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WHY HAS INDIA LAGGED BEHIND IN SEMICONDUCTOR CHIP MANUFACTURING?

FairAndUnbiased

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https://analyticsindiamag.com/india-semiconductor-chip-manufacturing/

While India has done well in terms of chip design and electronics manufacturing, there have been challenges in setting up of Semiconductor Wafer Fabrication (FAB) units for a long time.

The digital age has propelled the world into consuming electronics at an unprecedented scale. There will be worldwide shipments of devices — PCs, tablets and mobile phones — totalling 2.2 billion units in 2019. All of these gadgets require semiconductor chips to function, and it is clear that economies with a large production of these chips have benefited the most in terms of enhancing their GDP. US, Japan, Korea, China, Singapore, etc are all large producers of semiconductor chips and also have a strong foothold on the global economy.

Where Does India Stand?
While India has done well in terms of chip design and electronics manufacturing, there have been challenges in setting up of Semiconductor Wafer Fabrication (FAB) units in India for a long time. This is due to multiple factors, including not just the lack of infrastructure and skilled labour in the country. It is also difficult to compete with neighbouring countries like China and Vietnam which have been favourite destinations for global chip manufacturers due to better cost-efficiency. It is for these reasons that Intel stated in 2014 it had no interest in starting manufacturing in India.

There have been attempts to set up semiconductor fab units here by private companies in the country:

  • Hindustan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation (HSMC), a consortium of companies that included ST Microelectronics and Silterra Malaysia was aiming kickstart chip manufacturing plant in Gujarat, a project worth ₹30,000 crore. The government in 2019 cancelled the letter of intent granted to HSMC and now there is no such proposal from any private company to initiate such a project. The reason was that the consortium could not submit the required documents asked by the government for setting up of Semiconductor Wafer Fabrication (FAB) unit. HSMC had been backed by AMD and has also received ₹700 crore in funding from Mumbai-based Next Orbit Ventures.
  • Then there was another consortium led by Jaiprakash Associates, which partnered with IBM and Tower Semiconductor of Israel to start chip manufacturing in UP. In 2016, debt-ridden Jaiprakash (JP) Associates has pulled out of the ₹34,000-crore. If the only two private sector consortiums cleared by the government to establish large scale chip manufacturing in the country could not make it happen, then it’s certainly a bad indicator to why India is lagging behind in the space.
What Are The Hurdles?
One of the biggest hurdles in setting up fab manufacturing units is the fact that it requires massive investment. In addition to the huge cost, running in billions of dollars, manufacturing even a single chip requires hundreds of gallons of pure water, which may also be hard to find in India in the required quantities. An uninterrupted power supply is another major hurdle. The heart of the issue is that India is still not unto the par in terms of the basic infrastructure needed to pursue endeavours in the chip manufacturing space. There is also constant price pressure from other global players, particularly China which is also building a homegrown chip program for the adoption of local semiconductors in 70% of its products by 2025.

No Dearth Of Talent In Chip Manufacturing
It’s not like India does not possess the scientific capabilities to manufacture semiconductor chips. In fact, the level of technical know-how is so high that the government even considered a ₹2,500 crore feasible study based on Gallium Nitride semiconductor fab at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) in order to build a local semiconductor industry. Gallium Nitride based semiconductors skip altogether the already mature silicon-based fab technology dominated by countries like US and China.

While large scale semiconductor manufacturers face challenges to take off, several startups building chips for embedded systems like IoT and telephony on a much smaller scale are also disrupting the scene. There are many prominent startups here like Signalchip, a semiconductor company also based in Bengaluru, which rolled out 4G and 5G modem chips. Saankhya Labs, is another Bengaluru-based startup that has been creating chipsets for use in defence, satellite communication and broadcast. Another one is a microprocessor called Shakti, developed at IIT Madras which can be used in mobile computing devices, embedded low power wireless systems like smartphones, surveillance cameras and networking systems.

Overview
Clearly, there is no dearth of talent when it comes to India becoming a dominant player in semiconductor chip manufacturing.Yet, the country has struggled to find a way to establish fab units needed for large scale manufacturing. Now, with the rising demand for electronics, India is a large net importer of semiconductor chips. In fact, experts say that India is spending more money on import of semiconductor than on oil. The way to reduce the dependency on chip imports is to create semiconductor manufacturing units within the country. Here, the government needs to make sure there is proper infrastructure and investments are made so that scalable manufacturing units can be created. We also need to look at the success story of China in semiconductor manufacturing and take lessons.
 
good article...It's an extremely capital intensive and HR intensive industry...India can only make this with few billion dollars of start up capital and Silicon Valley returned talent...An implosion of AMD will free up a lot of Indian talent
 
good article...It's an extremely capital intensive and HR intensive industry...India can only make this with few billion dollars of start up capital and Silicon Valley returned talent...An implosion of AMD will free up a lot of Indian talent

AMD will help on the design side, but India already has design experience i.e. in Intel Bangalore.

the manufacturing side is quite different. Not many countries have success - not even in EU.
 
