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DRDO Netra Mk2
Airborne early warning and control aircraft From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The DRDO Netra Mk II is an upcoming Indian airborne early warning and control system (AEW&CS) being developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation for the Indian Air Force. It follows the Netra Mk 1 and Netra Mk 1A variants, and will be mounted on second-hand Airbus A321 aircraft that have been acquired from Air India.
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Development
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The Defence Acquisition Council in September 2021 cleared the acceptance of necessity for the ₹11,000 crore (equivalent to ₹120 billion or US$1.5 billion in 2023) AEW&CS project for six aircraft. The platform would be Airbus A321 purchased from Air India.[1][2][3] The platforms would be sent to France, modified to military standards, and then will be returned to DRDO where radars and surveillance suites would be fitted.[4] The contract negotiations for the modifications of the aircraft was on the way as of October 2024.[5]
The developmental work on the six Mark-2 aircraft, with bigger and more capable versions of the AEW&C radars and sensors to be mounted on second-hand Airbus A321 planes bought from Air India, was already at an advanced stage, as of February 2024, at a cost of ₹10,990 crore (US$1.3 billion). Delivery of the first such AEW&C Mark-2 aircraft, which will also have an antenna in the nose in addition to the main dorsal antenna to give 300-degree radar coverage, should take place in 2026–27.[6] Adani Defence & Aerospace has been designated as the L1 entity for this project.[7]
The six A321 aircraft, as of March 2025, were being operated by the Air HQ Communication Squadron, Indian Air Force.[8]
The Cabinet Committee on Security approved the project, worth ₹19,000 crore (US$2.2 billion), on 17 July 2025. It is anticipated that the project will be completed in three years starting in 2025. For the refit, DRDO will collaborate with Airbus Defence and Space in Spain, to modify and upgrade the jet platforms as per military standards, along with several Indian firms to equip the Netra Mk 2 with a mission control system and an indigenous AESA radar atop a dorsal fin-mounted antenna which will reportedly provide 300–360° coverage. The project has been officially designated AWACS (India).[9][10] All the six aircraft are expected to be delivered by 2033–34. The cost of the project inflated by ₹7,000 crore (US$830 million) after additional modifications to the aircraft was identified.[11]
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Design and Features
The Netra Mk2 will feature a dorsal fin-mounted active electronically scanned array radar, providing 300° radar coverage. In addition, a secondary antenna will be installed in the nose of the aircraft to enhance forward coverage.
Other planned features include:
- Extended detection ranges compared to the Netra MkI.
- Multi-role mission control system for airspace surveillance, battle management, and communication relay.
- Integration of advanced indigenous sensors and electronic warfare suites.
- Use of Airbus A321 as the base platform, offering larger payload capacity and endurance compared to Embraer EMB-145 used in Netra Mk1A.
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Operators
- Indian Air Force – Six aircraft to be procured.[1][3]
See also
References
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