Indian Defence Exports

So, it seems there is an integrated artillery ammo production hub coming up in the Polish town of "Niewiadów". How would you pronounce that?

Anyway, this is a brochure of some kind for that factory:
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Google translate is gave me this:
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The colour of the shell, the red band marking on top etc. seems very much like our M777 rounds.

So, I translated the other poster we saw yesterday:
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It would seem that the Germans are providing the fuzes. The ammo marked as "missile" is MIL manufactured. Canadians are providing the packages. Not sure what Serbia is providing. All of these will go to Sweden's BOFORS for quality control.

I am guessing the translation is poor & "Polonization" is basically their way of saying indigenization. Except the ammo, Poland has established domestic production for everything else. They are targeting "Polonization" for the ammo.

Global demand for explosives, ammunition leads to record defence exports

By Manu Pubby, ET Bureau
Last Updated: Apr 02, 2025, 12:46:00 AM IST
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Synopsis
Indian defence exports have hit a record ₹23,622 crore in 2024-25 driven by high global demand for explosives and ammunition amidst conflicts in Europe and West Asia. The capacity is fully booked for years, with significant contributions from state-owned units and a rise in private sector manufacturing. The number of defence exporters has grown by 17.4%.

A surge in global demand for explosives and ammunition, fed by ongoing conflicts in Europe and West Asia, has resulted in record Indian defence exports, with the figure crossing ₹23,622 crore in 2024-25.

Defence exports, which have been actively promoted by the government over the past decade, grew at over 12%, with strong demand for Indian manufactured explosives like TNT, RDX and HMX in the global market. Sources said that most Indian explosives and ammunition manufacturing capacity has been fully booked for the next three years, with at least five more plants coming up within the private sector in the coming months.

State-owned defence public sector units have recorded a 42.8% surge in exports, reaching a high of ₹8,389 crore in the financial year. A large part of these too are for explosives and parts for ammunition, particularly for artillery which is in big demand in Europe. Reflecting the growing number of defence manufacturing companies in India, the total number of exporters has also grown by 17.4% in the last year.

Global demand for explosives, ammunition leads to record defence exports

 
India offers cheap loans for arms, targeting Russia's traditional customers

By Shivam Patel
April 16, 20251:16 PM GMT+5:30
Updated 14 min ago
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Indian Army soldiers participate in a mock drill exercise during the Army Day parade in New Delhi, India, January 15, 2016. REUTERS/Anindito Mukherjee/File Photo.

NEW DELHI, April 16 (Reuters)- Prime Minister Narendra Modi's bid to transform India into a global factory floor has produced billions of dollars of low-cost iPhones and pharmaceuticals. Now he hopes to add missiles, helicopters and battleships to the shopping carts of foreign governments.

The world's largest importer of weapons after Ukraine is expanding the ability of the state-owned Export-Import Bank (EXIM) to offer long-term, low-cost loans to clients, including those whose political or credit risk profiles may limit their access to conventional financing, according to two Indian officials and three industry sources.

New Delhi will also sharply increase the number of defense attachés in its foreign missions as part of a new program that will see the government directly negotiate some arms deals, four Indian officials said. India is particularly targeting governments which have long relied on Russia for arms, two of the people said.

India's plans, which were detailed to Reuters by 15 people and have not been previously reported, mark an unprecedented effort by the government to inject itself into the recruitment and financing of foreign buyers as the world is rearming and longstanding geopolitical relationships are being recast.

Indian bureaucrats have long focused more on buying fighter aircraft from Russia's Sukhoi and howitzers from the United States to ward off China and Pakistan, Delhi's two nuclear-armed neighbors. While India has long had a small-arms production sector, its private firms have only recently started to make higher-end munitions and equipment.

The Indian defense and external affairs ministries, as well as Modi's office, did not respond to requests for comment. EXIM declined to comment.
“India is marching towards achieving the target of increasing defence exports,” defense minister Rajnath Singh wrote on X this month.

