Industry leaders hail India's Semiconductor Mission as a game-changer
New Delhi [India], February 27 (ANI): Industry leaders and experts see "India's Semiconductor Mission" as a game-changer as the government aims to establish a strong semiconductor industry, boosting tech manufacturing and creating jobs across the country.
Industry leaders speaking to ANI today emphasised that the initiative serves as the foundation for national electronics self-reliance, aiming to reduce a long-standing dependence on volatile global supply chains. By establishing domestic fabrication units in states like Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, and Assam, the mission seeks to secure the critical components necessary for telecommunications, digital governance, and the expanding 5G network.
"Previously, we didn't have any fabrication labs. Now only we might be having in Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh and Assam also, the fabrication units. And also, we used to import a lot of them from other countries. Nokia companies like Nokia Ericsson, Huawei or Samsung from Korea. So if there is any disruption in the supply chain because of the global events which are not in our control, our rollout is also affected," Srikanth said.
"If we don't have that base of the production in our country, we need to depend on imports, which is not safe, which is not good, and it may have the effects of the security may be having the issues," he said. He further mentioned that using the "Desi version" of the 4G stack developed by C-DOT and manufactured by Tejas Networks ensures that the ecosystem, from small components to end-to-end products, stays within India, providing opportunities for the nation's young engineers.
"When you are able to build the solutions around the semiconductor technology, using the semiconductor technology and solving the problems of India. Indian problems are totally different from international problems because India is a very hard country. A lot of chips what is developed, the solutions in other parts of the world may not work in India because of the higher temperatures. So all hard countries need different solutions. So the majority of the developing nations are all cold countries. So the problem is India is not getting really required solutions. This is the one opportunity I feel India has to constantly improve so that we can even sell it," Ramakrishna concluded. (ANI)
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