
Made in India, built for all terrains: The ATAGS howitzer that fires and disappears in 85 seconds is being tested locally
Built for modern battlefields
Live Events
— ANI (@ANI)
Moving targets need moving guns
Big orders, bigger plans
Pinaka and K9 Vajra: More teeth in the arsenal
(You can now subscribe to our
(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel
India is gearing up to field its own mobile artillery that can operate just as easily on Rajasthan's burning sands as it can on Siachen's icy heights. The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) calls it the Advanced Towed Artillery Gun System or ATAGS. This 155mm, 52-calibre beast is set to replace the Army's older guns with something far more potent.The idea for ATAGS was greenlit back in 2012. The Armament Research and Development Establishment (ARDE) has driven its design with clear goals: longer range, pinpoint accuracy, faster firing, and all-weather, all-terrain readiness. 'The ATAGS has been envisaged with a high degree of excellence in range, accuracy, consistency of operations, superior rate of fire, and all-weather and terrain deployability,' said ARDE Director A Raju told HT.ATAGS isn't just a gun. It's a carefully engineered system. The upper carriage packs the gun barrel, breech, recoil system, loading gear, and targeting controls. Below that sits the undercarriage, the frame, wheels, and drive gear. There's no complicated hydraulics to fuss over in the field either. An all-electric drive handles gun laying, loading, ramming, and deployment. Fewer moving parts, fewer headaches.'The system is configured with an all-electric drive to ensure maintenance-free and reliable field operations,' the DRDO noted in its bulletin. The gun can fire existing shells in the Army's stockpile and plugs into the Artillery Combat Command and Control System (ACCCS). So, it doesn't just shoot, it talks to other units too.In action, ATAGS can fire 10 high-explosive shells in under three minutes. Or pump out five rounds in just 60 seconds in burst mode. Targets up to 48 km away are fair game, depending on ammo.Modern wars show that artillery must move fast or die fast. The Russia-Ukraine conflict drove that lesson home. High mobility means you shoot, scoot, and survive. To fill this gap, India is adapting ATAGS into a Mounted Gun System (MGS). Think of it as ATAGS bolted onto an 8x8 truck. It packs shock absorbers, blast-proof cabins, silent power units, and an electronic brain to control the whole thing.The MGS can unleash six rounds in a minute and strike targets over 45 km away. It takes just 85 seconds to shoot and relocate. 'The Russia-Ukraine war has shown the effectiveness of high mobility artillery,' said VRDE chief GRM Rao after internal trials in Balasore and Pokhran.The government has already cleared the purchase of 307 ATAGS units. The Defence Acquisition Council signed off on this plan, and the Cabinet Committee on Security backed it with a Rs 7,000 crore nod in March. Production is split between Bharat Forge and Tata Advanced Systems Limited. Bharat Forge will build 60 percent of the guns, Tata the rest.'We aim to sign the ATAGS contract by the end of this fiscal year,' General Dwivedi confirmed earlier. Trials for the truck-mounted version should wrap up by 2026.The Army wants 700 to 800 mounted systems eventually. Several private and public firms are vying for a share, including Bharat Forge, Tata Advanced Systems, Adani Defence (partnered with an Israeli firm), and Advanced Weapons Equipment India Ltd.The artillery boost doesn't stop with ATAGS. The Pinaka rocket system , India's answer to multi-barrel rocket fire — is also evolving. Its range has grown from 40 km to 72 km. Plans are underway to push that to 90 km, possibly even 120 km, outpacing the old Russian Smerch launchers.Then there's the K9 Vajra. Originally built with South Korean tech, it's a proven self-propelled gun already in Army service. Another 100 Vajra units will join the fleet by end of 2025, adding to the 100 already deployed in places like Ladakh.The Galwan clash in 2020 changed the Army's mindset. More firepower, closer to contested borders, all with an emphasis on speed and local manufacturing. 'Adding mobility to artillery guns enhances their lethality and firepower,' said one DRDO official.Nearly all new systems are made in India, apart from the M777 ultra-light howitzers from the US. It's a deliberate shift under 'Make in India'. The goal is clear: modernise artillery with longer range guns, smarter rockets, lethal ammo, and drones, all tied together so targets can be spotted and destroyed faster than ever before.India's artillery transformation is no small affair. Tens of thousands of crores are being sunk into this plan. But for a country keeping a watchful eye on two tense borders, homegrown firepower is no longer just a project. It's the frontline.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
