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One of the most important missing links in India's aerospace industry today is indigenous jet engines, particularly in the 50–1000 kgf thrust class. They are the centerpiece of air vehicles from tiny drones and loitering munitions to tactical UCAVs and even light planes. Without them, we are still at the mercy of foreign vendors — subject to export controls, supply-chain disruptions, and strategic coercion at the most inconvenient moments.

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Creating such engines locally is not merely a matter of military independence. It's also about triggering an Indian industrial revolution: high-end metallurgy, additive manufacturing, turbine-quality alloys, high-precision machining, digital engine control, and intense test facilities. Each step creates capabilities that spill over into civilian aerospace, clean energy, and high-end manufacturing. From development to production, jet engines progress through digital design, material development, controls testing, and ground/flight validation into scaling into precision manufacturing, inspection, and certification. Interplay among labs, startups, and industry enables quicker, modular, and risk-reduced production

India's experience with the Kaveri engine program is testament to resilience

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Why is this thrust range critical? Engines at ~50 kgf power small loitering drones and expendable aerial vehicles. At ~300–500 kgf, we're in the sweet spot for long-endurance cruise drones and UCAVs. And at ~1000 kgf, we power heavier unmanned systems with strike capability. This is the very class of propulsion that drives "launch-and-forget" UCAVs — platforms that can loiter, search, and strike with precision. The recent wars have demonstrated how transformative these can be; such as the IAI Harop loitering drones employed in Operation Sindoor has proven to penetrate and strike deep within the enemy's heartland.13715479501?profile=RESIZE_710x

The vision is unambiguous: to build an indigenous family of modular, scalable jet engines for both defense and civilian applications, so that India masters the skies and powers its own industrial development. Startups, MSMEs, R&D centers, and industry captains have to join forces on this mission.

If India is serious about being an aerospace power, propulsion mastery is not optional. This is the time to invest, construct, and innovate in the 50–1000 kgf class — and it's worth taking on.

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Comments

  • Hi Ashrith, this is an incredibly ambitious and important idea. Your vision to build indigenous jet engines is a smart, strategic decision that could transform India's industrial landscape. However, the scalability of the supply chain for specialized components is a significant challenge. Without a mature ecosystem of qualified vendors, the project could face major delays. To unlock your vision's full potential, you could focus on a phased approach centered on supply chain development, perhaps by establishing a national "Center of Excellence" to support startups and MSMEs.
  • Well put—indigenous propulsion in this thrust range can be a real game-changer for both defense and industry
  • This is a powerful and well-written piece that clearly highlights both the strategic and industrial importance of indigenous jet engines. The thrust range is explained convincingly, with practical examples that make the urgency clear. You could also emphasize India’s competitive advantage if we succeed here, not just the risks of dependence. Overall, very compelling—just needs a touch more crispness to make it stand out.
  • Strongly argued — you’ve highlighted propulsion as the true missing link, showing both the defense urgency and the industrial spillover. A crisp, compelling call to action.
  • That is a very amazing initiative
  • This passage makes a powerful case that indigenous jet engine development in the 50-1000 kgf thrust class is not just a military necessity but a strategic enabler for India's entire high-tech industrial base.
  • E-Cell
    This is an outstanding and strategically vital proposal. You've perfectly articulated why indigenous propulsion is the critical missing link for India to become a true aerospace power. The focus on the 50–1000 kgf thrust class is particularly insightful, as it targets the most dynamic segment for modern unmanned systems.

    My main question is about the practical first step to make this a commercial reality, given the immense capital required: What do you believe is the most viable initial business model? Should a new venture focus on developing a single high-value component (like turbine blades or a digital controller) for the existing supply chain, or aim to build a full 'demonstrator' engine with a large seed grant from a defense PSU or government body?
  • A clear and timely insight stressing the need for India to develop its own jet engines and capture the industrial growth that comes from mastering the 50 to 1000 kgf thrust class.
  • If this is achieved, Indian Air force will become unstoppable. This small beginning will also become the start point for various other in-house projects.
  • This is a very compelling and nationally significant idea. You’ve articulated the big picture well, but adding more clarity on how startups and MSMEs could realistically enter such a capital- and research-intensive field would make it stronger. Outlining partnerships, phased development, or niche entry points could help show a practical roadmap alongside the vision.
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