It has come as no great shock to Cricket Australia, given how much its Indian counterpart mistrusts the technology behind DRS.
India remain DRS' most strident critic and stand-in-skipper Virat Kohli confirmed it will be the case for the foreseeable future.
"Unless it's 100 per cent accurate I don't think ... (India) will change take on it. It just doesn't make sense to us sometimes," Kohli said ahead of the first Test starting here tomorrow.
The DRS will not be used this summer in Australia for the first time since India toured the country in 2011-12, the 'Sydney Morning Herald' reported.
It will be a game-changer for Michael Clarke and his teammates, who had been afforded the chance to review decisions in their past four Test series.
DRS has been a regular source of frustration for fans and officials, but much of this has come down to umpires' interpretation rather than faults in the technology.
The technology has improved every year since its introduction and the International Cricket Council now has a much larger body of evidence to show as much.
The ICC set up a DRS working group, including former India legspinner Kumble earlier this year, but progress towards a universal set of playing rules has been limited.
Last month, former Indian batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar had called for an urgent need to standardise the technology used for DRS across all formats in international cricket.