I remember reading an article in the 90s when Intel was choosing between setting up a manufacturing plant in Chengdu and Hyderabad. Chengdu won out, because logistics to move the product from Hyderabad to the US was adding adding around 16 days more to the transit time.
 
I remember reading an article in the 90s when Intel was choosing between setting up a manufacturing plant in Chengdu and Hyderabad. Chengdu won out, because logistics to move the product from Hyderabad to the US was adding adding around 16 days more to the transit time.

I believe Intel Chengdu is only for packaging/assembly. Intel Dalian is the actual fab, but even that is only in 2010, 10 years after SMIC was already demonstrated to be a success.

Nobody will invest in a fab in a country without that country successfully demonstrating it has the proper human capital and resources to run a fab... chicken and egg problem.

I also must comment about the article itself: GaN is not used in the same applications that Si is. There are very few GaN logic devices, most GaN is for optoelectronics or RF.
 
AMD will help on the design side, but India already has design experience i.e. in Intel Bangalore.

the manufacturing side is quite different. Not many countries have success - not even in EU.
It needs govt. backing and support financially. There is enough market for chips to make it profitable even among the competition. We need to provide incentives and proper infrastructure. It needs to be done sooner as security concerns keep growing.
 
It needs govt. backing and support financially. There is enough market for chips to make it profitable even among the competition. We need to provide incentives and proper infrastructure. It needs to be done sooner as security concerns keep growing.

Many people mistakenly underestimate China's semiconductor industry or think semiconductor is easy. China has the 4th strongest semiconductor industry in the world though, after South Korea, Taiwan and US.

SMIC and Tsinghua Unigroup are fabricating at 14 nm and moving to 7 nm. They have already surpassed EU and Japanese fabs which are mostly still on 28 nm.

India will need to catch up from the bottom floor. They will need to surpass EU, then Japan, before thinking about taking on the Big 4.
 
Many people mistakenly underestimate China's semiconductor industry or think semiconductor is easy. China has the 4th strongest semiconductor industry in the world though, after South Korea, Taiwan and US.

SMIC and Tsinghua Unigroup are fabricating at 14 nm and moving to 7 nm. They have already surpassed EU and Japanese fabs which are mostly still on 28 nm.

India will need to catch up from the bottom floor. They will need to surpass EU, then Japan, before thinking about taking on the Big 4.
The problem is not process technology, it's equipment tech. China needs both. Taiwan and SK are only strong in process tech, while the Dutch and Japs are strong in equipment tech, US is stronger than China in both process tech and equipment tech but not the strongest in both categories, they are the most balanced and can tap the supply chain from the world. We are forced to be independent.
 
Commenting on India's contribution in the global semiconductor industry, Gupta says, "any chip getting done in the world will have some contribution from Indian semiconductor ecosystem. More than 90 per cent of semiconductor companies have their R&D Centres in India where cutting-edge chip development work takes place. The semiconductor R&D alone produces almost $2.5 billion in revenue and $20 billion including the Electronics Products and Embedded system. The total employment generated is approximately 6 lakhs in India."
https://www.businesstoday.in/latest...nterest-rises-industry-body-271653-2020-08-31
 
India should not need enemy untill this modi in power he diverted them to hatred for muslims

We seriously need to invest in modi succes in next election to bring india complete destruction
 
Commenting on India's contribution in the global semiconductor industry, Gupta says, "any chip getting done in the world will have some contribution from Indian semiconductor ecosystem. More than 90 per cent of semiconductor companies have their R&D Centres in India where cutting-edge chip development work takes place. The semiconductor R&D alone produces almost $2.5 billion in revenue and $20 billion including the Electronics Products and Embedded system. The total employment generated is approximately 6 lakhs in India."
https://www.businesstoday.in/latest...nterest-rises-industry-body-271653-2020-08-31

companies have few offices in India does not mean Indians do the chip design

such bullshit boasting, R&D center or call center :rofl:

Indias only good at is conning old retired American folks out of money, shamelss
 
India will import more chips than oil, which is hard to change.
 
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