ISM 2.0 will support setting up of facility for chemicals, gases, equipment manufacturing in India: Senior MeitY official
The Hindu
ISM 2.0 aims to boost India's semiconductor ecosystem by supporting chemicals, gases, and equipment manufacturing, says MeitY official.
Offering a teaser about the India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) 2.0, Amitesh Kumar Sinha, Additional Secretary, Ministry of electronics, information technology (MeitY), and CEO of India Semiconductor Mission, on Monday (April 6, 2026) said, in ISM 2.0, the government is trying to support setting up of facility for chemicals, gases, materials, and equipment manufacturing in India. “ISM 2.0 is totally focussed on these verticals,” Mr. Sinha stated during a fireside chat ‘From Assembly to Electronics Excellence: India’s Semiconductor Ambitions’ at the two-day Deep Tech Summit 2026 organised by The Hindu Group in association with the SRM Institute of Science and Technology (SRMIST) in Chennai.
Observing that setting up semiconductor manufacturing was not an easy task, Mr. Sinha, in conversation with Aroon Deep, Principal Correspondent of The Hindu, said the industry has multiple ingredients and every ingredient has a very precise implementation process or engineering process that is required to set that up. Flagging certain challenges faced by companies, he said the companies are overcoming those problems with the support of the government which fully understands that ecosystem has a very important role.
Equipment, technology partners and supply chain partners are important, he pointed out and said that in ISM 2.0, “We are trying to support setting up of facility for chemicals, gases, materials, and equipment manufacturing in India. So, the next leg of ISM 2.0 will focus entirely on these verticals.”
Observing that other three verticals of design, manufacturing, and packaging will continue, Mr. Sinha said: “Besides, these kinds of ecosystem development efforts will start. Parallelly, we will also start working on specific technology development oriented R & D.” Skilling will be a thrust area going forward, he underlined.
Replying to a query, Mr. Sinha said that the government’s role was to create opportunities and to provide infrastructure and also underlined the importance of industry’s participation. “We all know that deep tech is very capital intensive and it needs a lot of infrastructure in terms of lab facility, testing facilities and many more. The government will create that along with the industry,” mentioned Mr. Sinha. So, the industry which is looking for a real-time solution to integrate in their product lines or to solve some problems that they are facing, is also a very important partner in all this, he added.
Amitesh Kumar Sinha, Additional Secretary, Ministry of electronics, information technology (MeitY), and CEO of India Semiconductor Mission, at the two-day Deep Tech Summit 2026 organised by The Hindu Group in association with the SRM Institute of Science and Technology (SRMIST) in Chennai. He is in conversation with Aroon Deep, Principal Correspondent, The Hindu | Photo Credit: R. Ragu













