What Happened
- A Deloitte report titled "Technology, Media, and Telecommunications Predictions 2026" projects India's semiconductor market will grow from approximately $45–50 billion in FY2024-25 to $120 billion by 2030 and $300 billion by 2035 — a more than six-fold increase in a decade.
- The sector has been growing at 20% CAGR over the past three years, driven by demand from mobile phones, automotive electronics, AI computing, and data centres.
- India, which currently imports over 90% of its semiconductor needs, is projected to meet more than 60% of domestic demand through local production by 2035 — a structural shift from import-dependency to near self-sufficiency.
- The India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) has already approved 10 projects attracting over $19 billion in manufacturing investment, including 8 OSAT facilities, 1 compound semiconductor fab, and 1 logic semiconductor fab.
- An additional 18-20 proposals worth $20-25 billion are in the pipeline, with a further $50 billion projected over the next five years and $75-80 billion between 2030-35.
Static Topic Bridges
India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) and Semicon India Programme
The India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) was established in 2022 as a specialised and independent nodal agency within the Digital India Corporation (DIC) under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY). ISM administers the Semicon India programme — a Rs 76,000 crore (approximately $10 billion) incentive package offering fiscal support of up to 50% of project cost for semiconductor fabs, display fabs, and compound semiconductor units. The programme covers the full semiconductor value chain: wafer fabrication → ATMP/OSAT (Assembly, Testing, Marking and Packaging / Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly and Test) → compound semiconductors → design (via the DLI scheme). A companion scheme, the Design Linked Incentive (DLI) scheme, provides financial incentives and infrastructure support for domestic semiconductor design companies.
- ISM: Under MeitY, established 2022; nodal body for Semicon India programme
- Semicon India outlay: Rs 76,000 crore (~$10 billion); up to 50% project cost support
- DLI scheme: For chip design companies; up to Rs 15 crore + product deployment incentives
- Approved projects (as of March 2026): 10 projects; $19 billion investments
- Tata Electronics: Semiconductor fab (28nm) in Dholera, Gujarat
- CG Power + Renesas + Stars Microelectronics: OSAT in Sanand, Gujarat
- Tata Semiconductor Assembly and Test (TSAT): OSAT in Morigaon, Assam
- 18-20 more proposals ($20-25 billion) in pipeline
Connection to this news: The Deloitte projections validate ISM's foundational logic — that government de-risking of capital-intensive semiconductor manufacturing can trigger a self-reinforcing cycle of investment, talent formation, and supply chain localisation that could fundamentally alter India's technology import bill.
OSAT vs Semiconductor Fab: Understanding the Value Chain
A semiconductor fab (fabrication plant or "foundry") manufactures integrated circuits on silicon wafers through complex photolithographic processes. It requires the highest capital investment ($10–20 billion per facility) and the most advanced technology (measured in nanometre process nodes — 28nm, 5nm, 2nm). An OSAT (Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly and Test) facility performs the downstream steps: dicing wafers into chips, assembling them into packages, and testing electrical functionality. OSATs require less capital ($500 million–$2 billion) and less cutting-edge technology. India's initial approved projects are primarily OSATs — a pragmatic entry point, as OSATs are less technology-intensive but are a critical link in global supply chains. The compound semiconductor fab (gallium nitride, silicon carbide) fills a niche for power electronics and defence applications.
- Fab: Capital-intensive ($10-20B); manufactures wafers; technology node critical
- OSAT: Less capital ($500M-$2B); downstream packaging and testing; faster entry
- India's approved mix: 8 OSAT + 1 compound fab + 1 logic fab (Tata-Powerchip, Dholera)
- Key fab technology: Tata Electronics-Powerchip fab in Dholera targets 28nm node
- Compound semiconductors: GaN, SiC — used in power electronics, EV inverters, defence radar
Connection to this news: The Deloitte report's $300 billion projection assumes India successfully climbs the semiconductor value chain beyond OSATs into advanced packaging and eventually leading-edge fabs — a trajectory that requires sustained policy commitment beyond annual budget cycles, as the report itself recommends.
Global Semiconductor Geopolitics and India's Strategic Positioning
Semiconductors have become the defining strategic commodity of the 21st century — a lesson reinforced by the 2020-22 global chip shortage that disrupted automotive, electronics, and medical device supply chains worldwide. The US CHIPS Act (2022, $52 billion), EU Chips Act (2023, €43 billion), Japan's semiconductor revival plan ($6.8 billion), and Taiwan's continued fab investment have all been responses to the realisation that geographic concentration of chip manufacturing — primarily in Taiwan (TSMC) and South Korea (Samsung, SK Hynix) — poses unacceptable supply chain risk. India's Semicon India programme positions it as a beneficiary of global diversification: offering English-speaking engineering talent, large domestic demand, and geopolitical alignment with western supply chain strategies.
- US CHIPS Act (2022): $52 billion for domestic semiconductor manufacturing and R&D
- EU Chips Act (2023): €43 billion to double Europe's global chip share to 20% by 2030
- Taiwan: ~90% of advanced chips (sub-5nm) made by TSMC; concentration risk
- India's engineering talent pool: 4th largest STEM graduate pipeline globally
- India domestic semiconductor demand 2024-25: ~$45-50 billion (90% imported)
- Post-2035 target: 60%+ domestic sourcing of chip demand
Connection to this news: The $300 billion projection is not just an industry forecast — it reflects India's opportunity to capitalise on global semiconductor supply chain diversification while simultaneously reducing its $40+ billion annual chip import bill.
Key Facts & Data
- India semiconductor market (FY2024-25): ~$45-50 billion; CAGR: 20% (last 3 years)
- Deloitte projection: $120 billion by 2030; $300 billion by 2035
- Current import dependence: >90% of semiconductor needs imported
- 2035 target: 60%+ demand met by local production
- Approved projects under ISM: 10 projects; $19 billion investment
- 8 OSAT + 1 compound fab + 1 logic fab (Tata-Powerchip, Dholera)
- Pipeline: 18-20 proposals; $20-25 billion
- Semicon India programme: Rs 76,000 crore (~$10 billion); up to 50% project cost support
- MeitY: Nodal ministry; ISM is implementing body
- Demand drivers by 2035: Mobile (>25%), automotive, AI computing, data centres