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Business India News Updated Oct 23, 2025

India's Shipbuilding Ambition: Charting Course to Global Leadership by 2047

India has set an ambitious goal to rank among the world's top five shipbuilding nations by 2047. The Kochi Shipbuilding Summit laid out a comprehensive roadmap focusing on industrial growth and technological advancement. Key leaders emphasized leveraging India's young workforce and projected $30 trillion GDP to drive this transformation. The summit concluded with consensus on strengthening partnerships across government, industry and academia to achieve global maritime leadership.

India charts course to global maritime leadership by 2047

Kochi Oct 22

India's ambitions to emerge as a global shipbuilding powerhouse gained fresh momentum as the Kochi Shipbuilding Summit 2025, jointly organised by Cochin Shipyard Limited (CSL) and Centre for Public Policy Research (CPPR) held on Wednesday.

The summit, a prelude to India Maritime Week 2025, laid out a roadmap for positioning India among the world's top five shipbuilding nations by 2047.

The deliberations focused on building an ecosystem that leverages India's industrial base, skilled workforce, and policy frameworks to strengthen its maritime competitiveness.

Madhu S. Nair, Chairman and Managing Director of CSL, described shipbuilding as a "mother industry" that drives growth, technology adoption, and job creation.

He noted that India's resilient economy, young workforce, and expanding domestic market offer the scale and strength to support its global ambitions.

"With a projected $30 trillion GDP by 2047, India is well placed to lead the next wave of shipbuilding," he said.

D. Dhanuraj, Chairman of CPPR, underlined the need for closer collaboration between academia and industry.

"To bridge capability gaps and foster innovation, we must build a research-oriented, skill-driven ecosystem with strong global partnerships," he said.

A high-level panel discussion moderated by R. P. Pradhan, Professor at BITS Pilani (Goa Campus), featured maritime leaders including G. Ashok Kumar, former Vice Chief of Naval Staff; Biju George of Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders; Hariraj P of SEDS; and Satheesh Babu P.K. of CUSAT.

Speakers identified key growth drivers such as the Shipbuilding Financial Assistance Scheme and the Maritime Development Fund, stressing the role of financial reforms, technology adoption, and digitalisation.

The discussions also emphasised sustainable ship design, skill enhancement, and green innovation as critical enablers of long-term competitiveness.

The summit ended with a consensus on forging stronger partnerships between government, industry, and academia to accelerate India's shift from a regional player to a global maritime hub by 2047.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rohit P

Finally some concrete roadmap for maritime sector! But we need to ensure proper implementation - too many grand plans fail at execution stage. Hope this doesn't remain just another summit declaration.

Arjun K

As someone from coastal Karnataka, I've seen how maritime industries transform local economies. This vision for 2047 aligns perfectly with India's growing global stature. Jai Hind! 🚢

Sarah B

The emphasis on academia-industry collaboration is crucial. We need more specialized maritime courses in Indian universities to build the skilled workforce required for this ambitious goal.

Vikram M

$30 trillion GDP projection by 2047 shows the scale of opportunity. Shipbuilding can be our next IT revolution - creating global companies and technological leadership. Very promising!

Karthik V

Hope this includes developing our inland waterways too. We have massive potential in river transport systems that can complement ocean shipping. Comprehensive approach needed.

Michael C

The mention of digitalization and technology adoption is key. India can leapfrog traditional shipbuilding methods with AI, automation and smart manufacturing. Future-ready approach!

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

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