On Monday, May 18, 2026, GE Aerospace announced a fresh capital infusion of ₹100 crore into its state-of-the-art manufacturing facility in Chakan, Pune.
This newest investment brings the aerospace giant’s total deployment into the Pune plant to ₹510 crore ($61.4 million) over a rolling three-year period, reinforcing India’s growing importance in the global commercial aviation supply chain.
Project Blueprint: Upgrading the Chakan Facility
Rather than physically expanding the factory’s brick-and-mortar footprint, this ₹100 crore phase is entirely focused on advanced manufacturing tech, tool specialization, and precision engineering.
- Advanced Technologies: Funding will introduce next-generation specialized welding technologies and automated robotic inspection equipment.
- Precision Tooling: Procurement of ultra-precise custom tools, gauges, and high-tolerance fixtures to eliminate variance in component fabrication.
- Core Objective: To drastically scale up component production capacity while enhancing structural process precision for high-stress engine parts.
Target Propulsion Platforms
The Pune facility serves as a vital tier-1 component supplier for GE’s most critical commercial engine programs globally:
- CFM LEAP Series: Built by CFM International (a 50/50 joint venture between GE and Safran), these engines power the world’s most popular narrowbody aircraft families, including the Airbus A320neo and Boeing 737 MAX—both heavily utilized by Indian carriers like IndiGo and Air India.
- Widebody Engines: Components made here feed the massive GE90 (Boeing 777), the GEnx (Boeing 787 Dreamliner), and the next-generation GE9X developed for the upcoming Boeing 777X.
Ecosystem and Skilling Infrastructure
The facility is a cornerstone of India’s push for indigenization in advanced aerospace manufacturing.
- Deep Supplier Network: The Pune plant directly collaborates with over 300 local micro, small, and medium enterprise (MSME) suppliers, which link into a broader network of 2,200 GE Aerospace vendors across India.
- Talent Pipeline: Since its inception in 2015, the facility has acted as a technical training academy, certifying more than 5,000 production associates in specialized aerospace disciplines.
- Apprenticeship Drive: Amresh Singh, Plant Leader for GE Aerospace Pune, confirmed that this funding phase will scale up local apprenticeship programs to handle the global backlogs for widebody aircraft engines.
The Broader Strategic Framework in India
This commercial expansion complements GE Aerospace’s massive footprint across India’s civilian and military aviation sectors:
- Civil Fleet Dominance: Over 1,400 commercial jet engines from GE and CFM are currently active or on order by domestic Indian airlines.
- Defense Sovereignty: GE Aerospace’s defense wing supplies the F404 engines powering the Indian Air Force’s indigenous LCA Tejas Mk1 and is currently finalizing a technology-transfer agreement with HAL for local co-production of the F414 engines for the Tejas Mk2.
- R&D Anchor: The Pune manufacturing operations work in tandem with the John F. Welch Technology Centre in Bengaluru, GE’s largest integrated research center outside the United States.
“Our continuous investments in the Pune facility are a testament to our commitment to building a world-class aerospace ecosystem in India. By advancing our manufacturing capabilities and nurturing local skill development, we are directly contributing to the nation’s vision for advanced aerospace engineering.” — Amresh Singh, Plant Leader, GE Aerospace Pune.
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