Minister Vaishnaw expects more companies to start production of memory chips in India
New companies are likely to invest in India to manufacture memory chips while existing investors will scale up production to address the demand-supply gap in
New companies are likely to invest in India to manufacture memory chips while existing investors will scale up production to address the demand-supply gap in the segment, Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said. Strong demand for memory (data storage) cards and advanced chips has tightened global supplies and supported higher prices in past quarters, and manufacturers have been sprucing up investments and production capacities to meet market requirements worldwide. The higher memory chip prices have, in turn, led to a rise in production costs for a range of electronic products, including smartphones and laptops. "Definitely, a lot more investment is coming in the memory manufacturing units, and that is because for the first time in the way the semiconductor industry has grown at such a rapid pace, for the first time we are seeing a huge shortage of certain components which are required in the AI data centres, the high bandwidth memory chips," Mr. Vaishnaw said. Data centre investments in India are expected to cross $200 billion soon, which may need billions of gigabytes of storage capacity. The Minister said there is a global phenomenon of supply-demand imbalance, which is now getting addressed by setting many more units.
"For example, there are the high bandwidth memory chips, which are manufactured by Micron. They are the first plant to start commercial production on February 28th this year. This is the second plant which started commercial manufacturing on March 31st. These are the steps which have started giving results. There is a serious supply-demand mismatch in the case of memory," he said. When asked if there will be new investments in the memory chip segment or only existing players have plans to ramp up production, Mr. Vaishnaw said, "Looks like both might happen". He said the India Semicon Mission (ISM) 1.0 could get about 48 startups to work on the tech products. "In ISM 2.0, that will be the topmost priority, design will be the topmost priority. The second biggest priority will be machines, which are used in the manufacturing of semiconductors. We will seriously be looking at getting the equipment manufacturers to come to India for designing the equipment as well as manufacturing the equipment," Mr. Vaishnaw said. The Minister said that after decades of effort, India has been able to attract chip makers to the country under Prime Minister Narendra Modi's regime as the India Semicon Mission 1.0 programme sets the foundation for a robust domestic semiconductor industry.
