Indian Electronics and Semiconductor manufacturing industry

FalconSlayers

धर्मो रक्षति रक्षितः
Senior Member
Joined
Oct 14, 2020
Messages
27,485
Likes
189,778
Country flag
Yes, a separate DLI is also announced.

There is a data centre linked scheme, worth ₹12,000 crore. Expected investment due to it ₹3 Lakh crores or $40 Billion.

 

FalconSlayers

धर्मो रक्षति रक्षितः
Senior Member
Joined
Oct 14, 2020
Messages
27,485
Likes
189,778
Country flag
Cabinet approves Programme for Development of Semiconductors and Display Manufacturing Ecosystem in India

Incentives of ₹2,30,000 crores (>$30 Billion) to position India as global hub for electronics manufacturing with semiconductors as the foundational building block
₹76000 crore (>$10 billion) approved for development of semiconductors and display manufacturing ecosystem in India
Setting up of India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) to drive this sector

In furtherance of the vision of Aatmanirbhar Bharat and positioning India as the global hub for Electronic System Design and Manufacturing, the Union Cabinet chaired by Hon’ble Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi has approved the comprehensive program for the development of sustainable semiconductor and display ecosystem in the country. The program will usher in a new era in electronics manufacturing by providing a globally competitive incentive package to companies in semiconductors and display manufacturing as well as design. This shall pave the way for India’s technological leadership in these areas of strategic importance and economic self-reliance.

Semiconductors and displays are the foundation of modern electronics driving the next phase of digital transformation under Industry 4.0. Semiconductors and display manufacturing is very complex and technology-intensive sector involving huge capital investments, high risk, long gestation and payback periods, and rapid changes in technology, which require significant and sustained investments. The program will give an impetus to semiconductor and display manufacturing by facilitating capital support and technological collaborations.

The programme aims to provide attractive incentive support to companies / consortia that are engaged in Silicon Semiconductor Fabs, Display Fabs, Compound Semiconductors / Silicon Photonics / Sensors (including MEMS) Fabs, Semiconductor Packaging (ATMP / OSAT), Semiconductor Design.

Following broad incentives have been approved for the development of semiconductors and display manufacturing ecosystem in India:

Semiconductor Fabs and Display Fabs: The Scheme for Setting up of Semiconductor Fabs and Display Fabs in India shall extend fiscal support of up to 50% of project cost on pari-passu basis to applicants who are found eligible and have the technology as well as capacity to execute such highly capital intensive and resource incentive projects. Government of India will work closely with the State Governments establish High-Tech Clusters with requisite infrastructure in terms of land, semiconductor grade water, high quality power, logistics and research ecosystem to approve applications for setting up atleasttwo greenfield Semiconductor Fabs and two Display Fabs in the country.

Semi-conductor Laboratory (SCL): Union Cabinet has also approved that Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology will take requisite steps for modernization and commercialization of Semi-conductor Laboratory (SCL). MeitY will explore the possibility for the Joint Venture of SCL with a commercial fab partner to modernize the brownfield fab facility.

Compound Semiconductors / Silicon Photonics / Sensors (including MEMS) Fabs and Semiconductor ATMP / OSAT Units: The Scheme for Setting up of Compound Semiconductors / Silicon Photonics / Sensors (including MEMS) Fabs and Semiconductor ATMP / OSAT facilities in India shall extend fiscal support of 30% of capital expenditure to approved units. Atleast 15 such units of Compound Semiconductors and Semiconductor Packaging are expected to be established with Government support under this scheme.

Semiconductor Design Companies: The Design Linked Incentive (DLI) Scheme shall extend product design linked incentive of up to 50% of eligible expenditure and product deployment linked incentive of 6% - 4% on net sales for five years. Support will be provided to 100 domestic companies of semiconductor design for Integrated Circuits (ICs), Chipsets, System on Chips (SoCs), Systems & IP Cores and semiconductor linked design and facilitating the growth of not less than 20 such companies which can achieve turnover of more than Rs.1500 crore in the coming five years.

India Semiconductor Mission: In order to drive the long-term strategies for developing a sustainable semiconductors and display ecosystem, a specialized and independent “India Semiconductor Mission (ISM)” will be set up. The India Semiconductor Mission will be led by global experts in semiconductor and display industry. It will act as the nodal agency for efficient and smooth implementation of the schemes on Semiconductors and Display ecosystem.

