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Govt paves way for Rs 50000cr chip fab projects

Inqhilab

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In a move that would boost investments in the semiconductor sector and provide an impetus to the country's beleaguered economy, the Union Cabinet on Thursday gave its in-principle approval to subsidise setting up of chip-fabrication units.

The facilities are expected to provide a significant push to domestic electronics manufacturing and act as magnets for the electronics components & ancillary industry, setting the stage for a conducive electronics manufacturing ecosystem in the country.

For the past few weeks, the government has been in an overdrive, pushing stuck projects with the larger aim to improve the country's economic growth, which had fallen to a four-year low of 4.4 per cent in the first quarter of this financial year. On Wednesday, it had approved nine projects, worth Rs 1.20 lakh crore, of the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor. (Investment magnet for the sector?)

Of the two chip-fabrication projects the government had shortlisted for subsidy, the consortium for one is led by Jaypee Group, which has partnered with IBM as its technology partner. The other has been mooted by domestic chipmaker Hindustan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp (HSMC), which will get technology support from Geneva-based STMicroelectronics NV. The projects are said to be worth Rs 25,000 crore each.

According to sources in the know, some Cabinet ministers questioned the fact that only two projects had come up for such a significant subsidy amount and suggested the Department of Electronics and Information Technology wait for four weeks to see if no other consortium put in its candidature for the project. Sources said the proposal could be brought back to the Cabinet after four weeks.

News agency PTI quoted IT & Communications Minister Kapil Sibal as saying the Cabinet had accepted the two offers - in principle - and also approved the incentives to be given to these consortia. The same incentives could also be extended to other players interested in setting up semiconductor plants here.

"Incentives... are already covered under existing policies, which account for about 62 per cent; the balance 38 per cent is in the form of loan provision, which is refundable. The burden on the government will only be of interest charges," Sibal added.

The government had invited applications for fab units in 2011. The two projects - led by Jaypee and HSMC - had been shortlisted from among 30 applications by an empowered committee of the PM's advisor, Sam Pitroda, National Manufacturing Competitiveness Council chairman V Krishnamurthy and others. The ambitious proposals had run into rough weather, as the Planning Commission was reportedly against such large-scale subsidy payouts at a time when the country was battling a wide fiscal deficit.

J Satyanarayana, secretary in the department, refused to comment on the specifics but said the approval was great news for the country's thrust on domestic manufacturing.

Chips form the core of any electronic device and command the bulk of the monetary value. If these were manufactured locally, it would create the right ecosystem, as it involves a lot of downstream work, said Neel Ratan, executive director of audit and consultancy firm PwC India.

"Fab is like a mother unit that will give a fillip to the overall manufacturing activity in the country. A majority of fabrication units are based in China and Taiwan. And, the whole electronics manufacturing ecosystem in these countries could easily be attributed to their presence," he added.

He, however, sounded a note of caution, saying the chip industry was a cyclical one and the current global supply for chips was higher than demand. "There is a bit of an oversupply but the demand for electronics is picking up. We should ensure that procedural delays do not derail the project, as the project itself has a long gestation period."

Setting up a fab unit here, a long-standing aim of the country, was revived because it was felt India's import bill for electronics could soon exceed that for oil. In 2007, the government was in talks with Intel Corp to set up a facility in India but the discussions failed and the firm, instead, set up a unit in China.

Identifying the rise in electronic goods imports as a significant cause for concern, the government had in 2011 unveiled a series of policies to incentivise investments in the electronics manufacturing sector, under the National Electronics Policy, to kick-start domestic manufacturing. According to government estimates, the country would need $400-billion electronics by 2020 and, if local manufacturing is not incentivised, India might have to import at least $300 billion worth of products. Also, the current account deficit issue has necessitated cutting down of imports and boosting of exports.

In July last year, the Cabinet had approved Rs 10,000-crore incentives for manufacturing electronics products and components under the Modified Special Incentive Package Scheme (M-SIPS). Under M-SIPS, companies that invest in special economic zones get 20 per cent subsidy on capital expenditure, while those operating out of SEZs get 25 per cent support. The fab proposals, will get the subsidy under M-SIPS, with some additions. The details were not elaborately disclosed by the government on Thursday.

Govt paves way for Rs 50k-cr chip fab projects | Business Standard
 
Very late decision.. Without domestic semiconductor manufacturing industries, whatever an electronic company gains through export, half the amount will again flow out of india to manufacture the products. Our Company is designing various products and selling our products in multiple countries, but manufacturing is outsourced to Flextronics. So, whatever we gain through exports, we are almost giving the most to Flextronics for manufacturing. In the present situation, one can imagine how hard it would be, since we need to pay Flectronics in USD$. If already semiconductor industries were promoted by this govt, then there is no need for us to go to Flextronics, We would have chosen the local vendor and we can pay them in rupees. This is not the case only with our company, almost many indian electronic companies are forced to outsource manufacturing part without any option here in India.

Atlast we woke up... Hope this won't get delayed further...
 
Very late decision.. Without domestic semiconductor manufacturing industries, whatever an electronic company gains through export, half the amount will again flow out of india to manufacture the products. Our Company is designing various products and selling our products in multiple countries, but manufacturing is outsourced to Flextronics. So, whatever we gain through exports, we are almost giving the most to Flextronics for manufacturing. In the present situation, one can imagine how hard it would be, since we need to pay Flectronics in USD$. If already semiconductor industries were promoted by this govt, then there is no need for us to go to Flextronics, We would have chosen the local vendor and we can pay them in rupees. This is not the case only with our company, almost many indian electronic companies are forced to outsource manufacturing part without any option here in India.

