Jaishankar Highlights Six Cabinet Decisions Worth ₹2.19 Lakh Crore
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union External Affairs Minister Dr. S. Jaishankar on Wednesday, 15 July 2026, highlighted six landmark decisions approved by the Union Cabinet under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, spanning semiconductor manufacturing, mobile phone production, urea self-sufficiency, urban mobility in Varanasi, and railway expansion in eastern India — with a combined outlay exceeding ₹2.19 lakh crore.
Context
Posting on X, Dr. Jaishankar listed the six approvals under the hashtag #CabinetDecisions, calling them 'landmark decisions taken by the Union Cabinet today, under the leadership of PM @narendramodi.' The announcements span five distinct policy domains — advanced manufacturing, agriculture, urban infrastructure, and rail connectivity — reflecting the breadth of a single cabinet sitting.
The largest single outlay is Semicon 2.0, approved with a total budget of ₹1,27,500 crore, aimed at developing India's semiconductor design and manufacturing ecosystem. It follows the India Semiconductor Mission launched in 2021, which sought to attract fabrication and design investments and laid the institutional groundwork for a domestic chip industry.
Policy Backdrop
The Mobile Phone Manufacturing Scheme (MPMS), approved with a budgetary outlay of ₹62,500 crore, is set to run from FY 2026–27 to FY 2030–31. It builds on the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) framework for mobile manufacturing introduced in 2020, which helped India emerge as the world's second-largest mobile phone producer. MPMS is designed to deepen component-level manufacturing and reduce import dependence.
On the agriculture front, the Cabinet cleared the National Investment Policy for Urea-2026 (NIPU-2026) under the Atmanirbhar Bharat banner. The policy is intended to encourage fresh private investment in gas-based urea manufacturing units across the country, addressing India's structural reliance on urea imports that has persisted for decades. The Atmanirbhar Bharat initiative, announced in 2020, had specifically identified fertilisers and electronics as sectors requiring domestic capacity-building.
Two elevated corridor projects in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh — the Prime Minister's parliamentary constituency — were also approved. The first is a 43.2 km, 6/4-lane elevated corridor worth ₹10,998.32 crore, connecting NH-31 and the Varanasi Ring Road along the River Varuna, primarily for city decongestion. The second is a 6-lane Greenfield Elevated Corridor worth ₹14,447.64 crore between NH-19 and the Varanasi Ring Road, to be built on the Hybrid Annuity Model to improve urban mobility.
Stakeholders and Impact
The semiconductor and mobile manufacturing decisions are expected to benefit domestic and global electronics firms looking to establish or expand India-based production. Semicon 2.0's outlay of ₹1,27,500 crore signals a significant step-up in state support for a sector considered critical to national security and economic competitiveness. Farmers and the agricultural sector stand to gain from NIPU-2026, which targets reduction in urea import bills and greater price stability for a key farm input.
Residents of Varanasi — one of India's most congested heritage cities — are direct beneficiaries of the two corridor projects totalling over ₹25,445 crore. The rail component covers two multitracking projects costing ₹3,907 crore across four districts in Odisha and Jharkhand, expanding the Indian Railways network by approximately 145 km and improving freight and passenger connectivity in the eastern region.
What's Next
Implementation of Semicon 2.0 and MPMS is expected to begin from FY 2026–27, with phased disbursements tied to investment and production milestones. Ground-level progress on the Varanasi elevated corridors and the commissioning timeline for the 145 km rail multitracking in Odisha and Jharkhand will be key markers to watch in the coming quarters. Together, the six decisions represent a continuation of India's dual-track strategy: fiscal incentives for strategic manufacturing and direct public investment in physical infrastructure.