Russia
will put off delivery of a renovated $2.3 billion aircraft carrier to India by
five months to fix defects in its construction, a state shipbuilder said,
blaming some of the problems on NATO-supplied equipment.
Sources
close to Russian arms exporter Rosoboronexport told Reuters earlier this week
that problems with the boilers on the Vikramaditya were discovered during sea
trials and would delay delivery of the vessel by six months to a year.
The head
of a top shipbuilder confirmed on Friday that boilers had malfunctioned.
“Besides that, there are a series of mechanisms which malfunctioned including
those delivered by countries of NATO,” Interfax reported Andrei Dyachkov,
president of United Shipbuilding Corporation, which owns another company that
is doing the renovation, as saying. He did not go into details. Interfax quoted
him as saying repairs would push back the delivery by five months until May
from this December.
Originally
built as the Admiral Gorshkov in the Soviet Union, the vessel to be
reconditioned for India is seen as the cornerstone of defence ties between
Russia, the world’s second largest arms exporter, and its biggest customer.
But
several delays and cost overruns for the vessel have raised the ire of both
sides. Russian newspaper Kommersant said this week the boilers malfunctioned
when the ship accelerated to maximum speed. “According to our calculations, the
estimated duration of repair work ranges from five to seven months,” said
Dyachkov.
The ship
is due to arrive back for repairs in the coming days.
Earlier
it was scheduled to be delivered to the Indian Navy in time for the country’s
Dec. 4 naval holiday. New Delhi bought at least $1.6 billion worth of Russian
arms last year, or 21 percent of all of Russia’s defence exports. reuters
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