Exclusive: A billion for every chip-maker who 'makes in India,' sources
say
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[March 31, 2021] By
Sankalp Phartiyal and Aditi Shah
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India is offering
more than $1 billion in cash to each semiconductor company that sets up
manufacturing units in the country as it seeks to build on its
smartphone assembly industry and strengthen its electronics supply
chain, two officials said.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's 'Make in India' drive has helped to turn
India into the world's second-biggest mobile manufacturer after China.
New Delhi believes it is time for chip companies to set up in the
country.
"The government will give cash incentives of more than $1 billion to
each company which will set up chip fabrication units," a senior
government official told Reuters, declining to be named as he was not
authorised to speak with media.
"We're assuring them that the government will be a buyer and there will
also be mandates in the private market (for companies to buy locally
made chips)."
How to disburse the cash incentives has yet to be decided and the
government has asked the industry for feedback, said a second government
source, who also declined to be identified.
Governments across the world are subsidising the construction of
semiconductor plants as chip shortages hobble the auto and electronics
industries and highlight the world's dependence on Taiwan for supplies.
India also wants to establish reliable suppliers for its electronics and
telecom industry to cut dependence on China following border skirmishes
last year.
Chips made locally will be designated as "trusted sources" and can be
used in products ranging from CCTV cameras to 5G equipment, the first
source said.
But the sources did not say whether particular semiconductor companies
have shown interest in setting up units in India.
India's technology ministry did not respond to a request for comment.
PREVIOUS ATTEMPTS
India has previously tried to woo semiconductor players but firms were
deterred by India's wobbly infrastructure, unstable power supply,
bureaucracy and poor planning. (https://reut.rs/3fyV6Zr)
[to top of second column] |
A woman visits a semiconductor device display at the Appliance and
Electronics World Expo (AWE) in Shanghai, China March 23, 2021.
REUTERS/Aly Song
The renewed government push to lure chipmakers is more likely to succeed,
following the success of the smartphone industry, industry insiders say.
Moreover, Indian conglomerates, such as the Tata Group, have also expressed
interest in moving into electronics and high-tech manufacturing.
India in December invited an "expression of interest" from chipmakers for
setting up fabrication units in the country or for the acquisition of such
manufacturing units overseas by an Indian company or consortium.
The government extended the last date of submission for that expression of
interest to end-March from Jan. 31, given the level of industry demand, the
government source said.
Abu Dhabi-based fund Next Orbit Ventures has filed an application to set up in
India, it said on Wednesday. An auto industry source said it had done so as
leader of a consortium of investors.
A shortage of chips is holding back India's auto sector just when it sees early
signs of a recovery in demand after sales plunged in 2020 because of the
pandemic.
Indian technology ministry officials met executives from the Society of Indian
Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM), a leading auto industry body, earlier this year
to assess car makers' demand for chips, three auto industry sources said on
condition of anonymity.
The government estimates it would cost roughly $5-$7 billion to set up a chip
fabrication unit in India and take 2-3 years after all the approvals are in
place, one of the auto industry sources said.
The source added that New Delhi is willing to offer companies concessions,
including waivers on customs duty, research and development expenses and
interest free loans.
(Reporting by Sankalp Phartiyal and Aditi Shah; Additional reporting by Douglas
Busvine and Mathieu Rosemain; Editing by Barbara Lewis and Jan Harvey)
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