Nifty in red, Sensex loses 330 pts in opening amid valuation concerns of Indian markets
Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], July 14 (ANI): Indian stock markets opened flat on Monday as valuation concerns emerged alongside weak earnings in the first quarter of the current financial year. The Nifty 50 index opened at 25,123.65, declining by 26.20 points or 0.10 per cent, while the BSE Sensex opened at 82,392.04, down by 108.43 points or 0.13 per cent. Experts attribute the cautious start to a mix of high valuations, weak corporate results, and global uncertainties. Ajay Bagga, Banking and Market Expert, told ANI, "Indian markets have a problem of premium valuations with earnings yet to pick up meaningfully and a weak global sentiment impacting FPI inflows." He added that large divestments by insiders, including promoters and private equity funds, as well as a strong pipeline of new primary market issuances, are draining liquidity from secondary markets. "When promoters are selling their crown jewels, markets should be more circumspect and lowering valuations," Bagga said. "Instead, we are seeing a continued 'buy all dips' strategy by domestic retail investors, who are holding up the markets and providing easy exits to departing insiders in a counterintuitive move." Global sentiment remains uncertain, particularly in the United States. US markets witnessed a negative week amid increasing trade tensions under President Donald Trump's administration, which included fresh tariff-related announcements. Tensions between the Trump administration and the Federal Reserve, led by Jerome Powell, further dampened sentiment. This week, the US markets are awaiting major earnings announcements, especially from big banks, along with key inflation data, which could indicate the impact of Trump's tariffs on consumer and producer prices. Back in India, in the broader market indices on the NSE, the Nifty Midcap 50 and Nifty Smallcap 1000 opened in the green, while other major indices were in the red. The Nifty 100 index was down by 0.20 per cent. In sectoral indices, only Nifty Auto and PSU Bank were in positive territory, while the rest opened in red. Notably, Nifty IT was down by more than 1 per cent. Akshay Chinchalkar, Head of Research at Axis Securities, pointed out that the Nifty dropped 205 points on Friday, marking its biggest single-day percentage fall in over a month. "Technically speaking, Friday's candle had a long upper shadow and a close near the lows, and that's weak behavior," he said. Several companies are expected to report their first-quarter results today. These include HCL Technologies, Authum Investment & Infrastructure, Tata Technologies, Ola Electric Mobility, Tejas Networks, Rallis India, Benares Hotels, Kesoram Industries, and Royal India Corporation. "The area between 25,000 and 25,127 is now a critical support. Bulls must defend this and push the index above 25,340 to reverse the ongoing dip. The market has closed below a short-term rising channel, so if it slips below 25,100, we may see a test of the 24,900-25,000 zone where another support channel lies." Sunil Gurjar, SEBI-registered analyst and founder of Alphamojo Financial Services, echoed similar concerns. He said, "The markets are currently experiencing a significant sell-off, driven primarily by three factors: weak Q1 earnings expectations, pressure on tech stocks, and broader valuation concerns." He added that Nifty's key reversal level is now 24,650. If the index falls below 25,300 and does not find support at 24,650, it could sharply decline to 23,855. In other Asian markets, Japan's Nikkei 225 and Taiwan's weighted index were down by 0.25 per cent and 0.74 per cent, respectively. However, most other indices opened higher, with Singapore's Straits Times gaining 0.26 per cent and South Korea's KOSPI rising by 0.23 per cent. (ANI)


Economic Times
an hour ago
- Economic Times
India's growth cycle bottoming out; interest rate, decline in crude prices & normal monsoon support growth ahead: HSBC