One turning point was Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, according to an Indian official tasked with growing arms exports. Like most of the people interviewed by Reuters for this story, the official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive government matters.

Spare Western arsenals were shipped to Kyiv while Russia's factories churned out munitions almost exclusively for its war effort. That left other nations that had historically relied on Washington and Moscow - the world's two largest arms exporters - scrambling for alternatives.

With its history of buying and absorbing arms technology from both the West and Russia, Delhi started to get more inquiries, the official said.
In response to Reuters' questions, Russian state arms exporter Rosoboronexport referred to previously issued statements that said it was in talks with India about jointly producing and promoting equipment to third-party states that are "friendly to Russia."
The Pentagon had no comment.

India produced $14.8 billion of arms in 2023-2024 fiscal year, up 62% since 2020, government data show. Some Indian-made artillery shells were found on the frontline in Ukraine in support of Kyiv's defense, Reuters previously reported.

Delhi has started brokering meetings between visiting delegations and domestic arms contractors, as well as demonstrating more sophisticated equipment like combat helicopters during military exercises, four officials said.

Viraj Solanki, a research fellow at London's International Institute for Strategic Studies think-tank, said India faced challenges selling its newer and more high-end wares.

"Unless it starts using its indigenous equipment more frequently and demonstrating its effectiveness, it is likely to struggle to convince potential buyers," he said.

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The value of annual defense production in India between 2016 and 2024

FAST AND CHEAP


Modi's government has set a target of doubling arms-and-equipment exports to $6 billion by 2029. It hopes sales will go beyond the ammunition, small arms and defense-equipment components that currently compose much of its military exports.

Delhi missed its target of $3.5 billion in arms sales for the latest fiscal year by about a third, but that still marks a significant increase from the $230 million in weapons and defense components it exported a decade ago.

At a time of stretched global budgets and burgeoning defense demand, India is pitching itself partially as a relatively low-cost producer.
India can produce 155 mm artillery ammunition for about $300 to $400 a piece, two Indian sources said, while European equivalents sell for upwards of $3,000.


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Indian firms have also sold howitzers for about $3 million each, one of them said, or roughly half what a European-made version costs.

While Western nations that reduced artillery and other defense production after the Cold War are rushing to restart factories, state-owned Munitions India was among the Indian firms that kept such capacity.

Delhi - which has in recent years faced off with Pakistan and China in combat - had a different strategic scenario, said retired naval Cdr. Gautam Nanda, who leads KPMG's Indian aerospace and defense consulting practice. "There were no cuts on our production capacity."

Private manufacturers like Adani Defence and Aerospace and armor-and-ammunition maker SMPP are beginning to produce 155 mm artillery shells, which they said had already been ordered by foreign governments.

"With this changing scenario, definitely we see a huge, massive demand for artillery ammunition," said SMPP chief executive Ashish Kansal, whose company is setting up a plant to manufacture large caliber 155 mm artillery ammunition.

HIGHER-END WEAPONS


India plans to use increased financing of arms exports via EXIM, which had a loan portfolio of $18.32 billion in the 2023-24 fiscal year, to move its products up the value chain.

Such financing will largely be conducted by EXIM's commercial business, which has the state as a backstop but doesn't draw solely from the national budget. Indian arms makers lobbied heavily for the move, an industry source said.

Most banks in India have been unwilling to offer commercial loans for arms exports because they don't want to deal with countries that may have higher credit and political risks, one Indian diplomat told Reuters.

That has long hampered India from competing on big deals with countries like France, Turkey and China, whose packages come with financing or credit guarantees, the diplomat said.

One market India is hoping to expand in is Brazil, where EXIM opened an office in January.

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Delhi is in talks to sell Akash missiles to Brasília, according to two industry sources and two Brazilian officials. Even as India faces shortfalls in its own shipbuilding capacity, it is also pursuing a deal to build battleships for Brazil, according to the two Brazilian officials and an Indian official.

India's Bharat Electronics, which develops components for the Akash missile system, opened a marketing office in São Paulo this year, two Indian industry sources said.

