Amphibian Aerospace Industries & Apogee Aerospace unveil Rs 3,500 cr order book, investment of Rs 500 cr
Amphibian Aerospace Industries and Apogee Aerospace are set to industrialize the Albatross 2.0 amphibious aircraft in India, with an initial order of 15 aircraft valued at Rs 3,500 crore. This collaboration aims to establish manufacturing, mainten...

According to Wg Cdr MVN Sai (Retd), Chairman and Managing Director of Apogee Aerospace, the opportunity emerged from clear operational signals. “Engagements with prospective customers in the restricted category over the past two years indicate a clear operational gap that amphibious aviation can address,” Sai says. “In the first phase itself, services see a requirement for 20 to 30 aircraft to familiarise crews, develop SOPs, and formalise amphibious mission doctrines.”
India currently relies on a mix of fixed wing aircraft, helicopters, naval vessels, and surface transport to execute missions such as coastal security, island logistics, disaster response, and surveillance. These often require significant ground or port infrastructure and coordinated deployment across platforms.
The Albatross 2.0 consolidates these roles into a single transport category aircraft capable of operating from land and open sea, including wave heights of up to six to eight feet . It carries up to 28 passengers and remains the only FAA or EASA certified transport category amphibious aircraft above 19 seats in the Registered Passenger Transport sector.
“Albatross is a force multiplier like no other before it, as it fundamentally redefines the point of launch and recovery of air power,” Sai adds . “This intervention provides India with strategic insurance to its status as one of the world’s leading economies through the assured maintenance of its Sea Lanes of Communication.”
For a nation with more than 7,500 kilometres of coastline and island territories across the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal, infrastructure independent reach has clear implications.
Certification
The company says one of the programme’s strongest differentiators lies in its certification status. Gopi Reddy, President and CEO of Amphibian Aerospace Industries, underlines the significance of transport category approval.
“Without FAA or EASA Transport Category certification in the Registered Passenger Transport sector, no aircraft can be inducted into commercial airlines globally,” Reddy explains. “Being the only FAA or EASA transport category certified above 19 seats in the amphibian category means our aircraft can be inducted into commercial airlines, NSOP operators, and also serve military and government aviation.”
AAI says it is poised to become one of only eight FAA or EASA certified transport category aircraft manufacturers globally in the Registered Passenger Transport sector, placing it in select company alongside established global OEMs.
Industrialisation beyond assembly. While many defence partnerships stop at import and offset structures, this collaboration embeds manufacturing capability within India.
“The programme is built around capability led industrialisation rather than assembly-based localisation,” Sai says. “Over the first five years, we will establish end to end systems integration for military and special mission variants, FAA certified MRO capability, and tail section manufacturing for the global supply chain.”
This approach signals movement up the aerospace value chain, from sustainment and lifecycle support to mission integration and export oriented manufacturing.
Reddy confirms that India plays a central role in AAI’s long-term roadmap. “India is emerging as an aerospace manufacturing hub. We are committing by appointing Apogee to manufacture tail sections for the global supply chain, and Amphibian Aerospace Industries will gradually build towards a Final Assembly Line in India.”
Civil aviation as a strategic niche
Beyond defence, the civil opportunity is emerging in targeted corridors. Government initiatives such as UDAN and Sagarmala have identified more than 20 seaplane routes, yet India currently has no operational amphibious aircraft capable of serving them at transport category scale, Sai notes. Taken together, defence and civil demand could realistically cross 80 aircraft over the next decade, with a broadly balanced split between segments.
“The strongest civil opportunities lie in island territories, remote coastal districts, riverine regions, large inland lakes, offshore energy support, and disaster-prone areas,” Sai says. “It will be targeted rather than mass market.”
Unlike conventional floatplanes, Albatross 2.0 offers full standing cabin height, a washroom, luggage compartment, galley, and longer range. In structured regional connectivity or humanitarian logistics scenarios, these features elevate it from niche to strategic transport solution.
Reddy identifies the United States, Europe, the Middle East, BIMP economies, CLMV nations, and India as key markets witnessing traction.
India’s aviation growth story has historically been runway centric. Yet as maritime geopolitics intensify and climate resilience becomes a strategic imperative, the sea is increasingly emerging as an extension of sovereign reach.
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