Defence Atmanirbharta: India’s Record Surge in 2025

Syllabus: Challenges to internal security


Context

  • India achieved its highest-ever defence production and exports in FY 2024–25 under the Atmanirbhar Bharat push.
  • Government targets ₹3 lakh crore production and ₹50,000 crore exports by 2029.

Trends and Key Statistics

  • Indigenous production rose to ₹1,27,434 crore in FY 2023–24, up 174% from 2014–15.
  • Total defence output reached ₹1.54 lakh crore in FY 2024–25, reflecting strong annual growth.
  • Exports surged to ₹23,622 crore, compared to under ₹1,000 crore in 2014.
  • Private sector share increased from 21% to 23%, with 16,000+ MSMEs entering defence supply chains.
  • MoD signed 193 contracts worth ₹2.09 lakh crore in FY 2024–25, of which 177 were with domestic firms.

Opportunities

  • Defence Industrial Corridors in UP and Tamil Nadu attracted ₹9,145 crore actual and ₹66,423 crore potential investment.
  • India exports defence products to 80–100 countries, expanding its global footprint.
  • FDI up to 74% automatic and 100% via approval enables deeper technology partnerships.
  • A digital export portal issued 1,762 authorisations, reducing delays and raising participation.
  • Innovation supported through RDI Scheme (₹1 lakh crore), iDEX, and DRDO’s TDF (₹500 crore).

Government Initiatives

  • Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP) 2020 prioritises Buy Indian–IDDM and integrates new technologies.
  • Defence Procurement Manual (DPM) 2025 streamlines revenue procurement with uniform, digital systems.
  • Positive Indigenisation Lists restrict imports of thousands of items.
  • Seven DPSUs created from OFB for efficiency and autonomy.
  • Export reforms include OGL, simplified SOPs and an export promotion cell.

Challenges

  • Limited capabilities in propulsion, sensors, materials, avionics restrict high-end indigenisation.
  • Output still insufficient to fully meet annual services’ requirements.
  • DPSUs face weak export performance, losing key global tenders.
  • Reforms face implementation delays and procedural bottlenecks.
  • Heavy dependence on imported sub-systems, creating supply-chain vulnerabilities.

Way Forward

  • Invest heavily in deep-tech areas like stealth materials, seekers, propulsion and sensors.
  • Strengthen private sector through long-term orders, test facilities, and transparent competition.
  • Raise defence R&D to 8–10% of the defence budget.
  • Expand export diplomacy through finance, maintenance hubs and training partnerships.
  • Accelerate procurement reforms with single-window clearances and digital monitoring.

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