Indian Navy on Wednesday received its first locally made medium altitude long endurance drones, which were contracted using emergency financial powers last year, marking the first major weapons delivery by the Adani Group.
The drones will enhance surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities in the Arabian Sea, said Navy chief Admiral R Hari Kumar.
The drones — Drishti 10 Starliner unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), also known as Elbit Hermes 900 — have been manufactured at Hyderabad facility of Adani Defence and Aerospace which is being expanded to a manufacturing hub for missiles and UAVs.
The Adani Group has ambitious plans for the defence sector, with a portfolio spanning drones and counter drone systems to arms and ammunition.
While the drones are being produced in partnership with Israel's Elbit Systems, the Adani Group said 70% of the drone has been indigenised. The Hyderabad facility has in the past exported around 20 locally manufactured drones.
The intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) platform with 36 hours' endurance and 450 kg payload capacity will now be taken to Porbandar for final tests before being inducted for maritime operations.
A total of four drones have been ordered by the armed forces — two each by the army and navy — using emergency financial powers granted by the defence ministry last year.
The combined value of the deals is around ₹550 crore. The army is expected to receive its first drone within the next three months.
There is, however, a larger requirement for this category of drones in the armed forces, with a case being processed to acquire 97 such platforms, including 20 for Navy.