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From mobile phones to chips, India manufacturing enters golden era
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IANS | 28 May, 2023
In 2018, South Korean giant Samsung inaugurated the world's largest
mobile factory in India. The 35-acre facility at Sector 81 in Noida,
Uttar Pradesh, saw Prime Minister Narendra Modi and South Korean
President Moon Jae-in officially inaugurating it together -- placing the
country firmly on the global manufacturing map.
Even
before that, the country saw a massive turnaround in mobile
manufacturing. Before 2014, there were two mobile manufacturing
factories and now, more than 200 manufacturing units have been set up in
India, producing millions of devices and exporting them to other
countries.
Fast forward to 2023. Led by locally-manufactured
mobile phones, India's electronics industry saw a record exports of
electronic goods at an estimated Rs 1,85,000 crore in FY22-23 --
compared to Rs 1,16,936 crore in FY21-22 -- marking a whopping 58 per
cent increase.
According to data by the India Cellular and
Electronics Association (ICEA), mobile phone exports made history by
crossing the $10 billion threshold for the first time in any fiscal
year, reaching an estimated $11.12 billion (over Rs 90,000 crore) in
FY23.
This growth has been primarily driven by the Apple
ecosystem, which alone crossed a record $5 billion in exports from India
in FY23.
The country has now taken a leap on manufacturing IT hardware (laptops, servers, tablets), semiconductors and more.
Vedanta-Foxconn
Semiconductors Limited (VFSL), a joint venture between Foxconn and
Vedanta Group, is one such example. Vedanta and Foxconn signed a
Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Gujarat government last year
to invest Rs 1,54,000 crore to set up the semiconductor and display
manufacturing plant which is India's first.
In April, Vedanta
Group signed MoUs with 20 Korean companies from the display glass
industry for the development of an electronics manufacturing hub in the
country.
The Centre last week approved an updated production
linked incentive (PLI) scheme for IT hardware, nearly doubling the
overall outlay for the scheme to around Rs 17,000 crore.
The
tenure of the programme will be applicable for six years and the
government expects investments worth Rs 2,430 crore in the scheme.
"PLI
2.0 for IT hardware will be a catalyst for India's $300 billion
electronics manufacturing mission, an important part of India's trillion
dollar digital economy goal," according to Minister of State for
Electronics and IT, Rajeev Chandrasekhar.
The IT hardware PLI 2.0
is focused on expanding India's production and presence in the global
value chains of IT hardware/servers/laptops.
The country recently
launched a Rs 76,000 crore production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme for
semiconductors and display manufacturing units.
Earlier this
month, Prime Minister Modi allocated a budget of Rs 1,200 crore to
invest in the Indian semiconductor design startups.
The
government is aiming to create 100 semiconductor design startups in the
near future that will develop innovative designs and solutions not only
for the domestic market but also for the world, according to
Chandrasekhar.
The country will soon have a talent pool of 85,000
highly-skilled professionals in the semiconductor space, according to
the minister.
India's semiconductor market was valued at $22.7
billion in 2019, according to a recent joint report by Counterpoint
Research and the India Electronics and Semiconductor Association (IESA).
The
2026 forecast of $64 billion is set to be driven by both domestic and
export markets with significant demand from the consumer electronics,
telecom, IT hardware and industrial sectors.
India's 'telecom stack' and industrial applications are expected to account for two-thirds of the total.
"In
the short term, there is a huge opportunity being driven by domestic
demand across applications like sensors, logic chips and analog
devices," according to Tarun Pathak, Research Director at Counterpoint.
"Local
sourcing is already happening in a significant way. It accounted for
around 10 per cent of the overall market in 2022," he added.
According
to Amitesh Kumar Sinha, CEO of ISM and Joint Secretary, MeitY, "India
is committed to becoming a reliable partner in global supply chains and
we are working towards that by framing long-term policies, keeping the
next 25 years in mind."
As 5G roll-out picks up pace in India,
Prime Minister Modi is already laying out the blueprint for 6G and has
asked global giants like Cisco to begin research and development
(R&D) around the next-gen telecommunication technology to further
empower millions.
The company's Chief Operating Officer (COO)
Maria Martinez told IANS earlier this month that Prime Minister Modi has
asked them to engage on 6G.
"We talked about building some kind
of joint R&D around 6G as well. We are very excited after seeing the
5G roll-out globally, including in India. We're very excited about 6G
too," Martinez said.
The Prime Minister has already emphasised
that the 6G initiative will create new opportunities for innovators,
industries and startups. In March, he released a vision document that
details India's plans to develop and launch 6G telecom services in a few
years.
The Modi government's next target is to increase
electronics manufacturing capability to Rs 24 lakh crore by 2025-26,
which will also help create over 10 lakh jobs.
Next on the anvil
may be Tesla manufacturing its electric cars in the country. Elon Musk
will likely pick a new location for a Tesla factory by the end of this
year and according to him, India is very much part of his scheme of
things.
In an interview with Wall Street Journal, when asked if
India is an interesting choice for a new Tesla location, Musk responded:
"Absolutely".
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