Atlast we woke up... Hope this won't get delayed further...

Chalo Dher aye Durust Aye
Atlast Congressis have woken up

But still A new govt is needed
Inshallah In 2014 we will get a new one
 
Chalo Dher aye Durust Aye
Atlast Congressis have woken up

But still A new govt is needed
Inshallah In 2014 we will get a new one

Yes, Manufacturing industry needs a big boost in every sector. Whatever China develops, is getting manufactured in China, that's their big boost. There is no point in developing any technology until we manufacture it locally and our economy also won't get boosted.
 
[Bregs];4764720 said:
welcome decision by govt

theek-hai11.jpg


1 more Scams foundation seems to be laid....

110411satish.jpg


:omghaha: :help: :partay:
 
In a move that would boost investments in the semiconductor sector and provide an impetus to the country's beleaguered economy, the Union Cabinet on Thursday gave its in-principle approval to subsidise setting up of chip-fabrication units.

The facilities are expected to provide a significant push to domestic electronics manufacturing and act as magnets for the electronics components & ancillary industry, setting the stage for a conducive electronics manufacturing ecosystem in the country.

For the past few weeks, the government has been in an overdrive, pushing stuck projects with the larger aim to improve the country's economic growth, which had fallen to a four-year low of 4.4 per cent in the first quarter of this financial year. On Wednesday, it had approved nine projects, worth Rs 1.20 lakh crore, of the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor. (Investment magnet for the sector?)

Of the two chip-fabrication projects the government had shortlisted for subsidy, the consortium for one is led by Jaypee Group, which has partnered with IBM as its technology partner. The other has been mooted by domestic chipmaker Hindustan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp (HSMC), which will get technology support from Geneva-based STMicroelectronics NV. The projects are said to be worth Rs 25,000 crore each.

According to sources in the know, some Cabinet ministers questioned the fact that only two projects had come up for such a significant subsidy amount and suggested the Department of Electronics and Information Technology wait for four weeks to see if no other consortium put in its candidature for the project. Sources said the proposal could be brought back to the Cabinet after four weeks.

News agency PTI quoted IT & Communications Minister Kapil Sibal as saying the Cabinet had accepted the two offers - in principle - and also approved the incentives to be given to these consortia. The same incentives could also be extended to other players interested in setting up semiconductor plants here.

"Incentives... are already covered under existing policies, which account for about 62 per cent; the balance 38 per cent is in the form of loan provision, which is refundable. The burden on the government will only be of interest charges," Sibal added.

The government had invited applications for fab units in 2011. The two projects - led by Jaypee and HSMC - had been shortlisted from among 30 applications by an empowered committee of the PM's advisor, Sam Pitroda, National Manufacturing Competitiveness Council chairman V Krishnamurthy and others. The ambitious proposals had run into rough weather, as the Planning Commission was reportedly against such large-scale subsidy payouts at a time when the country was battling a wide fiscal deficit.

J Satyanarayana, secretary in the department, refused to comment on the specifics but said the approval was great news for the country's thrust on domestic manufacturing.

Chips form the core of any electronic device and command the bulk of the monetary value. If these were manufactured locally, it would create the right ecosystem, as it involves a lot of downstream work, said Neel Ratan, executive director of audit and consultancy firm PwC India.

"Fab is like a mother unit that will give a fillip to the overall manufacturing activity in the country. A majority of fabrication units are based in China and Taiwan. And, the whole electronics manufacturing ecosystem in these countries could easily be attributed to their presence," he added.

He, however, sounded a note of caution, saying the chip industry was a cyclical one and the current global supply for chips was higher than demand. "There is a bit of an oversupply but the demand for electronics is picking up. We should ensure that procedural delays do not derail the project, as the project itself has a long gestation period."

Setting up a fab unit here, a long-standing aim of the country, was revived because it was felt India's import bill for electronics could soon exceed that for oil. In 2007, the government was in talks with Intel Corp to set up a facility in India but the discussions failed and the firm, instead, set up a unit in China.

Identifying the rise in electronic goods imports as a significant cause for concern, the government had in 2011 unveiled a series of policies to incentivise investments in the electronics manufacturing sector, under the National Electronics Policy, to kick-start domestic manufacturing. According to government estimates, the country would need $400-billion electronics by 2020 and, if local manufacturing is not incentivised, India might have to import at least $300 billion worth of products. Also, the current account deficit issue has necessitated cutting down of imports and boosting of exports.

In July last year, the Cabinet had approved Rs 10,000-crore incentives for manufacturing electronics products and components under the Modified Special Incentive Package Scheme (M-SIPS). Under M-SIPS, companies that invest in special economic zones get 20 per cent subsidy on capital expenditure, while those operating out of SEZs get 25 per cent support. The fab proposals, will get the subsidy under M-SIPS, with some additions. The details were not elaborately disclosed by the government on Thursday.

Govt paves way for Rs 50k-cr chip fab projects | Business Standard

way to go..............................
 
The 2 major things required for these plants are

1)assured power supply

2)pure water in huge quantities

we couldn't assure these things in 2007 when intel first offered to set up the plant as a result it went to some other country.
i hope we do well this time as we still haven't signed on anything and without these 2 things there will be no plant
 
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