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DRDO and Jadavpur varsity establish research centre

June 24, 2016 12:00 am | Updated October 18, 2016 02:46 pm IST - Kolkata:

On Tuesday, the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) and Jadavpur University jointly established the Jagadish Chandra Bose Centre for Advanced Technology. The centre will be housed on the main campus of Jadavpur University.

Dr. S. Christopher, Secretary of the DRDO, laid the foundation stone of the centre in the presence of Prof. Suranjan Das, Vice-Chancellor of the university, and M. Rehman, DRDO’s Chief Controller of Research and Development. The collaboration is the result of Jadavpur University’s significant contributions to the DRDO in the past.

The DRDO is venturing into collaboration with various academic institutes throughout the country to attract scholars and academics into defence research.

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“The outcome of research that emerges from academic labs mainly focussing on fundamentals and theories, coupled with DRDO’s principle of developing user-friendly defence products within a fixed timeframe will benefit futuristic defence systems,” said Dr. Christopher.

Dr. Christopher added that the defence industry might also be involved in the development of the products that come out of these collaborations and that DRDO “products may soon be sent for export.”

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The government had on Monday announced opening up the defence sector by allowing foreign companies to own up to 100 per cent equity.

When asked at a news conference about the repeated delays in execution of various projects by the DRDO, Dr. Christopher said when those programmes and projects were taken up they never realised the complexity.

“If I have said seven years (for delivering a product), then at the end of seven years someone will knock at my door. So that is the problem of miscalculation of number of years,” he said.

The second issue, he noted, was during the gestation period the requirement of the defence forces increases sometimes and therefore the product development takes more time.

“A new product takes lot of time even in other countries. When you take submarines it has taken not less than three decades. Air-borne air warning system has taken not less than 15 years even in the US. So when compared to that we are also in a similar kind of situation,” he said.

“These are areas where we are stuck. We can’t give lame excuses. We are explaining these to the government,” he said.

The DRDO, functioning under the Ministry of Defence, undertakes design and development of products and technologies to suit the requirement of the three wings of the Indian armed forces.

“Someday there may be a possibility that a big company with a 100 per cent FDI may come with their technology and may be a competition to us. And we are raring to go for competition,” he said.

On the government’s thrust on ‘Make in India’, Dr. Christopher said it was a bonanza as far as DRDO was concerned.

“DRDO technology is made in India. It is a huge boost,” he said, adding they have even asked the government several times for exporting DRDO products.

“In case if I am not up to your level, there are several other countries which are poorer and they are willing to have the product we have,” the DRDO chief said, adding they can export products which have suffered because of environmental conditions.

The DRDO is venturing into collaboration with various academic institutes throughout the country to attract scholars and academics into defence research

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