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Leading international aerospace and defence manufacturer Lockheed Martin has stated that, as part of the Make in India initiative, it will choose a local partner to provide the Indian Air Force (IAF) with a C-130J.
Head of Lockheed Martin's international business development for the tactical airlifter, Nicholas Smythe, reaffirmed the company's intention to collaborate with an Indian organisation. This collaboration is in line with the Indian government's "Make in India" initiative, which seeks to advance homegrown production and autonomy in the defence industry.
Officials from Lockheed Martin stated that they intend to choose a local partner in the next two to three months. With this move, they hope to strengthen their competitive offer in the IAF's contract for 40–80 medium transport aircraft and set up a final assembly line in India.
In the event that Lockheed Martin wins the contract, Smythe made hints about the prospect of choosing other partners to help with the C-130J's industrialization in India. Since the program's beginning in 1952, Marietta, Georgia, has been home to the original C-130J manufacturing facility. This collaboration may result in the development of a second site globally.
Recently, Mahindra and Embraer Defence & Security announced that they had inked a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the aim of working together to fulfil the Indian Air Force's forthcoming Medium Transport Aircraft (MTA) procurement project, which includes the acquisition of C-390 Millennium multi-mission aircraft. At Brazil's Embassy in New Delhi, the Memorandum of Understanding was signed.