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Updated Jun 25, 2026 · 10:05
India News Updated Jun 25, 2026

India, US Forge Deeper Tech Ties in Semiconductors, AI and Critical Minerals

India and the United States held a high-level meeting in Washington to deepen bilateral technological cooperation. The discussions focused on semiconductor manufacturing, artificial intelligence, trusted supply chains, and critical minerals. India's MeitY Secretary S. Krishnan met US Under Secretary of State Jacob S. Helberg to explore these avenues. The cooperation aims to strengthen supply chain resilience and reduce dependencies in strategically important sectors.

India, US discuss deeper cooperation in semiconductors, AI and critical minerals

New Delhi, June 25

India and the United States discussed ways to deepen bilateral technological cooperation, with a focus on semiconductor manufacturing, artificial intelligence, trusted supply chains and critical minerals, during a high-level meeting in Washington, it was announced on Thursday.

In a post on social media platform X, the Embassy of India in Washington said that Secretary of the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), S. Krishnan, met US Under Secretary of State Jacob S. Helberg to explore avenues to expand cooperation in key technology sectors.

"MeitY Secretary S. Krishnan met with US Under Secretary of State Jacob S. Helberg to deepen bilateral technological cooperation," the Embassy said in the post.

The two sides discussed opportunities for collaboration in building diversified and trusted supply chains, particularly in semiconductor manufacturing and AI adoption.

"They discussed avenues for cooperation in building diversified and trusted supply chains, particularly in semiconductor manufacturing, AI adoption and securing access to critical minerals," the post further said.

In addition, the officials deliberated on measures to secure access to critical minerals, which are increasingly seen as critical for advanced manufacturing, clean energy technologies and other strategic industries.

The discussions come amid growing India-US cooperation in critical and emerging technologies, with both countries seeking to strengthen supply chain resilience and reduce dependencies in strategically important sectors.

Earlier this month, Union Minister for Electronics and Information Technology Ashwini Vaishnaw said the global semiconductor industry is facing a shortage of nearly one million professionals, presenting a significant opportunity for India to emerge as a key supplier of skilled talent for the sector.

According to the minister, the global semiconductor industry is currently valued at around $800 billion and is expected to cross the $1 trillion mark within a year.

"By 2032, around one million jobs are expected to emerge in the semiconductor sector globally. At the same time, the industry is facing a shortage of nearly one million skilled professionals," Vaishnaw had said.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rohit P

Finally, a strategic move beyond just IT services. We need to invest in our own fab plants and AI research, not just supply talent. The US talks are good, but we must avoid being just a back-end provider. Let's build our own ecosystem too.

Sarah B

As someone who works in tech, this collaboration makes so much sense. India has the workforce, the US has the R&D muscle. The critical minerals angle is also smart—we need to secure supply chains for batteries and electronics. Win-win for both countries.

Vikram M

This is all well and good, but I hope our government focuses on skilling our youth properly. The minister mentioned a shortage of one million professionals—are we training them for high-value work or just assembly line jobs? Quality matters, not just quantity.

Priya S

As an Indian woman in STEM, I'm thrilled to see this. But we also need policies that encourage more women and rural youth to enter these fields. The US partnership is a great starting point, but the real work is in building inclusive education at home.

James A

Interesting development. The semiconductor race is huge—countries like Taiwan and South Korea dominate. India has the engineers and the democracy bonus for trusted supply chains. Let's see if this translates into actual chip fabs in India, not just MoUs.

K We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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