Micron CEO Praises Modi's Policies, Unveils $2.75B Gujarat Semiconductor Plant

Sanjay Mehrotra, CEO of Micron Technology, praised the Modi government's supportive policies for enabling the company's major investment in India. He detailed the $2.75 billion semiconductor assembly and test facility being built in Sanand, Gujarat, describing its massive scale. Mehrotra emphasized that memory and storage are critical components for advancing artificial intelligence technologies. The project represents a pioneering initiative in India's domestic semiconductor manufacturing sector.

Key Points: Micron CEO Credits Modi Govt for $2.75B India Semiconductor Investment

  • $2.75B investment in Gujarat
  • Pioneering semiconductor manufacturing project
  • Facility size equals 10 cricket fields
  • Critical for AI memory and storage needs
3 min read

Modi government provided tremendous support and policies that encourage investment in India: Micron Tech CEO

Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra lauds Modi government's support for investment, detailing the pioneering $2.75B semiconductor facility in Gujarat.

"Modi's government has provided tremendous support and a policy that encourages investment here in India - Sanjay Mehrotra"

New Delhi, February 20

The PAX SILICA initiative is expected to bring technology collaboration closer between the United States and India. Sanjay Mehrotra, President and CEO of Micron Technology, credited the regulatory environment for facilitating the project.

"Modi's government has provided tremendous support and a policy that encourages investment here in India," he said. He described the Sanand facility in Gujarat as "the pioneering project of semiconductor manufacturing here in India" and expressed pride in the partnership with both the central government and the government of Gujarat.

While speaking at the signing of the PAX SILICA declaration on the sidelines of the India AI Impact Summit in New Delhi on Friday, Mehrotra reiterated Micron Technology's investment of USD 2.75 billion in Gujarat to establish a semiconductor assembly and test facility. The project represents a "pioneering initiative" in India's semiconductor manufacturing sector.

"Micron is making an investment of USD 2.75 billion here in Gujarat. We'll talk more about it in the fireside chat a little bit later. Those investments now are going to be bringing a grand opening coming up soon, where packaging and assembly will be done of advanced memory wafers produced worldwide. So this is a pioneering project here in India," Mehrotra said.

Painting the visual size of the facility, Mehrotra stated, "The size of this facility that has been built is 500,000 square feet. So imagine that the clean room is the size of 10 cricket fields. The amount of steel that has been used in that is about three and a half times of the Eiffel Tower. The amount of concrete that is used in that is the size of 100 Olympic-sized swimming pools. This is the pioneering project of semiconductor manufacturing here in India."

Mehrotra highlighted the importance of memory and storage in the current technological landscape, noting that these components are essential for artificial intelligence. "Memory and storage are critical to driving AI," Mehrotra said. He explained that as contextual processing expands and real-time performance demands on AI systems increase, the requirement for memory continues to grow. He also noted that "Micron is the only company in the Western Hemisphere that develops and manufactures memory and storage."

The project is part of Micron's broader strategy as a manufacturing powerhouse with 60,000 patents worldwide. "We now have 300 inventors with the number of patents approaching nearly 2000 that have been contributed by the innovative, phenomenal team here in India. Very proud also of Micron's investment in bringing advanced packaging, assembly and test technologies here to Sanand, Gujarat," the CEO said.

The company has maintained a presence in India since 2019, operating research and development centers in Bangalore and Hyderabad. Micron currently employs 24,000 people in the country. The India-based teams contribute to the company's global innovation, with some of the most advanced DRAM products being designed in India in collaboration with teams in the United States.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone working in the tech sector in Bangalore, this is very encouraging. Micron's R&D centers here are already doing great work. A local manufacturing facility will create a complete ecosystem and so many high-skilled jobs. The scale of investment is impressive.
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Priya S
While this is a positive step, I hope the benefits reach local communities and smaller businesses in Gujarat, not just the big corporates. Also, we must ensure sustainable practices—the concrete and steel stats sound a bit worrying for the environment. Progress needs to be responsible.
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Rohit P
"Size of 10 cricket fields" – now that's a comparison every Indian can visualize! 😄 Jokes aside, this is a game-changer for our electronics and AI ambitions. Reducing import dependence for critical components like memory chips is strategic and necessary.
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Vikram M
The US-India tech collaboration (PAX SILICA) is the real story here. In today's geopolitical climate, such partnerships are crucial. It's good to see Indian engineers (300 inventors!) contributing significantly to global patents. We have the talent; we just need the infrastructure.
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Kavya N
Hope this leads to more such projects across different states. Why always Gujarat? Other regions also have potential and need development. Still, a pioneering project is a start. Let's see if the promised jobs and technology transfer actually happen on the ground.

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