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Project 17A And India’s Naval Capability Gap

Context
  • The article examines the Indian Navy’s Project 17A and argues that India’s naval expansion must be assessed against delayed integration, import dependence and the actual threat environment.
  • Source: At sea: On the Indian Navy’s Project 17A, The Hindu, May 6, 2026.

Project 17A and Delivery Status

  • Nilgiri-class frigates: Project 17A is a ₹45,000-crore programme to build seven Nilgiri-class frigates with anti-air, anti-surface and anti-submarine capabilities.
  • Fleet role: These frigates are an advanced complement to Shivalik-class frigates and a precursor to Project 17B.
  • Recent delivery: INS Mahendragiri was delivered on April 30, completing six deliveries in 17 months.
  • Delay record: The project had earlier faced multiple delays, reflecting broader problems in warship construction and integration.

Design Changes and Integration Delays

  • CAG concerns: The CAG flagged hundreds of design changes in earlier warship classes during construction.
  • Paper commissioning issue: Some ships were nominally complete but lacked critical components such as engines and sensors, making them unready for combat.
  • Infrastructure gap: A 2025 CAG report found that the Navy was inducting platforms without adequate supporting infrastructure.
  • Timeline control problem: India can build most of each ship, but still has limited control over final delivery timelines.

Indigenisation and Import Dependence

  • Indigenous value share: Project 17A used 75% indigenous components by value.
  • Critical imports: Several critical components were still sourced from abroad.
  • Final integration risk: Absence of imported critical parts delayed final integration of vessels.
  • Sensor dependence: Frigate radars and sonars remain among the most import-dependent and delay-prone components.

Indian Ocean Security Environment

  • Strategic sea lanes: The Indian Ocean carries most of India’s energy imports.
  • Chinese naval presence: Chinese naval deployments, including increasing submarine presence, add to India’s maritime security concerns.
  • Threat-response mismatch: The existence of threats does not automatically justify every type or scale of naval response.
  • High-end limitation: A hull without premium sensors required to detect submarines does not effectively respond to China’s undersea presence.

Sensor Grid and Detect-Decide-Respond System

  • Post-26/11 surveillance: India built the Chain of Static Sensors after the 2008 Mumbai attacks.
  • Regional extension: The sensor chain has been extended to Mauritius, Sri Lanka and the Seychelles.
  • Networked approach: Static sensors, satellites, underwater networks and naval platforms together form a detect-decide-respond system.
  • Fuzzy picture problem: Adding more surface combatants is like adding receivers to a network that still gives incomplete or unclear maritime awareness.

Fleet Expansion and Threat Prioritisation

  • Valid frigate role: Securing sea lanes and responding to threats such as Houthi drone and missile activity justify some multi-role frigates.
  • Overkill concern: High-end frigates may be excessive for piracy and smuggling, where surveillance and Coast Guard capacity are more appropriate.
  • 26/11-type response: Heightened surveillance and the Indian Coast Guard also address coastal infiltration-type threats.
  • Industrial policy risk: Expanding the high-end frigate fleet may sustain shipyards and absorb technology, but risks letting industrial interests override threat-based planning.
Project 17A: Nilgiri-Class Stealth Frigates
Advanced stealth frigates strengthening India’s frontline naval capability and defence self-reliance
Project Overview
  • Project 17A: The Indian Navy’s programme to build seven Nilgiri-class advanced stealth frigates.
  • Nilgiri-Class: A follow-on to the Shivalik-class Project 17 frigates.
  • Ship Category: Multi-mission stealth guided-missile frigates designed for frontline naval operations.
  • Operational Role: Intended to strengthen the Navy’s surface combat capability across multiple maritime missions.
Design and Capability
  • Stealth Features: The frigates incorporate advanced stealth characteristics to reduce detectability and improve survivability.
  • Capability Upgrade: Project 17A is an advanced successor to the Shivalik-class, with improved design and combat systems.
  • Multi-Mission Platform: The frigates are designed for diverse roles, including surface, air and underwater warfare-related tasks.
Aatmanirbharta Significance
  • Indigenous Content: The ships feature approximately 75% indigenous content.
  • Self-Reliance Milestone: Project 17A reflects India’s growing self-reliance in naval ship design and warship construction.
  • Defence Manufacturing: The project supports India’s broader push for domestic capability in advanced defence platforms.

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