Begin typing your search...

India anticipates semiconductor project approval this year: IT Minister

Telecom and IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said that semiconductor plant proposals received under Rs 76,000 crore Semicon Mission by the government are under evaluation.

Telecom and IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw
X

Telecom and IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw

Telecom and IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said that semiconductor plant proposals received under Rs 76,000 crore Semicon Mission by the government are under evaluation.

The indigenous 5G technology developed by the TCS-CDoT-led consortium has the potential to win global deals as people the world over are looking for trusted telecom solutions and no country can match the level of trust India can bring in, Telecom and IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw has said.

While sharing the government plans to deploy 1.25 lakh mobile sites in the BSNL network based on indigenously developed technology gears, Vaishnaw in an interview with PTI expressed concern over the shortage of semiconductors and said the first project proposal for the high-tech electronic chips will be approved in coming few months this year.

"We are very rapidly progressing on developing our own 5G technology stack. There is a huge interest among the whole world community in having a good trusted and affordable technology source for telecom because telecom is today the primary consumption point for all digital services. People want a trusted telecom solution. And as you know, the trust which India can bring, no other country can match," Vaishnaw said.

Several countries led by the US and European nations have blocked 5G telecom gear from Chinese companies. India too has set up a process for approving trusted telecom gears in local networks.

The minister said that the indigenous 4G technology stack, developed recently, is now mature, scalable and can be deployed over more than one lakh towers.

"Billions of simultaneous calls have been done on it to test its ruggedness. Our target is to deploy over about 1.25 lakh towers in the coming few months. 2G and 3G equipment have to be replaced by 4G. The only challenge is semiconductor chips that go in radios," Vaishnaw said.

He said that semiconductor plant proposals received under Rs 76,000 crore Semicon Mission by the government are under evaluation.

"We are in a very advanced stage of evaluation of the applications, which were received in February. I wouldn't like to comment on their status at this point in time. But, we believe that in the coming few months, we should have the first agreement signed this year," he added.

The minister in mid-June met semiconductor technology firm IMEC at its headquarters in Belgium, which is in discussion with two of the applicants to provide technology for making electronic chips in India.

Dwaipayan Bhattacharjee
Next Story
Share it