INS Mahe Commissioned

INS Mahe Commissioned

Context

The Indian Navy has commissioned INS Mahe, the first ship of the indigenously- built Mahe-class Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft (ASW-SWC). The Navy is inducting 16 such vessels to strengthen coastal defence and underwater surveillance capability along India’s extensive coastline and island territories.

What is INS Mahe?

  1. INS Mahe is an indigenously designed and built ASW-Shallow Water Craft by Cochin Shipyard Limited (CSL).
  2. It is the lead ship in a class of eight Mahe-class vessels.
  3. Designed to operate in shallow coastal waters, where large warships cannot manoeuvre effectively.
  4. 80% indigenous content – major participation from BEL, L&T Defence, Mahindra Defence, NPOL and 20+ MSMEs.
  5. Crest symbol: Urumi sword (Kalaripayattu) depicting agility and
  6. Mascot: Cheetah symbolising speed and
  7. Motto: “Silent Hunters”.

What is an Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft (ASW-SWC)?

  1. An ASW-Shallow Water Craft is a specialised naval vessel designed to detect, track, and neutralise enemy submarines operating in shallow coastal waters, where larger warships cannot operate effectively due to depth limitations.
  2. It is equipped with advanced SONAR systems, underwater weapons, high manoeuvrability, and low draught, enabling it to conduct surveillance, mine-laying, and coastal defence operations.

Key Features of Mahe-class Ships

  1. Length: 78 metres
  2. Width:36 metres
  3. Draught:7 metres (ideal for shallow waters)
  4. Displacement: 896 tonnes
  5. Speed: 25 knots
  6. Endurance: 1800 nautical miles

Technological and operational features

  1. Propelled by diesel engine-waterjet combination (largest Indian Navy warships with such propulsion).
  2. Equipped with advanced SONARs, hull and towed-array systems for underwater surveillance.
  3. ASW warfare capability + mine-laying capability.
  4. Low Intensity Maritime Operations (LIMO) and Search & Rescue
  5. Fitted with state-of-the-art weapons, sensors, communication systems, and integrated control machinery.

Why is the Navy Inducting 16 ASW-SWCs?

Background

  1. Earlier the Indian Navy used Abhay-class corvettes (Soviet Pauk-II class) for coastal anti-submarine patrols.
  2. These were decommissioned between 2017-2025.
  3. In 2013, DAC approved 16 new ASW-SWCs worth ₹13,000 crore.

Ship Production

ShipbuilderClassStatus
CSL, KochiMahe-class8 ships (INS Mahe commissioned; 7 upcoming)
GRSE, KolkataArnala-class8 ships (INS Arnala, Androth commissioned; 6 upcoming)
  1. All 16 ships planned to be inducted within 2-3 years.

Strategic Significance

  1. Fills a critical capability gap created after decommissioning older corvettes.
  2. Detects and counters stealthy diesel-electric submarines operating close to the coast.
  3. Protects harbour approaches, major shipping lanes, ports, offshore oil and gas infrastructure, and naval bases.
  4. Low draught and high manoeuvrability make them ideal for littoral warfare.
  5. Creates a structured shallow-water ASW defensive wall along the coastline.
  6. Frees larger warships for blue-water (open ocean) operations.
  7. Strengthens deterrence posture in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR).
  8. Enhances real-time surveillance through integration with radar chains, patrol aircraft and underwater sensors.

Implications

  1. Boosts coastal and maritime security amid rising submarine activity in the Indian Ocean.
  2. Reinforces India’s Atmanirbhar Bharat and defence manufacturing ecosystem.
  3. Improves inter-operability and naval readiness for multi-domain maritime threats.
  4. Enhances India’s role as a net security provider in the Indian Ocean.

Challenges and Way Forward

ChallengesWay Forward
Increasing deployment of advanced submarines by adversaries in the IORStrengthen multi-layered ASW network integrating satellites, UAVs, P-8I aircraft and seabed sensors
Huge coastal area (7,516 km coastline + 1,197 islands) needing constant monitoringDeploy ASW-SWCs in tiered defence structure + expand coastal radar chain
Need for faster induction timelinesAccelerate ship-building; reduce procurement delays
High demand for underwater domain awarenessInvest in indigenous sonar R&D and AI-based threat-tracking systems

Conclusion

The commissioning of INS Mahe marks a significant upgrade in India’s coastal defence and underwater surveillance capability. With the induction of 16 ASW-Shallow Water Craft, India is building a robust anti-submarine security shield, strengthening maritime dominance, securing strategically important littorals, and enhancing indigenous naval power in the Indian Ocean Region.

Ensure IAS Mains Question

Q. Explain the strategic significance of the Indian Navy’s induction of the Mahe-class ASW-Shallow Water Craft. How does it enhance India’s maritime security architecture? (250 words)

 

Ensure IAS Prelims Question

Q. Consider the following statements about Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft (ASW-SWC):

1.     They are designed to detect and counter submarines operating in shallow coastal waters.

2.     ASW-SWCs are equipped with advanced sonar and mine-laying systems.

3.     They are primarily used for blue-water (deep ocean) naval operations.

Which of the above statements is/are correct?

a) 1 and 2 only

b) 2 and 3 only

c) 1 and 3 only

d) 1, 2 and 3

Answer: a) 1 and 2 only

Explanation

Statement 1 is correct: ASW-SWCs are specifically built for shallow coastal waters, where they detect and counter submarines close to the shore.

Statement 2 is correct: They are equipped with advanced sonar systems, sensors and mine-laying capability for underwater threat neutralisation.

Statement 3 is incorrect: They are not designed for deep-sea (blue-water) operations, which are handled by larger warships such as destroyers and frigates.

 

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