India seeks Dutch knowhow in semiconductor push

By Toby Sterling EINDHOVEN, Netherlands, March 4 (Reuters) – A trade delegation from India visited the Dutch semiconductor hub of Eindhoven on Wednesday to discuss โ€Œinvestment opportunities as New Delhi accelerates its efforts to build a domestic โ€Œchip industry. India has pledged billions of dollars in subsidies to attract semiconductor fabrication plants and related โ€‹manufacturing,…


India seeks Dutch knowhow in semiconductor push
India seeks Dutch knowhow in semiconductor push

By Toby Sterling

EINDHOVEN, Netherlands, March 4 (Reuters) – A trade delegation from India visited the Dutch semiconductor hub of Eindhoven on Wednesday to discuss โ€Œinvestment opportunities as New Delhi accelerates its efforts to build a domestic โ€Œchip industry.

India has pledged billions of dollars in subsidies to attract semiconductor fabrication plants and related โ€‹manufacturing, 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.

โ€œItโ€™s clear there are opportunities for Dutch firms, in โ€Œthe first place for equipment โ exports,โ€ and later as a base for manufacturing, given Indiaโ€™s 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 โ€œChina-plus-oneโ€ manufacturing strategy should consider India as their production base outside China.

โ€œWe are quite open if they are โ€‹interested โ€‹in setting up operations in India,โ€ Hooda โ€‹said.

The Eindhoven region is home to โ€Œleading 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.

Indiaโ€™s subsidy program launched in 2021 covered up to 50% of project costs, with state governments offering an โ€Œadditional 20% to 25%, Hooda said. A โ€‹second program slated for approval March 30 could โ€‹be even larger, he added.

Smit said โ€‹about 50 to 60 Dutch firms had requested meetings with โ€Œthe Indian delegation.

Indian engineers already form a โ€‹significant part of โ€‹the 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 โ€‹than 10,000 living in โ€Œthe Eindhoven region.

The two countries hope to announce a strategic partnership during โ€‹a planned visit by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi later this โ€‹year.

(Reporting by Toby Sterling;Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)

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