Saryu-class patrol vessel


The Saryu class of offshore patrol vessels are advanced patrol ships of the Indian Navy built at the Goa Shipyard Limited. These vessels are capable of ocean surveillance and monitoring and can maintain control of shipping lanes. They can also be deployed to provide security to offshore oil installations, and other naval assets.

Design and development

Saryu class was derived from Sankalp-class vessels built for the Indian Coast Guard. The ships were designed by GSL's in-house design team and built at a cost of. The vessels are powered by two Pielstick diesel engines rated at a combined, each driving a Wärtsilä WCP 5C10 controllable-pitch propeller through a reduction gearbox.

Ships of the class

The first ship, was launched on 30 March 2009 in the presence of Chief of Naval Staff, Admiral Sureesh Mehta. INS Saryu was handed over to the Navy on 21 December 2012 and was commissioned on 21 January 2013 at Vasco da Gama, by the Commander-in-Chief of Andaman and Nicobar Command, Air Marshal P K Roy.
The second ship, INS Sunayna, was handed over to the Indian Navy on 2 September 2013; her first CO was to be Cdr Aftab Ahmed Khan. The three remaining ships were delivered subsequently with an interval of six months each. INS Sumitra, the fourth and last OPV, was delivered to the Navy by GSL on 16 July 2014. Two ships were delivered to Sri Lankan Navy in 2017 and 2018.
OperatorNamePennantKeel laidLaunchedDeliveredCommissionedHome portStatus
P5415 December 200630 March 200921 December 201221 January 2013Port BlairActive
P5725 September 200714 November 20092 September 201315 October 2013KochiActive
P587 May 200821 May 201114 January 20147 March 2014Port BlairActive
P5928 April 20106 December 201016 July 20144 September 2014ChennaiActive
P62310 September 201411 June 201622 July 20172 August 2017ColomboActive
P6249 May 20152 May 201723 March 201819 April 2018ColomboActive

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