EXIM was expected to help finance some of the deals in Brazil, they added.

Brazil's army said in an email to Reuters that the developers of Akash had responded to a request for information and that it had not made a decision on the purchase.

Bharat Electronics did not respond to requests for comment.

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The value of India's annual defense exports between 2016 and 2025

STRATEGIC AUTONOMY


Delhi is focusing its arms-export strategy on countries in Africa, South America and Southeast Asia.

India plans to dispatch at least 20 new defense attachés to foreign embassies by March 2026, three Indian defense officials said. Their host nations include Algeria, Morocco, Guyana, Tanzania, Argentina, Ethiopia, and Cambodia, they said, adding that Delhi believed it had the ability to significantly expand arms exports to those governments.

One of the officials said this would be accompanied by a reduction in the number of defense attachés posted to Western embassies, who would be sent elsewhere.

The attachés have been tasked with promoting Indian weapons and were given resources to analyze the arms requirements of their host governments, the officials said.

Like India, many of these nations have a history of buying military equipment from the Soviet Union and Russia, which differs from the NATO standards adopted by many Western producers.

One early success story is Armenia, where India posted a defense attaché for the first time last year.

India has already eroded Russia's monopoly over arming Armenia, which was part of the Soviet Union but has since said that it cannot rely on Moscow.

It sold 43% of the arms Armenia imported between 2022 and 2024, according to data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, up from almost nothing between 2016 and 2018.

Rosoboronexport said in March that SIPRI, which relies on open-source information, does not have comprehensive data.

https://www.reuters.com/world/india...ing-russias-traditional-customers-2025-04-16/
 

Sunita Tools had received a Letter of Intent in March 2025 from a supplier from a neutral & friendly Far East nation for 100,000 155mm M107 empty artillery shells, to be supplied at a rate of 7,500/month. They're setting up the necessary infra, the order is worth ₹200-300 crores.
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"Friendly far east country"-Philippines? Taiwan? Japan? SK?
 
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A new revised SOP for grant of export authorization was issued further liberalizing & streamlining export permissions to reduce the timeline and to facilitate exports of items to the FOEMs for the purpose of repair/replacement.

Further, the list of non-lethal items for the purpose of Business Development was also expanded from 9 to 15 reducing the consultation process resulting into expeditious authorization.
 
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India has shipped the second of three batteries of BrahMos cruise missile system to Philippines.


Indian embassy in Jakarta received a letter regarding a $450 million Brahmos deal from Indonesia's MoD just before Indonesian President's visit to India in Jan 2025. Top-level Indonesian delegation led by Navy chief Muhammad Ali had visited the BrahMos Aerospace HQ in Delhi & was briefed.


Talks with the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Vietnam among others are underway for the sale of BrahMos missiles. It is expected that the deal worth USD 700 million would conclude with Vietnam in few months.
 

The new combat helmet currently being widely adopted by Moroccan Army units is made by the Indian company MKU, model "Kavro MKH / ACH-7." It is lighter and more comfortable, provides better protection against various ballistic impacts, and its modern design allows it to accommodate various accessories (NVG, torches, cameras,...)
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Armenian MP Special Forces with Tonbo Imaging Spartan-S thermal monoculars along with a newly utilized clip-on style for mounting the Tonbo thermals to picatinny rails.
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Original text in Russian. Google translated.

India replaces Russia in Armenia's arms market

But Yerevan's dependence on conventional trade with Moscow remains

By Nurlan Gasimov
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Armenia exchanges Russian weapons for Indian and French thanks to trade with Russia. Photo: KAREN MINASYAN / AFP

In the period from 2022 to 2023, Armenia signed defense contracts with India worth more than $1.5 billion, according to the report of the Russian International Affairs Council (RIAC) "Russian-Armenian Cooperation at the Present Stage", which was reviewed by Vedomosti, with reference to statements in the country's parliament.

