India's Chip Revolution: Why Industry-Academia Alliance Is Key, Says MeitY Scientist

India's semiconductor ambitions require stronger industry-academia collaboration to transform design talent into complete indigenous products. The government is expanding support through the semiconductor mission and design-based incentive framework. A new R&D scheme provides long-term loans to startups working on complex chip development. Experts emphasize adopting a market-first approach and integrating startups into the value chain for sustainable growth.

Key Points: Sunita Verma on Industry-Academia Partnership for India Semiconductor

  • India needs deeper industry-academia collaboration for indigenous chip products
  • Government expanding support through semiconductor mission and design incentives
  • New R&D scheme offers long-term loans for advanced chip startups
  • Market-first approach essential to identify demand before manufacturing
  • Strong academic pipeline built over 30-35 years supports design talent
3 min read

India needs industry-academia alliance to power India's chip revolution: MeitY Scientist Sunita Verma

MeitY Scientist Sunita Verma calls for industry-academia collaboration to transform India's chip design talent into fully indigenous semiconductor products and boost innovation.

"We do realise that with this talent we don't have any Indian end-to-end product. We cannot claim the entire product is ours. - Sunita Verma"

New Delhi, November 17

India's semiconductor ambitions hinge on deeper collaboration between industry and academia, a shift that MeitY believes is essential to turn the country's strong design talent into fully indigenous chip products, Sunita Verma, Scientist-G and Group Coordinator at MeitY, told ANI today.

"We do realise that with this talent we don't have any Indian end-to-end product. We cannot claim the entire product is ours. Our designers were working in various companies," Verna told ANI on the sidelines of the 8th Electronics Summit in New Delhi.

She also called for a united national push to build full-stack semiconductor products and highlighted the urgency of moving beyond fragmented contributions to global design houses.

Stressing the need for industry participation, she added, "There is a trust from the DCA also, industry is approaching to utilise the funds so the complex chips should be taken up for development. We are all behind this."

The government, she noted, is expanding support mechanisms through the semiconductor mission and the design-based incentive framework. These initiatives focus on "creating infrastructure, providing IT support, and financial support" to enable domestic designers and startups to mature their ideas into products.

Verma highlighted the depth of India's academic pipeline as a key asset, saying, "We are supporting academia in the last 30-35 years," which has enabled strong capacity building for chip design across institutions.

A major boost to industry-led innovation is coming from the newly launched R&D and Innovation (RDI) Scheme, which offers long-term loans to startups working on advanced chip development.

She said this mechanism addresses long-standing gaps, especially as "Funding from the industry in R&D was not adequate." The RDI scheme, she noted, is helping companies take on technologically complex chips that require sustained investment.

She also cautioned that India must adopt a market-first approach: "Identify the users and sell the idea and then start manufacturing," instead of developing products without assured demand.

In the broader context of India's semiconductor mission, Verma outlined the need to identify products "from the market low volume high quality or vice versa," depending on strategic priorities.

She emphasised aligning with industry to accelerate Made-in-India chip development and said mandating the use of indigenous products in select areas could strengthen domestic manufacturing.

The government, she added, is committed to supporting companies that step into deeper technology layers and contribute to national capability building.

Later, participating in a panel discussion, Verma joined experts in deliberating on promoting fabless chip design, hardware-software co-design, incentivizing IP creation, expanding access to EDA tools, rapid prototyping, and strengthening industry-academia partnerships. The panel also stressed the importance of integrating startups into the design and development value chain and ensuring effective utilisation of the RDI scheme.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
The market-first approach is crucial. Too many Indian startups fail because they build products without understanding customer needs. Hope this initiative succeeds!
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Arjun K
As an electronics engineer, I've seen our talent go abroad for better opportunities. If government provides proper infrastructure and funding, we can definitely build world-class chips in India. The RDI scheme sounds promising.
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Sarah B
While I appreciate the vision, I hope the implementation is better than previous schemes. We need transparency in fund allocation and measurable outcomes. The academia-industry gap has been discussed for decades with little progress.
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Karthik V
This is exactly what we need! Our colleges teach outdated syllabus while industry needs cutting-edge skills. Collaboration will bridge this gap. Hope they involve private companies actively in curriculum design.
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Michael C
The focus on fabless design makes sense for India. Building fabs requires massive investment, but design is where our strength lies. Smart strategy to play to our strengths first.
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Ananya R
Mandating use of indigenous products in government projects would be a game-changer! This will create guaranteed demand and boost confidence among startups. Atmanirbhar Bharat in action! 💪

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