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India Is Building Its Own Chip — But Can It Survive the Hard Part?
Fabs are rising in Gujarat. Partners are committed. ₹76,000 crore is on the table. So why are India’s top engineers still losing sleep?GIN Desk · May 12, 2026 · ginmedia.co.in New Delhi: Somewhere on the outskirts of Dholera, Gujarat, on a flat stretch of land that was scrubland three years ago, the most strategically important construction project in India’s industrial history is quietly taking shape. The Tata Electronics semiconductor fabrication facility — India’s first commercial chip fab — is expected to begin trial production runs by late 2026, with full commercial output targeted for 2027. Built in partnership with Taiwan’s Powerchip Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation (PSMC), the plant will initially manufacture chips at the 28-nanometre process node — not cutting-edge by global standards, but critically relevant for the majority of chips used in automobiles, industrial equipment, consumer electronics, defence systems, and telecommunications infrastructure. A second fab — the CG Power plant in Sanand, Gujarat, in partnership with Japan’s Renesas Electronics and Thailand’s Stars Microelectronics — is progressing in parallel, targeting analog and mixed-signal chips used in power management and sensing applications. A third facility, the Kaynes Semicon plant in Sanand, will focus on OSAT (Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly and Testing), the packaging and testing stage of chip production. The India Semiconductor Mission, launched with a ₹76,000 crore government incentive package in 2021, has finally moved from policy announcement to concrete and steel. Why semiconductors matter more than almost anything else The global chip shortage of 2021-2023 — which idled automobile factories, delayed laptop shipments, and disrupted supply chains across every sector — delivered a blunt lesson to every government on earth: a nation that cannot make its own chips is a nation whose economy can be held hostage by events ten thousand kilometres away. India currently imports semiconductors worth approximately $24 billion every year — making chips the country’s third-largest import category after crude oil and gold. Nearly 70 percent of those imports come from Taiwan and South Korea. The geopolitical risk embedded in that dependency — given the Taiwan Strait tensions that have persisted through 2025 and into 2026 — is not lost on New Delhi. For India’s defence sector, the dependency is even more acute. The Tejas Light Combat Aircraft, the Arjun Main Battle Tank, the Pinaka rocket system, and virtually every modern radar and communications platform used by the Indian Armed Forces depend on chips that India currently cannot make domestically. The Ministry of Defence has explicitly identified semiconductor self-reliance as a national security priority. The talent problem nobody wants to talk about Here is where the nervousness begins. Building a semiconductor fab is, arguably, the most technically complex industrial undertaking in modern manufacturing. It requires not just massive capital investment and cutting-edge equipment — it requires thousands of highly specialised engineers and technicians who know how to operate, maintain, and optimise equipment that costs hundreds of millions of dollars per unit. India currently does not have that workforce at scale. A 2025 assessment by the India Electronics and Semiconductor Association (IESA) estimated that India would need approximately 85,000 trained semiconductor professionals by 2030 to support its fabrication ambitions. Today, fewer than 12,000 Indians hold relevant qualifications and work experience. Several IITs have launched dedicated semiconductor engineering programmes, and MeitY has funded the establishment of chip design centres at universities in Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and Pune. But academic programmes take years to produce graduates, and semiconductor manufacturing experience cannot be taught in a classroom — it is acquired over years of factory-floor exposure. The Tata and CG Power fabs are addressing this partially by deploying PSMC and Renesas engineers in leadership and training roles for the first three to five years of operation, a model similar to how South Korea and Taiwan built their own semiconductor industries in the 1980s and 1990s — by learning from foreign partners before gradually indigenising the knowledge base. The equipment chokepoint There is a second problem that sits above even talent: equipment. Advanced semiconductor manufacturing requires extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines — equipment so specialised that only one company in the world, the Dutch firm ASML, makes them, and each machine costs approximately $350 million. India’s 28nm fabs do not yet require EUV machines — that node can be achieved with older deep ultraviolet (DUV) lithography. But the moment India aspires to produce chips at 7nm or below — the process nodes used in smartphones, AI accelerators, and advanced military hardware — it will face the same equipment dependency that has made chip manufacturing a geopolitical flashpoint worldwide. This is not a near-term problem. It is a medium-term one. And the engineers and policymakers driving India’s semiconductor mission are watching the ASML supply situation, the US-China chip war, and the Taiwan question with a clarity of focus that goes well beyond the commercial. The bigger picture India’s chip ambition is not about competing with Taiwan or South Korea in the global semiconductor market. Not yet. It is about insurance — building enough domestic capability that the next global supply shock does not bring Indian manufacturing to its knees. By that more modest standard, the progress is real. Three fabs under construction. A government with genuine political will. A diaspora of Indian semiconductor engineers in Silicon Valley and TSMC’s fabs in Taiwan who are beginning, slowly, to look homeward. The hard part, as always in India, is not the beginning. It is the sustained, patient, unglamorous execution that follows. — GIN Desk | ginmedia.co.in
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