Context:
The inauguration of the Kaynes Semicon plant in Sanand, Gujarat marks a major step in India’s ambition to become a global semiconductor hub, with projections of a $100 billion market by 2030.
Key Highlights:
Government Initiative & Policy Framework
- Semiconductor plant established under India Semiconductor Mission (2021).
- Promotes indigenous manufacturing and reduces import dependence.
- Aligns with initiatives like Digital India and Make in India.
Project & Investment Details
- Kaynes Semicon facility built at a cost of ₹3,300 crore.
- Focus on semiconductor assembly and testing (ATMP).
- Located in Sanand, emerging as a major electronics manufacturing hub.
Market Trends & Targets
- Current semiconductor market: ₹4.5 lakh crore.
- Target: ₹9 lakh crore by 2030.
- Global opportunity: $100 billion+ market by decade end.
International Collaboration
- India part of Pax Silica initiative (US-led):
- Focus on secure semiconductor supply chains
- Includes AI and rare earth ecosystems
Stakeholders
- Government of India
- Kaynes Technology
- Global semiconductor supply chain partners
- DRDO, private electronics firms
Significance
- Strengthens India’s position in global electronics value chains.
- Reduces dependence on East Asian semiconductor hubs.
- Boosts high-tech manufacturing and employment.
- Supports emerging sectors like AI, IoT, fintech, EVs.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Semiconductors
- Materials with conductivity between conductors and insulators.
- Essential for chips, processors, electronics devices.
- India Semiconductor Mission (2021)
- Aim: Build a complete semiconductor ecosystem.
- Includes incentives for fabrication, design, and packaging.
- ATMP (Assembly, Testing, Marking, Packaging)
- Final stage of chip manufacturing.
- Fintech
- Integration of technology with financial services.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Economic Transformation
- Semiconductor sector critical for $5 trillion economy vision.
- Enhances manufacturing competitiveness.
- Strategic Autonomy
- Chips are core to national security and digital sovereignty.
- Reduces risks from global supply disruptions.
- Geopolitical Dimension
- Participation in Pax Silica reflects strategic alignment with the US.
- Part of global effort to de-risk supply chains from China.
- Challenges
- High capital intensity and technology dependence.
- Need for skilled workforce and R&D ecosystem.
- Competition from Taiwan, South Korea, USA.
Way Forward
- Expand fabrication (fab) capabilities, not just assembly.
- Invest in semiconductor R&D and talent development.
- Strengthen global partnerships and supply chains.
- Provide long-term policy stability and incentives.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS Paper 3: Economy, Science & Technology
- GS Paper 2: International Relations (tech geopolitics)
- Prelims: Semiconductor ecosystem, government missions
