Sunday, April 28, 2013

GM OFPM arested

Bureau of Investigation team on Wednesday arrested V.K. Panda, the general manager of the Defence Ministry’s Ordnance Factory at Medak near Hyderabad, after he was summoned to the city as part of an investigation into irregularities in a deal for supply of battle tank parts. Four officials of two forgings companies, who too were summoned here, were arrested in connection with the scam. They are S. Shanavas, managing director of Steel and Industrial Forgings Ltd, (SIFL), Thrissur; A. Valsan, senior manager of SIFL; Muralidhar Bhagvat, former managing director of AMW-MGM Forgings in Mysore; and K.R. Mugilan, a manager in the same company.
The CBI had earlier sought the Defence Ministry’s permission to arraign Panda as an accused in the case. He had allegedly been in touch with defence consultant Subi Mally, who is believed to have facilitated an agreement between Panda and SIFL to award a contract to the forgings company. He allegedly accepted Rs.3 lakh as bribe for the deal.
Shanavas and Valsan had earlier been named second and third accused respectively in the case. The duo allegedly conspired with Subi Mally, the fourth accused, to manipulate deals between SIFL and the ordnance factories at Medak and another at Avadi.
They also allegedly received a part of the commission that Ms. Mally collected for her role in the deal. A portion of this sum had been recovered from Mr. Shanavas’ residence by the CBI in a search earlier.
Ms. Mally has already been arrested and interrogated by the CBI. CBI officials said the arrests on Wednesday were made on the basis of information given by Ms. Mally and other evidence.
Ms. Mally allegedly acted as a mediator between ordnance factories and forgings companies like SIFL and AMW-MGM.
The five arrested will be produced before the CBI special court in the city on Thursday

Monday, April 8, 2013

OFB moderisation plan

The Ordnance Factory Board (OFB) has drawn up a Rs 6,800-crore modernisation plan for its 39 factories across the country. A detailed project report in this regard will be submitted to the Defence Ministry for its approval. The detailed plan will outline the future product demand and include necessary requirements to suit this demand.
The board will also commence trial production at its new plant at Korwa near Lucknow this year. In case of the Nalanda project in Bihar, work on the fourth plant of the project has been stalled due to some “internal problems”.
OFB would also look forward for technical collaborations with Russian companies for manufacturing Smerch rockets that have a range of 90 km.
The board is expecting a 29 per cent growth in its turnover this fiscal from Rs. 7,815 crore to Rs 11,000 crore. It currently exports items worth Rs 50 crore to countries that include Indonesia, Malaysia, Kenya, Vietnam and Latin American nations

Massive Rs upgradation for Ordnance factories

MoD's massive Rs 15,000-cr upgrade for ordnance factories

This amount will be spent during the 12th Plan on upgrading, modernising and supplementing the OFB's production facilities
the defence ministry (MoD) will spend an unprecedented Rs 15,000 crore on the Ordnance Factory Board (OFB), its fully owned conglomerate of 41 factories that manufactures arms, ammunition, vehicles and equipment mainly for the military.

This amount will be spent during the 12th Plan (2012-13 to 2016-17) on upgrading, modernising and supplementing the OFB's production facilities.

During the last decade, the OFB has spent an average of about Rs 400 crore per year on modernisation. Now, during the 12th Plan, OFB modernisation will consume more than Rs 3,000 crore annually.

For private sector companies that are foraying into defence manufacture, this is worrying news. Bharat Forge, for example, has invested about Rs 100 crore on importing an entire factory to build artillery guns; it has set up a production unit in Pune. Now the private sector fears that that heavy expenditure on upgrading the OFB will result in military orders being placed on the OFB rather than on the private sector.

Dismissing such apprehension, a top MoD official tells Business Standard that the OFB's modernisation plan will not create additional production capacity. Instead, the new infrastructure is intended to improve production quality and to reduce the OFB's manpower levels by increasing automation.

For example, some OFB facilities still fill explosive into ammunition by pouring it manually, a laborious and inaccurate process that causes variations in the ammunition. The new machines being installed will fill explosive using a screw-driven mechanism that is faster and more precise.

A key benefit of modernisation will be a reduction in the OFB's bloated workforce. While the OFB is authorised more than 1,50,000 workers, it functions with just 90,000 on Sunday. Modernisation could bring this down to below 50,000.

This modernisation plan comes as a major relief for the OFB, which has been tarred by scandal since the Central Bureau of Investigation arrested the OFB's just-retired chairman Sudipta Ghosh on May 19, 2009, for allegedly accepting bribes from foreign companies.

Now dust from that scandal appears to be settling. While Ghosh has not yet been convicted, the MoD banned six arms vendors on March 5, 2012, from doing business with the Ordnance Factory Board for 10 years. Last month the army placed a Rs 1,260-crore order for 114 artillery guns, which the Ordnance Factory Board has developed from plans obtained from Bofors in the 1980s.

While Bofors provided 155 millimetre/39 calibre guns in the 1980s, the OFB has upgraded these with in-house R&D to 45 calibre.

Of the sanctioned Rs 15,000 crore, the Ordnance Factory Board says that Rs 7,600 crore will be spent from the Replacement Fund on replacing old machinery with new, automated and efficient machines that require fewer operators. The Replacement Fund is built up from the depreciation amount that OFB writes off each year, creating a corpus for replacing production machines after about 20 years of operation. Another Rs 7,400 crore will be spent from the New Capital head on civil works and modern production gear that is badly needed in the OFB's more decrepit factories.

One of the OFB's facilities, the Gun and Shell Factory, Cossipore, has produced equipment at the same location since 1802.

The New Capital expenditure also caters for new projects, such as the Rs 1,500-crore plan that was approved last month for manufacturing the DRDO-designed Pinaka multi-barrel rocket launcher, and advanced variants of its ammunition in several OFB facilities.

In addition, the Ordnance Factory Board will now build 51 mm and 81 mm mortar casings and will enhance its capacities for producing and overhauling infantry combat vehicles (ICVs).

"The modernisation plan, which was drawn up in 2010, has been approved by the government. Now the MoD will allocate funds to the OFB based on an annual expenditure plan," says L Mohanty, the OFB's Deputy Director (Engineering).

OFB officials admit that it will be a challenge to transparently absorb such a large modernisation budget. Mohanty explains that the OFB has overhauled and simplified its procurement procedures, especially eprocurement, which is now mandatory for most transactions.

Three key procurement manuals have been completely revamped. These include the Plant and Machinery Procurement Manual, with new procedures for overhauling machinery; the Civil Works Procedure Manual which has a simplified procedure for civil works construction; and the OFB Procurement Manual, which lays down the procedure for procuring raw materials.

The Ordnance Factory Board was the world's 46th largest arms manufacturer in 2010, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

Its total sales that year were Rs 11,214 crore ($2.04 billion), with arms sales bringing in about 80 per cent of its revenue. However, worker productivity has been abysmally low, at just Rs 12.5 lakh per annum