India’s strive to be “atmanirbhar” in engines is not a story of 2026. In 1986, the government had tasked DRDO’s Gas Turbine Research Establishment (GTRE) with building the indigenous Kaveri engine to power the then-nascent Tejas light combat aircraft. What followed was four decades of heartbreak. Despite nine prototype engines, over 3,200 hours of testing, and a budget overrun of 642 per cent, the Kaveri produced only 70.4 kilonewtons (kN) of wet thrust against a required 81 kilonewtons. India’s strive to be “atmanirbhar” in engines is not a story of 2026. In 1986, the government had tasked DRDO’s Gas Turbine Research Establishment (GTRE) with building the indigenous Kaveri engine to power the then-nascent Tejas light combat aircraft. What followed was four decades of heartbreak. Despite nine prototype engines, over 3,200 hours of testing, and a budget overrun of 642 per cent, the Kaveri produced only 70.4 kilonewtons (kN) of wet thrust against a required 81 kilonewtons.
Trending
- Two Indian soldiers put country on world rowing map with 1st-ever World Cup gold
- ‘Polio Free Pakistan’ on government-linked pamphlet triggers probe in Jammu and Kashmir
- Cessna crash lands near Highway in UP; trainee pilot unhurt
- Over 1,300 dead in Europe: How ‘Omega Block’ supercharged a deadly heatwave
- French proverb of the day: ‘Little by little, the bird makes its nest’ — a lesson on why slow, steady effort builds the strongest foundations
- Indian man found dead in Kansas after his car was swept away by floodwaters, locals saw car going into water with someone inside
- ‘Historic milestone’: JKLF chief Yasin Malik named main accused in brutal 1990 killing of Kashmiri Pandit nurse Sarla Bhat
- Katie Miller is not impressed with MacKenzie Scott who has donated billions