Comprehensive Fiscal Support for Semiconductors and Electronics

With the approval of the programme for development of semiconductors and display manufacturing ecosystem in India with an outlay of Rs.76,000 crore (>10 billion USD), Government of India has announced incentives for every part of supply chain including electronic components, sub-assemblies, and finished goods. Incentive support to the tune of Rs.55,392 crore (7.5 billion USD) have been approved under PLI for Large Scale Electronics Manufacturing, PLI for IT Hardware, SPECS Scheme and Modified Electronics Manufacturing Clusters (EMC 2.0) Scheme. In addition, PLI incentives to the quantum of Rs.98,000 crore (USD 13 billion) are approved for allied sectors comprising of ACC battery, auto components, telecom & networking products, solar PV modules and white goods. In total, Government of India has committed support of Rs. 2,30,000 crore (USD 30 billion) to position India as global hub for electronics manufacturing with semiconductors as the foundational building block.

In the current geopolitical scenario, trusted sources of semiconductors and displays hold strategic importance and are key to the security of critical information infrastructure. The approved program will propel innovation and build domestic capacities to ensure the digital sovereignty of India. It will also create highly skilled employment opportunities to harness the demographic dividend of the country.

Development of semiconductor and display ecosystem will have a multiplier effect across different sectors of the economy with deeper integration to the global value chain. The program will promote higher domestic value addition in electronics manufacturing and will contribute significantly to achieving a USD 1 Trillion digital economy and a USD 5 Trillion GDP by 2025.

:india::india::india:

 

Crazywithmath

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 3, 2021
Messages
2,362
Likes
14,355
Country flag
Cabinet approves Programme for Development of Semiconductors and Display Manufacturing Ecosystem in India








In furtherance of the vision of Aatmanirbhar Bharat and positioning India as the global hub for Electronic System Design and Manufacturing, the Union Cabinet chaired by Hon’ble Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi has approved the comprehensive program for the development of sustainable semiconductor and display ecosystem in the country. The program will usher in a new era in electronics manufacturing by providing a globally competitive incentive package to companies in semiconductors and display manufacturing as well as design. This shall pave the way for India’s technological leadership in these areas of strategic importance and economic self-reliance.

Semiconductors and displays are the foundation of modern electronics driving the next phase of digital transformation under Industry 4.0. Semiconductors and display manufacturing is very complex and technology-intensive sector involving huge capital investments, high risk, long gestation and payback periods, and rapid changes in technology, which require significant and sustained investments. The program will give an impetus to semiconductor and display manufacturing by facilitating capital support and technological collaborations.

The programme aims to provide attractive incentive support to companies / consortia that are engaged in Silicon Semiconductor Fabs, Display Fabs, Compound Semiconductors / Silicon Photonics / Sensors (including MEMS) Fabs, Semiconductor Packaging (ATMP / OSAT), Semiconductor Design.

Following broad incentives have been approved for the development of semiconductors and display manufacturing ecosystem in India:

Semiconductor Fabs and Display Fabs: The Scheme for Setting up of Semiconductor Fabs and Display Fabs in India shall extend fiscal support of up to 50% of project cost on pari-passu basis to applicants who are found eligible and have the technology as well as capacity to execute such highly capital intensive and resource incentive projects. Government of India will work closely with the State Governments establish High-Tech Clusters with requisite infrastructure in terms of land, semiconductor grade water, high quality power, logistics and research ecosystem to approve applications for setting up atleasttwo greenfield Semiconductor Fabs and two Display Fabs in the country.

Semi-conductor Laboratory (SCL): Union Cabinet has also approved that Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology will take requisite steps for modernization and commercialization of Semi-conductor Laboratory (SCL). MeitY will explore the possibility for the Joint Venture of SCL with a commercial fab partner to modernize the brownfield fab facility.

Compound Semiconductors / Silicon Photonics / Sensors (including MEMS) Fabs and Semiconductor ATMP / OSAT Units: The Scheme for Setting up of Compound Semiconductors / Silicon Photonics / Sensors (including MEMS) Fabs and Semiconductor ATMP / OSAT facilities in India shall extend fiscal support of 30% of capital expenditure to approved units. Atleast 15 such units of Compound Semiconductors and Semiconductor Packaging are expected to be established with Government support under this scheme.

Semiconductor Design Companies: The Design Linked Incentive (DLI) Scheme shall extend product design linked incentive of up to 50% of eligible expenditure and product deployment linked incentive of 6% - 4% on net sales for five years. Support will be provided to 100 domestic companies of semiconductor design for Integrated Circuits (ICs), Chipsets, System on Chips (SoCs), Systems & IP Cores and semiconductor linked design and facilitating the growth of not less than 20 such companies which can achieve turnover of more than Rs.1500 crore in the coming five years.

India Semiconductor Mission: In order to drive the long-term strategies for developing a sustainable semiconductors and display ecosystem, a specialized and independent “India Semiconductor Mission (ISM)” will be set up. The India Semiconductor Mission will be led by global experts in semiconductor and display industry. It will act as the nodal agency for efficient and smooth implementation of the schemes on Semiconductors and Display ecosystem.

