that there was a “very positive, forward leaning” ongoing conversation on small modular reactors (SMRs).
Modi and Macron also delved into the situation in the Red Sea and the “potential disruptions” that it can trigger, besides exchanging views on the conflict in Gaza, he said.
There was no announcement on India’s proposed procurement of 26 naval variants of Rafale jets and three Scorpene submarines from France as it is understood that price negotiations for the multi-billion dollar deals are still underway.
The two sides also inked a pact on defence space partnership that would facilitate joint work on a space situational awareness program, being considered as significant for developing military satellites and sharing information on space traffic and debris.
The foreign secretary said the Tatas and the Airbus Helicopters entered into an industrial partnership for joint production of H125 helicopters in India with a significant “indigenous and localisation component”.
Under the partnership, Airbus SE is set to put in place an assembly line in India for production of the helicopters.
Macron was the chief guest at the Republic Day celebrations at the Kartavya Path on Friday.
The French president, accompanied by a delegation of senior ministers, officials and top executives of leading French defence majors including Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury, began his two-day visit to India from Jaipur.
The foreign secretary said the two countries decided to adopt the defence industrial roadmap to identify opportunities for partnership for co-designing, co-development and co-production of military hardware besides building defence supply chains.
The aim is not only to fulfil the defence needs of India and France but also to see if it can be a useful contributor to the security partnership with other countries who might be in use of similar products, he said.
Kwatra said the defence roadmap will provide for technology collaboration in the spheres of air, space, underwater domain awareness, land warfare, robotics, cyber defence, artificial intelligence as also autonomous vehicles and platforms.
The focus would be on defence manufacturing in a manner that can harness the compatibilities and competencies of the two economies in the defence sector, he said.
The two sides also firmed up agreements for boosting engagement in areas of healthcare, education, training and research. and sustainable development.
It has been agreed that the year 2026 will be celebrated as India-France year of innovation, Kwatra said.
“The ongoing conflict in Gaza and its various dimensions including the terror dimensions, humanitarian dimensions, disruption dimensions—all those things came up for discussions and both leaders shared their perspective,” he said.
“With regard to the development in the Red Sea, naturally the potential disruptions and the actual things happening in the maritime domain there, which is causing disruption to the commercial shipping, indeed is a matter of serious concern and both leaders focused on it,” Kwatra said.
Modi and Macron also touched upon ongoing cooperation between the two nations in the Indian Ocean Region as well as the Indo-Pacific.
On India-France civil-nuclear cooperation, Kwatra said there are several elements to it including localisation, financial viability, cost effectiveness and the two sides are continuing the discussions.
The foreign secretary described the area of small modular reactors (SMRs) as a relatively new domain space in terms of discussion between the two countries.
“Technology needs to come together, viability needs to come together and its positioning in the overall energy mix needs to come together. There was a very positive, forward leaning ongoing conversation between the two countries (on it),” he said.
An MoU was inked by New Space India Limited (NSIL) and French space agency Arianespace for cooperation in satellite launches.
Kwatra said the French side has always been forthcoming in supporting India’s candidacy for the membership of the International Energy Agency.
He also said following up on a decision taken during Modi’s visit to Paris in July last year, the Indian consulate in the southern French city Marseille and the French bureau in Hyderabad are now fully ready to be operational.
The defence and strategic ties between India and France have been on an upswing in the last few years.
The two strategic partners also expressed commitment to cooperate in the co-development and co-production of advanced defence technologies, including for the benefit of third countries.
The two sides are also expanding cooperation in the maritime domain including in the Indian Ocean Region.