Misplaced Pages

Nistar-class diving support vessel

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Diving support vessels for the Indian Navy

Nistar at launch ceremony
Class overview
BuildersHindustan Shipyard (HSL)
Operators Indian Navy
Cost
  • 2,392.94 crore (equivalent to ₹32 billion or US$380 million in 2023)
  • 1,196.47 crore (equivalent to ₹16 billion or US$190 million in 2023) per unit (FY 2018)
Planned2
Completed2
General characteristics
TypeDiving support vessel
Displacement9,350 t (9,202 long tons)
Length118.4 m (388 ft 5 in)
Beam22.8 m (74 ft 10 in)
Propulsion2 x diesel engine
Complement1 x Deep-submergence rescue vehicle
Sensors and
processing systems
  • Navigation radar
  • 2 x BEL Lynx-U2
  • 2 x EOIRST
Electronic warfare
& decoys
1 x EW Suite
Armament2 × 30 mm/65 AK-630 CIWS
Aircraft carried1 × 15 t (15 long tons) helicopter.

The Nistar class is a series of two diving support vessels being built by Hindustan Shipyard (HSL) for the Indian Navy. The deal was signed on 20 September 2018 with the delivery of the ships is scheduled to commence from July 2023. The primary role of the vessels to support the Indian Navy's submarine fleet and meet various operational requirements such as submarine rescue, deep sea diving operations, sustained patrolling, non combatant evacuation operations and search and rescue (SAR).

History

The Nistar-class project is a series of two diving support vessels being built to support Indian Navy's expanding submarine fleet. These ships will act as a mother ship to the recently acquired deep-submergence rescue vehicle (DSRV) for rescuing and aiding submarines in need. To aid in its submarine operation, the Indian Navy signed a contract with the Hindustan Shipyard (HSL) to indigenously design, develop and manufacture these ships on 20 September 2018. Initially, the design of the vessel was limited to 7,650 t (7,529 long tons) which later increased to 9,350 t (9,202 long tons).

The deal that was signed in September 2018 had a value of 2,392.94 crore (equivalent to ₹32 billion or US$380 million in 2023). The aim was to deliver the first vessel within 36 months of signing the deal. However, there was considerable delay due to the COVID-19 pandemic with the launching of the ships done in September 2022 and the first delivery expected in July 2023, this tantamount to a delay of two years.

The project was awarded to HSL on a nomination basis to improve the financial standing of the shipyard. HSL began construction activities for the project in 2019.

Construction

HSL started the construction activities months after signing the deal. The beleaguered shipyard won this project on a nomination basis to bolster its financial position. The first ship (Yard-11190) was laid down on 28 December 2019, a year after signing the deal whilst the keel of the second ship (Yard-11191) was laid down three months later on 23 March 2020.

The contract obligated the shipyard to deliver the ships within 36 months from signing the deal but there has been considerably delays owing to the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent lock down in India. Both the ships were concurrently launched on 22 September 2022.

A minimum delay of a year was expected with the first ship, which is expected to be delivered in July 2023 while the second ship will be delivered six months later, around January 2024. Owing to this delay, the Indian Navy has released a Request for Information (RFI) to lease a mother ship to operate their deep-submergence rescue vehicle (DSRV).

The ship will have at least 80% indigenous content contributing significantly to the Atmanirbhar Bharat mission of the Government of India and further bolstered the Indian economy.

As of December 2022, 46% of the physical construction has been complete on both the ships with deliveries expected to be completed by 2024.

Design

The ships will have a displacement of 9,350 t (9,202 long tons) which has considerably increased from the contracted weight of 7,650 tonnes (7,529 long tons). The reason for the substantial increase in weight has not been disclosed but it can be corroborated to increased role of the ship. The length of 118.4 metres (388 ft 5 in) and a beam of 22.8 m (74 ft 10 in). The diving support vessels (DSVs) are first of the kind ship, indigenously designed and built at HSL for the Indian Navy.