Comprehensive Fiscal Support for Semiconductors and Electronics

With the approval of the programme for development of semiconductors and display manufacturing ecosystem in India with an outlay of Rs.76,000 crore (>10 billion USD), Government of India has announced incentives for every part of supply chain including electronic components, sub-assemblies, and finished goods. Incentive support to the tune of Rs.55,392 crore (7.5 billion USD) have been approved under PLI for Large Scale Electronics Manufacturing, PLI for IT Hardware, SPECS Scheme and Modified Electronics Manufacturing Clusters (EMC 2.0) Scheme. In addition, PLI incentives to the quantum of Rs.98,000 crore (USD 13 billion) are approved for allied sectors comprising of ACC battery, auto components, telecom & networking products, solar PV modules and white goods. In total, Government of India has committed support of Rs. 2,30,000 crore (USD 30 billion) to position India as global hub for electronics manufacturing with semiconductors as the foundational building block.

In the current geopolitical scenario, trusted sources of semiconductors and displays hold strategic importance and are key to the security of critical information infrastructure. The approved program will propel innovation and build domestic capacities to ensure the digital sovereignty of India. It will also create highly skilled employment opportunities to harness the demographic dividend of the country.

Development of semiconductor and display ecosystem will have a multiplier effect across different sectors of the economy with deeper integration to the global value chain. The program will promote higher domestic value addition in electronics manufacturing and will contribute significantly to achieving a USD 1 Trillion digital economy and a USD 5 Trillion GDP by 2025.

:india::india::india:

Although most of the PLIs were hits the ones on IT hardware, tablets, components, IoT devices, AI devices, hearables, wearables, robotics were not. The one on IT hardware has been awarded reagardless. MEiTy is holding discussions with the stakeholders to explore the various possibilities of making the scheme more attractive; including possible increase in the amount to be committed.

 

ezsasa

Designated Cynic
Mod
Joined
Jul 12, 2014
Messages
31,925
Likes
148,096
Country flag
In PPP terms the value of the scheme becomes around $40 billion I guess assuming that our PPP GDP to Nominal GDP ratio is 4. Which means that USA had to give an incentive of around $40 Billion to do the same what India is doing in $10 billion.

though PPP is not the right way to calculate these things, you were close in your estimation.

 

Crazywithmath

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 3, 2021
Messages
2,362
Likes
14,355
Country flag

Covfefe

Senior Member
Joined
Aug 17, 2021
Messages
4,028
Likes
27,519
Country flag
Ashwini Vaishnaw interview: ‘Have 20-year roadmap for semiconductor units’
🔴 "We had been thinking only of silicon fabrication. This time, the thought process is for the entire ecosystem, which includes silicon fabrication, display fabrication, 15-odd compound semiconductor fabrication and the entire design unit," Minister of Electronics and Information Technology Ashwini Vaishnaw said.

Ashwini Vaishnaw: ‘Have 20-year roadmap for semiconductor units’

Advertisement


Ashwini Vaishnaw (Express file photo by Anil Sharma)
Within a week of being approved by the Union Cabinet, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology on Tuesday notified the new scheme for domestic manufacturing of semiconductor wafer fabrication facilities. There is significant interest, Minister of Electronics and Information Technology Ashwini Vaishnaw said in an interview to Aashish Aryan, from both global and domestic companies. Edited excerpts

:
There have been schemes to encourage domestic manufacturing of semiconductor chips and fabrication, which are very similar to what has been announced this time. Those schemes did not take off. What is different this time?
Three things are very different. The first is that today there is an ecosystem that can consume the chips which are manufactured. Electronic manufacturing is today a $75-billion industry, on the way to becoming $250 billion in 5 years. That is a very big difference. Secondly, all along, we had been thinking only of silicon fabrication. This time, the thought process is for the entire ecosystem, which includes silicon fabrication, display fabrication, 15-odd compound semiconductor fabrication and the entire design unit.

We were thinking of 50 companies, but looking at the response we are getting, we might go beyond 100 companies. Then there are the 85,000 semiconductor engineers. So, that is the second difference. The third is a commitment for 20 years. So, instead of a one-off project, here we are committing to the industry that we have a roadmap of 20 years, in which talent, more fabrication units, and co-operation with the states will be considered. It is not based on our thinking but the way the industry has given us feedback. There is very extensive consultation with the industry, designers, equipment manufacturers, state governments, consumers and academia.

How many applicants are you expecting overall?
In the silicon and display fabrication units, these are very big-ticket items. That will always be a very limited area because there are only four or five companies who dominate this entire industry. But in the compound semiconductor and the ATMP (assembly, testing, marking and packaging ) segment, which is what goes into automobile, power electronics, and telecom equipment, we might even exceed 15 applicants, which is what we had targeted earlier. In design, of course, we had targeted 50 applications, but might get more than a hundred.


