Vaishnaw's Electronics Vision: Design, Quality, and Atma Nirbharta Roadmap

Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw has laid out a clear three-pronged strategy for India's next electronics manufacturing phase. He emphasized that design teams must become non-negotiable for every electronics company seeking long-term success. The minister called for implementing Six Sigma quality standards across all products, from simplest to most complex. Finally, he urged industry leaders to prioritize developing domestic suppliers under the Atma Nirbharta initiative.

Key Points: Vaishnaw Outlines India's Electronics Manufacturing Future Strategy

  • Design capability to become mandatory criteria for ECMS scheme approvals
  • Six Sigma quality standards required across all electronics products
  • Developing domestic suppliers crucial for Atma Nirbharta initiative
  • New skilling framework for electronics manufacturing sector in development
  • ECMS scheme received 249 applications with Rs 115,351 crore investment commitment
4 min read

Vaishnaw unveils roadmap for India's next electronics leap: Design, quality, Atma Nirbharta at core

Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw unveils 3-pillar roadmap for India's electronics sector: design teams, Six Sigma quality, and domestic supply chains under Atma Nirbharta.

"There were many naysayers, and those naysayers are now proven wrong. You have shown the way how this country will become a major electronics manufacturing hub - Ashwini Vaishnaw"

New Delhi, November 17

Union Minister for Electronics and IT Ashwini Vaishnaw on Monday laid out a clear roadmap for the next phase of India's electronics manufacturing growth, stressing that industry leaders to focus on three critical areas where they must take the lead.

His three key asks to industry members were building strong design teams, achieving Six Sigma quality, and deepening domestic supply chains under the Atma Nirbharta initiatives.

Addressing electronics industry members and other stakeholders at an event organised by ICEA, the minister said the rapid progress in India's electronics sector had silenced critics.

"There were many naysayers, and those naysayers are now proven wrong. You have shown the way how this country will become a major electronics manufacturing hub," the minister said.He also expressed satisfaction that industry leaders now acknowledge the government's efforts.

"I'm so glad that some people today mentioned that the government has done everything that was supposed to be done. Now it's our turn. It's a very nice thing to hear."

Emphasising that India's long-term competitiveness cannot rest on assembly alone, Vaishnaw said design strength must be central to every electronics company's strategy.

"To achieve long-term success, we will have to focus on three major things. First, we will have to develop our design teams. Whatever be the cost, whatever be the effort, whatever be the hard work that has to be put in. This is something which has to be done. There is no, it's one of those non-negotiables which has to be made a part of our journey," he said.

He urged the Ministry to factor design capability into ECMS approvals.

"I'll request that the department should ask in all the applications, what is the design capability that you are developing? And that should be one of the criteria for selecting the people who finally get approved in the ECMS," he said.

The Electronics Component Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS), approved by the Cabinet on May 1, 2025, with a fiscal outlay of Rs 22,919 crore, has received 249 applications with an anticipated investment commitment of Rs 115,351 crore. The government believes that the huge response will also translate into more direct and indirect jobs for the country's people. The application window was open for an initial period of three months, starting from May 1, 2025, and was subsequently extended till September 30, 2025.

The minister's second major point was the need for world-class quality across the entire electronics value chain.

"My second request and second ask is to focus on getting six sigma quality in every product that we manufacture. Smallest of the small products and the most complex of the complex products," he said.

He stressed that quality systems would be integrated into future evaluations. "Quality systems will also be part of the evaluation criteria, henceforth. I'll request the department to make that a major part of your evaluation of the quality systems," Vaishnaw said.

Minister Vaishnaw noted that other Indian sectors -- automobiles, aerospace, chemicals and pharmaceuticals -- have set global benchmarks, and electronics manufacturing must rise to the same standard.

Calling supply-chain independence central to India's economic strength, the Union minister urged companies to develop and upgrade domestic vendors.

"And third ask is, as far as possible, for everything that you use in your factory, in your plant, in your laboratory, get Swadeshi, get Atma Nirbharta. Focus on developing Indian suppliers. Make sure that they also come up to quality levels. Make sure that you hold hands and get them up the value chain."

He added that the government will continue to work with industry on new initiatives, including exploring a new skilling framework for electronics manufacturing. "We made a good beginning... Hopefully, very soon, we'll come out with a new skilling framework also for electronics manufacturing."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Great emphasis on developing domestic suppliers. This will create jobs across tiers and reduce import dependency. Hope the industry takes this seriously and doesn't just rely on assembly.
M
Michael C
While the vision is good, I hope the implementation is practical. Six Sigma quality requires massive investment in training and infrastructure. Hope there's support for SMEs too.
S
Sarah B
The skilling framework announcement is crucial. We need trained engineers and technicians who can handle advanced manufacturing processes. This could be a game-changer for employment.
R
Rohit P
Bhai, this is what we needed! Design teams in India creating original products instead of just assembling foreign designs. Jai Hind! 🙏
K
Kavya N
Good to see the minister acknowledging that government has done its part and now industry needs to step up. Time for Indian companies to show they can deliver world-class products.
D
David E
The focus on domestic supply chains is smart strategy. Building local component manufacturing will create a resilient ecosystem and reduce vulnerability to global supply disruptions.

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