India’s Military Aerospace Faces Strategic Shift as Air Marshal Umesh Yalla Calls for Urgent Indigenisation
Air Marshal Umesh Yalla calls for urgent indigenisation in India’s military aerospace sector, highlighting risks of foreign dependence and emphasizing advanced materials, repair technologies, and self-reliance to strengthen strategic autonomy and defense capability.
Providing a sobering assessment of the current industrial landscape, Air Marshal Yalla stated that military aerospace manufacturing has largely evolved around the licensed production of airframe structures based on foreign designs. He noted that engines, aggregates, accessories, and avionics are typically supplied as kits, and even when local production is permitted, foreign OEMs maintain tight control over critical parts technology, processes, and raw materials. This framework, he asserted, ensures a cycle of continued dependency on foreign entities.
Highlighting the risks posed by reliance on foreign suppliers, geopolitical constraints, and the persistent threat of obsolescence, Air Marshal Yalla advocated for indigenous solutions to fortify the nation's defense. He outlined measures including developing repair overhaul technologies, executing life extensions beyond original OEM parameters, and addressing supply chain vulnerabilities through local manufacturing. He further emphasized that modifications and upgrades—whether for reliability or performance enhancement—at Base Repair Depots remain crucial to the sustenance and warfighting potential of the Indian Air Force.
Addressing the technical hurdles of this mission, he identified a demanding triad consisting of low volume, high variety, and safety criticality. He defined the key challenges as material availability for manufacturing and repair, the development of technology specifications, establishing process parameters, and navigating the complexities of prototype building and airworthiness certification. He stressed that these efforts must be executed rapidly in a mission-mode approach.
Looking toward the future of aerospace materials, Air Marshal Yalla highlighted the importance of advanced adaptive technologies. He specifically pointed to smart materials, such as shape memory alloys, which allow structures to undergo controlled deformation and recover their original shape via thermal or mechanical stimuli. He noted that such innovations have vital applications in morphing wings, adaptive control surfaces, and compact actuation systems.
The high-level seminar was attended by Director General CAPS, Air Marshal Anil Khosla; Secretary Department of Defence R&D and Chairman DRDO, Dr Samir V Kamat; Neeraj Gupta, MD MKU; along with a cohort of serving and veteran officers.
This call for a self-reliant aerospace ecosystem marks a significant pivot in India’s defense strategy, signaling a move away from kit-based assembly toward a future defined by home-grown technological mastery and material science innovation.

Comment List