GANDHINAGAR, October 21, 2022.
Boeing [NYSE: BA] announced a significant expansion of
its partnerships within the Indian MRO ecosystem over the last year, having
concluded considerable work agreements and deliveries with diverse indigenous
partners across the public as well as private sectors, including with AI
Engineering Services Ltd., Horizon Aerospace, and Air Works Group. The
localization of Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) to support Indian
customers promptly and efficiently, remains a top priority for the company.
In 2021, Boeing launched the Boeing India Repair
Development and Sustainment (BIRDS) program in its effort to help develop India
into a regional MRO hub, enabling engineering, maintenance, skilling, repair
and sustainment services of defence and commercial aircraft right here in
India, for India. Under the initiative, Boeing has strategically collaborated
with:
·
Air Works, to
recently complete Phase 32 heavy maintenance checks of six P-8I maritime patrol
aircraft for the Indian Navy
·
AI Engineering
Services Limited (AIESL), for MRO of the Boeing 777 VIP aircraft operated by
the Indian Air Force, and the P-8I aircraft fleet operated by the Indian Navy.
Additionally, the company is exploring collaboration in repair and overhaul of
landing gear and other commercial common 737NG equipment fitted on the P-8I
fleet
·
Horizon Aerospace,
for MRO of the three key Boeing defence platforms in India, the P-8I operated by
the Indian Navy (IN), and VIP 737 transport fleet operated by the Indian Air
Force (IAF)
“Over a seven-decade presence in India, Boeing knows
that a strong local aerospace and defence ecosystem is an imperative for the
business as much as it is for the success and mission-readiness of its
customers. We have continued to invest in building indigenous MRO capabilities
over the years, and with the BIRDS hub launched in 2021, are building a network
of Indian suppliers that can support engineering, maintenance, skilling, repair
and sustainment services of defence and commercial aircraft comprehensively and
competitively. An important aspect of the BIRDS hub is training programs that
are helping develop sub-tier suppliers and medium, small and micro enterprises
(MSMEs) to build high-quality MRO capabilities in India,” said Salil Gupte, president, Boeing India.
Boeing believes that the maturation and development of
India’s local MRO ecosystem is a key imperative for success in the Indian
market, and to enable faster turnaround times, and higher operability and
mission-readiness critical for its Indian customers. The efforts and
initiatives being undertaken by Boeing in India are aimed at building
capability and capacity of indigenous organizations to gain prominence on a
global scale.
“Our planned strategic collaboration with indigenous
companies under the BIRDS hub program enables us to provide significant
value-add to our customers locally by enabling faster turnaround, exceptional
operational capability and mission readiness for the Indian armed forces. This
also marks as an important step as part of our commitment to the Government of
India’s Aatmanirbhar Bharat vision of making India a regional MRO hub” said Surendra Ahuja, managing director,
Boeing Defence India.
Over the last one year, Boeing has continued to add
two suppliers every month. Its network today includes over 300 supplier
partners that are an integral part of its global supply base. Over a quarter of
this number are Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs). These Indian
companies are manufacturing and exporting systems and components for some of
Boeing’s most advanced products from India to the world. Boeing’s investments
with these partners span skilling, research & technology, and manufacturing.
Its programs have skilled more than 3,700 frontline aerospace manufacturing
workers and aircraft maintenance engineers.