HAL-Russia MoU for SJ-100: Bridging Civil Skies to Defence—India’s Next Aero Export Leap?
MoU Breakdown: ToT, Rights, and Roadmap
Signed by Prabhat Ranjan (HAL) and Oleg Bogomolov (UAC), the agreement grants HAL:
- Full manufacturing rights for Indian market
- Technology transfer for 70% indigenization within 5 years
- Joint R&D on avionics, composites, and digital cockpits
Over 200 SJ-100s operate globally. India’s 550+ regional routes under UDAN make it a perfect fit—especially for Northeast and island connectivity.
| Aircraft | Range (km) | Capacity | Unit Cost (₹ Cr) | Indigenous Potential |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SJ-100 (India) | 3,530 | 103 | 150 | 70% |
| Embraer E190-E2 | 4,537 | 114 | 280 | Low |
| Airbus A220-300 | 5,920 | 130 | 350 | Minimal |
Defence Spillovers: From Passenger Cabin to Combat Cockpit
The SJ-100 isn’t just a commercial jet. Its dual-use potential includes:
- Military Transport Variant: Rapid troop deployment to Ladakh/Andamans
- Avionics Suite: Adaptable for IAF’s C-295 and future MTA
- Composite Wings: Tech transfer to AMCA and UAV programs
- Logistics Trainer: Pilot training for Su-30 MKI fleet
HAL’s Koraput division—already producing 12,000 AK-203 rifles/month—gains cross-domain efficiency.
Export Horizon: ₹50,000 Cr by 2035
With IOR nations (Maldives, Sri Lanka, Mauritius) and Africa eyeing regional jets, HAL-UAC targets 350 exports. India’s neutral geopolitics shield UAC from sanctions—unlike Comac or Irkut.
Job Creation: 10,000 direct + 25,000 indirect roles across Bengaluru, Nashik, Koraput.
“This MoU is not about buying aircraft—it’s about building an aerospace ecosystem.” — Raksha Mantri Rajnath Singh



