Sun, 17 May 2026
India News Updated May 17, 2026 · 20:36

GRSE to Launch First Next Gen Offshore Patrol Vessel on May 20

Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers Ltd will launch the first Next Generation Offshore Patrol Vessel for the Indian Navy on May 20. The warship features high indigenous content, supporting India's Atmanirbharta goal. Vice Admiral Sanjay Vatsayan will be the chief guest, with Sarita Vatsayan launching the vessel. The NGOPV is designed for coastal security, anti-piracy, and humanitarian missions.

Translate

Read this story in your language

Open a machine-translated reader view in a new tab.

GRSE to launch first Next Generation Offshore Patrol Vessel on May 20

Kolkata, May 17

Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers Ltd will be launching the first Next Generation Offshore Patrol Vessel, being built by it for the Navy, on May 20.

The shipyard is building four such warships for the Navy.

The NGOPV will also have a high indigenous content, officials said, providing a boost to the country's Atmanirbharta goal.

Vice Admiral Sanjay Vatsayan, Vice Chief of Naval Staff, Indian Navy, will be the chief guest during the event, while his wife, Sarita Vatsayan, will launch the warship.

GRSE has built and delivered several Offshore Patrol Vessels (OPVs) to the Indian Navy and Indian Coast Guard over the years. The shipyard also built the OPV MCGS Barracuda, the first warship exported by India to Mauritius in 2014. GRSE bagged the Defence Minister's Award of Excellence for the in-house Design Effort for that warship.

The NGOPVs will be much larger warships than the OPVs built earlier and have greater endurance and firepower. These platforms will be about 113 metres long and 14.6 metres wide, with a displacement of 3,000 Tons. The NGOPVs will achieve speeds of up to 23 knots. Their endurance will be 8,500 nautical miles at a speed of 14 knots. The crew will comprise 24 officers and over 100 sailors.

The NGOPVs will play a variety of roles. With a draught requirement of only 4 metres, they would be able to operate in coastal waters, protecting offshore assets, carrying out maritime interdiction, as well as visit, board, search and seizure (VBSS) operations. They will also be part of presence-cum-surveillance and mine warfare missions while having the capability to support special operations.

These warships will also participate in 'Out of Area' Contingency Operations, non-combatant evacuation, convoy operations, anti-piracy missions and counter-infiltration operations. Apart from these, they will take on poachers and traffickers and participate in humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, as well as search and rescue missions. They will also be able to operate as a hospital, and COMINT ships apart from providing fleet maintenance support.

— IANS

Found this useful?

Share with someone who'd want to read it

Continue reading

More in India News

Reader Comments

A
Arjun K
This is what we need - versatile patrol vessels that can do everything from anti-piracy to disaster relief. The 4-metre draught is clever for coastal ops. But I hope GRSE ensures timely delivery and quality control, not just fanfare at launch.
R
Rohit P
8,500 nautical miles endurance and can double as a hospital ship! Very practical design. Reminds me of how our navy handles both security and humanitarian roles. Proud of GRSE's journey since that Mauritius export in 2014.
S
Sneha F
These NGOPVs seem well-thought-out for multi-role ops. But I wish they'd also focus on reducing maintenance costs and crew fatigue for long deployments. 24 officers and 100+ sailors is still significant manpower. Good step though.
J
James A
Impressive specs - 23 knots and large patrol range. The fact that GRSE built the first exported warship to Mauritius shows India's defense manufacturing is maturing. Good to see Vice Admiral Vatsayan gracing the launch.
K
Kavya N
Really appreciate the emphasis on 'Atmanirbharta' here. From OPVs to NGOPVs, GRSE is showing what Indian shipyards can achieve. But I hope we also invest in crew training to make full use of these capabilities. Knowledge matters as much as hardware.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50