By Toby Sterling
EINDHOVEN, Netherlands, March 4 (Reuters) – A trade delegation from India visited the Dutch semiconductor hub of Eindhoven on Wednesday to discuss โinvestment opportunities as New Delhi accelerates its efforts to build a domestic โchip industry.
India has pledged billions of dollars in subsidies to attract semiconductor fabrication plants and related โmanufacturing, with eight projects underway including a $14 billion Tata Electronics facility in Gujarat.
Meanwhile, Dutch semiconductor firms are seeking new markets and geographical diversification amid export controls and trade restrictions linked to U.S.-China technology rivalry.
โItโs clear there are opportunities for Dutch firms, in โthe first place for equipment โ exports,โ and later as a base for manufacturing, given Indiaโs large engineering workforce, said Michiel Smit of the Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO).
Manish Hooda, โ technology director at the India Semiconductor Mission said Dutch firms pursuing a โChina-plus-oneโ manufacturing strategy should consider India as their production base outside China.
โWe are quite open if they are โinterested โin setting up operations in India,โ Hooda โsaid.
The Eindhoven region is home to โleading chip equipment maker ASML and dozens of its top suppliers. Chipmaker NXP Semiconductors is also headquartered there.
ASML disclosed last week it plans to open a support office in India. A spokesperson declined to give further details.
Indiaโs subsidy program launched in 2021 covered up to 50% of project costs, with state governments offering an โadditional 20% to 25%, Hooda said. A โsecond program slated for approval March 30 could โbe even larger, he added.
Smit said โabout 50 to 60 Dutch firms had requested meetings with โthe Indian delegation.
Indian engineers already form a โsignificant part of โthe Dutch tech workforce. According to statistics agency CBS, the number of Indians in the Netherlands tripled to 89,000 in 2024 from 2014, with more โthan 10,000 living in โthe Eindhoven region.
The two countries hope to announce a strategic partnership during โa planned visit by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi later this โyear.
(Reporting by Toby Sterling;Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)