During this period, Yerevan signed a number of agreements on the purchase of Indian 214-mm Pinaka multiple launch rocket systems, 155-mm ATAG artillery mounts, ZADS anti-drone systems, Akash-1S air defense systems, as well as Konkurs anti-tank missile systems (produced under a Russian license), mortars and various ammunition. In the near future, India is expected to send medium-range air defense Akash-NG.


Another major military partner of Armenia is France, with which Yerevan signed contracts for the purchase of weapons worth about $250 million from 2023 to 2024, including three GroundMaster 200 radars, Mistral 3 portable anti-aircraft missile systems and Caesar self-propelled artillery systems.

Yerevan concluded the last defense deal worth $400 million with CSTO ally Russia back in 2021, it has not yet been fully implemented, the report says. As the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) wrote, Russia's share in Armenia's arms imports in 2011-2020 reached 94%. But by 2024, it had dropped to 10%, as Secretary of the Security Council of the Republic Armen Grigoryan stated in early March of the same year in an interview with Armenian public television. The authors of RIAC believe that the reason for the decline in Russia's share in the Armenian arms market is the difficulties with supplies due to the ongoing hostilities in Ukraine.

In addition, the image of Russia has changed in Armenian society: from a friendly country, it has become a state from which "political threats" to Armenia emanate. Thus, according to a survey by the International Republican Institute (IRI) in December 2023, Moscow ranked 3rd in this indicator after Azerbaijan and Turkey. The decisive factor for this was the defeat of the Armenian armed forces in the second Karabakh war in the fall of 2020, as well as the subsequent armed clashes with the Azerbaijani army on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, during which Moscow, from the point of view of Yerevan, demonstrated a restrained reaction.

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As a result, the Armenian leadership has chosen a strategy to diversify its foreign relations in favor of rapprochement with Western states. In January 2025, Armenia and the United States signed a charter on strategic partnership in Washington. In February, the Armenian parliament adopted a government bill on the beginning of the process of the republic's accession to the European Union (EU).

But, despite these processes, Russia remains a key trading partner of Armenia. According to the Armenian Statistical Committee, at the end of last year, the Russian state accounted for more than 41% of the trade turnover of the South Caucasus republic ($12.4 billion, of which $3.1 billion is Armenian exports), while in the same period in 2023 it amounted to 37% ($7.9 billion). In 2022-2023, the volume of accumulated Russian investments also doubled to $4 billion, although the main increase in Russian-Armenian trade was mainly due to the re-export of a number of Western goods to the Russian market and Russian goods to international markets through the territory of Armenia, according to the RIAC report.

The Armenian leadership has long been preparing the ground for military-technical cooperation with India, says political scientist and specialist on the Caucasus Artur Atayev. According to him, this strategy is long-term in nature and is aimed at diversifying the sources of arms supplies and reducing Armenia's political dependence on Russia. France in this chain is also called upon to replace some of the Russian weapons. Nevertheless, Atayev notes, Yerevan is not interested in completely severing ties in this area with Moscow. "For Russia, the Armenian arms market is not important. The continuation of military cooperation with Russia is important mainly for Armenia itself, and not vice versa," the expert added.

French and Indian weapons will not be able to completely replace the fleet of Russian and Soviet weapons in the Armenian army, so the trend towards diversification of supplies is rather of political importance, continues Stanislav Pritchin, head of the Central Asia sector at the Institute of World Economy and International Relations of the Russian Academy of Sciences. "The new weapon has not yet proven itself in Armenia. And Russian equipment requires regular maintenance, the supply of components and ammunition for it. The Armenian military still adheres to CSTO standards, and the presence of a Russian military base in Gyumri remains a link for cooperation between Moscow and Yerevan. Therefore, the Russian share in the Armenian arms market will recover sooner or later," he explained.

Armenia has so far managed to secure a niche for itself as a transshipment point for Russia's trade with the outside world, Pritchin said. At this stage, Moscow and Yerevan are interested in maintaining this format of cooperation, however, if anti-Russian sanctions are lifted or channels for circumventing them are blocked, the indicators of trade will decrease and will probably return to the level before 2020, he believes.

Индия заменяет Россию на рынке вооружений Армении