The ship has been designed by HSL with design consultancy from Vik-Sandvik design similar to the INS Dhruv, another specialty ship manufactured by HSL.

These ships will be able to perform carry out submarine rescue, deep sea diving operations along with search and rescue missions, sustained patrolling and helicopter operations at the sea.

Ships of the class

Name Pennant Yard No Keel laid Launched Commissioned Home-port Status
 Indian Navy
Nistar 11190 28 December 2019 22 September 2022 December 2024 (expected) Visakhapatnam On sea trial
Nipun 11191 23 March 2020 Mumbai Launched

Gallery

  • Nistar and Nipun diving support vessels launched at HSL. Nistar and Nipun diving support vessels launched at HSL.
  • Launch ceremony of Nistar and Nipun at Hindustan shipyard. Launch ceremony of Nistar and Nipun at Hindustan shipyard.
  • Model of diving support vessels being built at Hindustan shipyard. Model of diving support vessels being built at Hindustan shipyard.

See also

References

  1. ^ MRS KALA HARI KUMAR LAUNCHES (YARD 11190 - NISTAR) & (YARD 11191 - NIPUN), DIVING SUPPORT VESSELS AT HINDUSTAN SHIPYARD LTD, VISAKHAPATNAM ON 22 SEP 22. Press Information Bureau (Report). 22 September 2022.
  2. "Defence Ministry clears 11 advance warships for Navy, 6 surveillance planes for IAF". The Free Press Journal. 17 December 2020.
  3. "Hindustan Shipyard Limited to construct Diving Support Vessels for Indian Navy". Financial Express. 26 September 2018.
  4. "Contract for Construction of Diving Support Vessels (DSV) Signed". Indian Navy. 20 September 2018.
  5. Contract for Construction of Diving Support Vessels (DSV) Signed. Press Information Bureau (Report). 20 September 2018.
  6. Patnaik, Santosh (7 July 2018). "HSL to sign contract to build two Diving Support Vessels soon". The Hindu.
  7. Launch Of Two Diving Support Vessels At Hindustan Shipyard Ltd, Vizag On 22 Sep 2022. Press Information Bureau (Report). 21 September 2022.
  8. ^ Patnaik, Santosh (9 February 2019). "HSL begins work for DivingSupport Vessels project". The Hindu.
  9. ^ "68th Annual Report - 2019/20" (PDF). Hindustan Shipyard. 10 April 2021. p. 44.
  10. Arthur, Gordon (26 September 2022). "Indian Navy beefs up diving support and submarine rescue capability". Shephard Media. Christchurch.
  11. Negi, Manjeet (22 September 2022). "2 Diving Support Vessels of Indian Navy all set to be launched in Visakhapatnam". India Today.
  12. "70th Annual Report 2021-22" (PDF). Hindustan Shipyard. 3 December 2022. p. 10.
  13. "69th Annual Report HSL 2020-21" (PDF). 27 December 2021. p. 15.
  14. "Indian Navy launches two diving support vessels Nistar and Nipun". Naval Technology. 20 September 2022.
  15. "INS Dhruv to be commissioned on September 10 by NSA Doval: All you need to know about the N-missile tracking ship". Jagran Josh. 8 September 2021.
  16. "Navy inks contract with Hindustan Shipyard". The Hindu. 26 September 2018.
  17. @Sputnik_India (20 September 2024). "EXCLUSIVE: 7 warships, one submarine to join 🇮🇳 Navy in next 4 months — defence sources to Sputnik India One ship is being built in 🇷🇺Russia, while the rest are being made in India..." (Tweet). Retrieved 22 September 2024 – via Twitter.
Ship classes of the Indian Navy
Aircraft carriers India
Destroyers
Frigates
Corvettes
Fast attack craft
Nuclear submarines
Attack
Ballistic missile
Conventional submarines
Midget submarines
Amphibious warfare ships
Research and survey vessels
Patrol craft
Minesweeper
Replenishment ship
Tugboats
Ferries
Barges
Torpedo recovery
Dredgers
Training
Categories: