India Achieves 1,000 km Quantum Communication Target in Just 3 Years

India has achieved 1,000 km of secure quantum communication in just three years, half the projected timeline, according to Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh. The minister highlighted India's rapid progress in emerging technologies like AI, semiconductors, and deep-tech. He noted India ranks third globally in startup ecosystem and has crossed one lakh patents. With nearly 70% population under 40, India aims to become a global skilled workforce hub by 2047.

Key Points: India Hits 1,000 km Quantum Communication Target in 3 Years

  • India achieves 1,000 km secure quantum communication in 3 years, half the projected timeline
  • National Quantum Mission advancing through four thematic hubs
  • India ranks 3rd globally in startup ecosystem, crosses 1 lakh patents
  • 70% population below 40 years offers global skilled workforce opportunity
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India achieves 1,000 kms secure quantum communication target in just 3 years: Minister

India completes 1,000 km of secure quantum communication in just three years, half the projected timeline, says Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh.

"India is moving at a very fast pace in emerging technologies including quantum, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and deep-tech - Dr Jitendra Singh"

New Delhi, May 8

India has already completed 1,000 kms of secure quantum communication within just three years, achieving the target in less than half the projected timeline, Union Minister of State for Science and Technology, Dr Jitendra Singh, said on Friday.

Dr Singh said India is moving at a "very fast pace" in emerging technologies including quantum, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and deep-tech, with the country's youth set to play the central role in building a Viksit Bharat by 2047.

At an event here, the minister outlined the government's broader push to align higher education with emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, semiconductors, cybersecurity and quantum technologies.

He said the Centre, developed in collaboration with the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC), Ethnotech and Cambridge University Press and Assessment, would train students in nine future-technology domains with globally recognised certifications.

Highlighting progress under the National Quantum Mission, the Minister said India has already completed 1,000 km of secure quantum communication within just three years, achieving the target in less than half the projected timeline, and added that the eight-year Mission is advancing rapidly through four thematic hubs and collaborations with institutions across the country.

The Minister said the India AI Mission launched in 2024 is creating a strong ecosystem around compute infrastructure, datasets, innovation and future skills.

Referring to India's growing global standing in innovation, he said the country today ranks third globally in the startup ecosystem and has crossed one lakh patents, a majority of them filed by Indian residents.

India also ranks among the top nations globally in scientific publications, with Indian research increasingly receiving international citations and recognition.

Dr Singh said the pace of technological evolution has made continuous skilling and re-skilling essential, especially in areas such as Artificial Intelligence, Cybersecurity, Quantum Technologies and Semiconductor Design.

He said India's demographic advantage, with nearly 70 per cent of the population below the age of 40 years, presents a major opportunity to emerge as a global skilled workforce hub over the next two to three decades.

- IANS

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Kavya N
Finally some good news about indigenous tech development! I'm a research student in physics, and seeing India invest seriously in quantum and AI makes me feel proud. The collaboration with Cambridge University Press and NSDC for certifications sounds promising too. Hope our skilled youth get the jobs they deserve from this. 🙏
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Rohit P
Impressive stats, but I'm a bit skeptical. We keep hearing about milestones, but what's the actual field deployment? Are banks or government agencies using this quantum link? I hope this isn't just for press conferences. We need to see real-world applications, especially for securing Aadhaar, UPI transactions, and defence communications.
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Shreya B
The part about 1 lakh patents and ranking 3rd in startup ecosystem is truly uplifting. 🇮🇳 My cousin is doing a PhD in quantum computing at IISc, and she says the labs are getting good funding now. The only worry is brain drain — many of her batchmates are getting offers from US and EU. Hope India can retain this talent with good salaries and research freedom. Skilling is good but retention is key!
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Siddharth J
Great vision, but I wish the government would simultaneously focus on basic infrastructure for tier-2 and tier-3 cities. Many engineering colleges in smaller towns still don't have stable internet or proper labs. How can students learn quantum and AI without basics? Also, 70% population below 40 is an opportunity only if we address the education quality gap. Hope the skilling programs reach beyond metros.
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Anushka E

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