Cabinet Clears Semicon 2.0 With Rs 1.27 Lakh Crore Outlay
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Context
Semicon 2.0 builds directly on the original India Semiconductor Mission (Semicon 1.0), which the Union Cabinet approved in December 2021 with an outlay of Rs 76,000 crore. That earlier programme was designed to attract semiconductor investments by offering fiscal incentives for fabrication plants and assembly, testing, marking and packaging (ATMP) facilities. The new mission more than doubles the financial commitment, signalling a significant escalation in ambition and urgency.
The approved scheme is structured around six key pillars: chip design, semiconductor machinery and materials, fabrication units (fabs), advanced ATMP and outsourced semiconductor assembly and test (OSAT) facilities, research and development, and talent development. Nadda's post on X described the mission as one that will 'boost innovation, attract investments, generate high-skilled employment, strengthen supply chain resilience, enhance technological self-reliance, and accelerate the journey towards Viksit Bharat 2047.'
Policy Backdrop
India's semiconductor push is rooted in the Atmanirbhar Bharat programme and the broader Production Linked Incentive (PLI) framework launched in 2020, which sought to reduce import dependence across critical sectors following pandemic-era supply-chain disruptions. Geopolitical concentration of chip manufacturing in Taiwan and China added strategic urgency to building domestic capacity.
The effort gained an international dimension in 2023 when India and the United States formalised cooperation on critical and emerging technologies, with semiconductors identified as a priority sector. Under Semicon 1.0, the government issued initial approvals for fabrication and assembly projects, laying the groundwork that Semicon 2.0 now seeks to scale. The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) is expected to issue project-wise allocation details in the coming months.
Stakeholders and Impact
The mission is expected to benefit a wide ecosystem: domestic and multinational semiconductor firms seeking a cost-competitive manufacturing base, electronics manufacturers looking to shorten supply chains, and engineering graduates who stand to gain from the talent-development pillar. High-skilled employment generation is explicitly cited as a goal, making the scheme relevant to India's large pool of science and technology graduates.
Analysts note that successful fab and OSAT capacity would reduce India's dependence on imported chips — a vulnerability exposed during the 2021-22 global chip shortage that disrupted automotive and consumer electronics production. A robust domestic semiconductor ecosystem would also support sectors such as defence electronics, telecommunications, and electric vehicles that are central to India's industrial roadmap.
What's Next
Attention will now turn to MeitY notifications detailing project-wise allocations and the first set of fab or OSAT approvals expected in subsequent months. Industry observers will watch whether the enhanced outlay translates into confirmed investments from global chipmakers and whether the talent-development pillar produces a credible pipeline of semiconductor engineers. Progress on Semicon 2.0 will be a key indicator of how seriously India is closing the gap with established semiconductor nations ahead of Viksit Bharat 2047.