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MeitY Clears ₹7,104 Cr Electronics Component Push, Signals Shift to Deep-Tech Manufacturing.

On Monday, March 30, 2026, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) approved 29 major investment proposals under the Electronics Component Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS).

With a total investment of ₹7,104 crore ($751 million), this latest tranche is a decisive move to shift India from a “final assembly” hub to a deep-tech component manufacturer. The projects are expected to generate ₹84,515 crore in production value and create over 14,200 direct jobs.


The “Firsts” in Indian Manufacturing

This round of approvals is notable for introducing high-tech manufacturing capabilities that previously did not exist in India:


Key Companies & Product Categories

The 29 proposals span 16 product categories, targeting everything from telecommunications to automotive electronics.

CategoryKey Approved Companies
Connectors & InterconnectsMolex India, Amphenol FCI India, Terminal Technologies
Passive ComponentsVishay Components India (Capacitors), TDK India (Inductors)
Semiconductors & SensorsVishay Precision Transducers (Resistors/Transducers)
Energy StorageMunoth Lithium Battery (Li-ion cells for digital apps)
Upstream Supply ChainSyrma Components (Copper Clad Laminates), Dhruv Industries
Capital EquipmentTitan Engineering & Automation, Bharat FIH, IFB Industries

The 2031 Vision: A $500 Billion Ecosystem

The Union Budget 2026–27 recently raised the ECMS outlay to ₹40,000 crore, reflecting a long-term commitment to self-reliance.

  1. Vertical Integration: By funding “Copper Clad Laminates” (the base material for PCBs), the government is targeting the very start of the electronics value chain.
  2. Import Substitution: Components like heat sinks (VVDN Technologies) and metallized films (Dhruv Industries) are small but essential parts that currently account for a significant portion of India’s trade deficit in electronics.
  3. The “Post-PLI” Era: As the initial mobile manufacturing PLI (Production Linked Incentive) scheme nears expiry, these component-focused approvals ensure that global giants like Apple and Samsung have a local ecosystem to source from, rather than just an assembly line.

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