A NITI Aayog report highlights India's chance to become a key player in the global semiconductor supply chain amid surging demand from AI and 5G. India's own demand is set to hit USD 90 billion by FY2030, urging a shift to co-creation.
Surging Global and Domestic Demand
The global semiconductor market, which grew at a CAGR of 6.5% between 2014 and 2024, is expected to accelerate to 8.5% over the next 5-10 years, the report notes. Global sales are projected to rise from $631 billion in 2024 to $1,029 billion by 2030 and $1,547 billion by 2035.Parallel to the global surge, India's semiconductor demand is on an accelerated path. "It is projected to grow at a CAGR of 19 per cent, reaching around USD 90 billion by FY2030 and potentially expanding further to over USD 200 billion by FY2035 if this momentum continues," the report said. This trajectory is underpinned by strong growth in electronics manufacturing, accelerated rollout of data centres and cloud infrastructure, rising semiconductor content in automotive, particularly EVs and ADAS, and widespread adoption of AI across consumer and enterprise workloads.Addressing Global Supply Chain Vulnerabilities
However, the report flags that the global value chain remains highly interconnected and vulnerable. "This deeply interdependent value chain has exposed vital industries to significant vulnerabilities in the past, stemming from natural disruptions and geopolitical tensions, prompting major countries to accelerate efforts to build resilient local ecosystems," it said.Industry Shift Towards New Architectures
The industry itself is undergoing a structural shift. "The shift toward AI accelerators such as GPUs, NPUs and domain-specific processors is redefining semiconductor design requirements, pushing the industry beyond traditional logic chips toward heterogeneous, application-optimised architectures," the report noted. Performance is now increasingly dependent on advanced packaging like chiplets and 2.5D/3D integration, as well as new materials such as SiC and GaN.India's Path Forward: From Consumer to Co-creator
To capitalise, the report urges India to act fast. "To realise this opportunity, India needs to move beyond being a downstream consumer to becoming a co-creator of frontier technologies that will shape global compute leadership. This calls for building capabilities in design, advanced packaging and strategic manufacturing."Semiconductors Across Key Sectors
Across end-use sectors, semiconductors are becoming the intelligence core. In power and energy, wide-bandgap chips govern efficiency and grid stability. In defence and aerospace, trusted chips underpin sensing and secure comms. In healthcare, sensors and low-power processors drive digital diagnostics, while in agriculture, chips convert field data into edge intelligence for farm-level decisions. (ANI)(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Asianet Newsable English staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)Add Asianet Newsable as a Preferred Source