Semiconductors is a very niche industry. There are requirements such as extremely pure water. Are there any specific geographies you have in mind for the industries?
Ultra-pure water is always manufactured. So, wherever plant is put, it will be part of the unit. So, that is not geography dependent. Double or triple redundant power is a design issue, which can be very easily handled. The third thing which people look for is high-tech engineers. So, what is the kind of facility that the applicant would be providing for them, and what kind of ambiance these engineers like to live in. That will also have a play in the decision for the unit.

There are some domestic companies such as Tata, which have expressed interest in semiconductor chip manufacturing. Is the Ministry consulting them?
All domestic companies interested in manufacturing these products have been consulted.

What will the scheme entail to support demand aggregation?
Luckily, electronics manufacturing is today a very well established industry. So, that is going to primarily have the consumption of these chips. The automobile industry, which is the second big consumer, is a highly organised industry. The power electronics industry, which is a bit fragmented at the lower voltage side, is again very organised at the larger level. And then there is the telecom equipment manufacturing.
These are the four large consumers. That is the level of aggregation. We will not be saying that we will buy and tell you the market. Our value add is more in guiding them. The industry itself is very organised.

Have any global companies shown interest?
It would be unfair to give any names. One prominent companies said all the countries around the world are putting in multiples of tens of billions of dollars, which is par for the course. What we have done different, according to them, is the 85,000 semiconductor engineer commitment. For the second plant, and the subsequent growth, you need the local talent. Otherwise, how do you grow this industry?

For the design linked incentive scheme, will local companies get manpower training from foreign experts?

We have about 60,000 design engineers already working in India, with the biggest names in the industry, which are almost all the global companies. Many of them will have their own startups in future. When the brain is India, why should the IP (intellectual property) also not be Indian?

Courtesy- Indian Express
 

Knowitall

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 31, 2019
Messages
7,930
Likes
35,897
Still nothing concrete and nothing on the ground :sleeping:
Well yea it's not a school project that can be done in a month or two.

In all seriousness it would good if you could go through the entire scheme and plan that was developed to bring in the entire ecosystem and not a part of it to India.

The plan and the amount of incentives and money being offered is realistic and we'll thought out.

Plus this is probably one of the fastest implementation of a project I have seen in India till date along with a few others.

Semiconductors are the Magnum opus of technology. You can have a nuclear bomb ready nowadays with lesser technological know how and money.

The fact that we have progressed this far tells you a lot about how seriously this project is being implemented.

Also look at recent tweets from our ministers I don't think you will have to wait much longer.
 

Covfefe

Senior Member
Joined
Aug 17, 2021
Messages
4,028
Likes
27,519
Country flag
So $10 Billion incentive is for
1. Atleast 2 Semiconductor fabs
2. Atleast 15-20 OSAT facilities
3. 100 Semiconductor design companies
4. 2 display fabs

Isn’t it too low of an incentive then?

View attachment 128265View attachment 128266View attachment 128267View attachment 128268
This 10 billion number will obviously go up as the actual production starts churning out as is the case with other schemes of MeiTY. But the chief plank for this semiconductor program isn't the monetary incentive as pointed out by Minister in his interview- it's a part of larger value chain, and the availability of low cost skilled manpower. US, for instance, has offered a 4x incentive size but then again for downstream consumption they need to sell those chips to countries like India, Vietnam, China etc where they're put in actual device. India covers both these aspects- with the current market size of electronics being 75B, they expect it to be of 250B in the next 5 years. That is a huge local consumption area for chips. Plus this sector requires a lot of skilled manpower which can be available at lower costs in India. Obviously we cannot capture the whole market of it, but even if we can start with the lower end of it, it'll be good business. All this goes with the backdrop of China+1 mindset of companies post pandemic supply chain diversification.
 

FalconSlayers

धर्मो रक्षति रक्षितः
Senior Member
Joined
Oct 14, 2020
Messages
27,485
Likes
189,778
Country flag
This 10 billion number will obviously go up as the actual production starts churning out as is the case with other schemes of MeiTY. But the chief plank for this semiconductor program isn't the monetary incentive as pointed out by Minister in his interview- it's a part of larger value chain, and the availability of low cost skilled manpower. US, for instance, has offered a 4x incentive size but then again for downstream consumption they need to sell those chips to countries like India, Vietnam, China etc where they're put in actual device. India covers both these aspects- with the current market size of electronics being 75B, they expect it to be of 250B in the next 5 years. That is a huge local consumption area for chips. Plus this sector requires a lot of skilled manpower which can be available at lower costs in India. Obviously we cannot capture the whole market of it, but even if we can start with the lower end of it, it'll be good business. All this goes with the backdrop of China+1 mindset of companies post pandemic supply chain diversification.
Some for GaN fabs should be made as well
 

Global Defence

New threads

Articles

Top