Synopsis HSBC Mutual Fund reports India's economic growth may be bottoming out, fueled by favorable interest rates, liquidity, lower crude oil prices, and a normal monsoon forecast. While global trade uncertainties pose a risk, sustained government spending, increased private investments, and real estate recovery are expected to drive medium-term investment growth. Despite global challenges, India's GDP grew 7.4% in Q4FY25. ANI India's growth cycle bottoming out; interest rate, decline in crude prices & normal monsoon support growth ahead: HSBC India's economic growth cycle may be bottoming out, supported by a combination of favorable macroeconomic factors such as the interest rate and liquidity cycle, a decline in crude oil prices, and a forecast of a normal monsoon, according to a report by HSBC Mutual report highlighted that these supportive factors could help drive a pick-up in growth in the coming quarters."We believe growth cycle in India may be bottoming out. Interest rate and liquidity cycle, decline in crude prices and normal monsoon are all supportive of a pick-up in growth going forward," the report global trade related uncertainties are expected to remain a headwind to private capital expenditure in the near term, the report expressed optimism over the country's investment report expects India's investment cycle to be on a medium-term uptrend. This will be driven by sustained government spending on infrastructure and manufacturing, an increase in private investments, and a recovery in the real estate sector. In addition, the report pointed out that higher private sector investments in renewable energy and related supply chains, localization of higher end technology components, and India becoming a more meaningful part of global supply chains could support faster economic the markets front, the report noted that Nifty valuations have moved to a premium compared to their 5-year and 10-year averages following the recent rally. However, the fund remains constructive on Indian equities due to a robust medium-term growth report also acknowledged the challenges in the global macro environment, including heightened geopolitical and economic uncertainties.A key concern it raised was the announcement of reciprocal tariffs by the US administration, which could significantly affect both US and global growth if the tariffs remain in the challenges, the report stated that India's GDP growth has accelerated further to 7.4 per cent year-on-year in report also noted that the government has made efforts to address the slowdown in private consumption, particularly through income tax rate cuts announced in the Union the US dollar weakening and crude oil prices declining, the report believed that the space for further policy easing has expanded. The forecast of an above-normal monsoon is also expected to be a positive driver for rural demand. (ANI)


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
India's growth cycle bottoming out; interest rate, decline in crude prices & normal monsoon support growth ahead: HSBC
Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads India's economic growth cycle may be bottoming out, supported by a combination of favorable macroeconomic factors such as the interest rate and liquidity cycle, a decline in crude oil prices, and a forecast of a normal monsoon, according to a report by HSBC Mutual Fund The report highlighted that these supportive factors could help drive a pick-up in growth in the coming quarters."We believe growth cycle in India may be bottoming out. Interest rate and liquidity cycle, decline in crude prices and normal monsoon are all supportive of a pick-up in growth going forward," the report global trade related uncertainties are expected to remain a headwind to private capital expenditure in the near term, the report expressed optimism over the country's investment report expects India's investment cycle to be on a medium-term uptrend. This will be driven by sustained government spending on infrastructure and manufacturing, an increase in private investments, and a recovery in the real estate addition, the report pointed out that higher private sector investments in renewable energy and related supply chains, localization of higher end technology components, and India becoming a more meaningful part of global supply chains could support faster economic the markets front, the report noted that Nifty valuations have moved to a premium compared to their 5-year and 10-year averages following the recent rally. However, the fund remains constructive on Indian equities due to a robust medium-term growth report also acknowledged the challenges in the global macro environment, including heightened geopolitical and economic uncertainties.A key concern it raised was the announcement of reciprocal tariffs by the US administration, which could significantly affect both US and global growth if the tariffs remain in the challenges, the report stated that India's GDP growth has accelerated further to 7.4 per cent year-on-year in report also noted that the government has made efforts to address the slowdown in private consumption, particularly through income tax rate cuts announced in the Union the US dollar weakening and crude oil prices declining, the report believed that the space for further policy easing has expanded. The forecast of an above-normal monsoon is also expected to be a positive driver for rural demand. (ANI)