India's
Semiconductor Journey: The New Kid on the Block
[ABS News Service/21.03.2022]
At the edge of the impossible
Modern chip fabs
use advanced technology that would've been considered science fiction just a
few years ago. The building blocks of chips are inconceivably tiny transistors
whose sizes are measured in nanometers (nm) - a billionth of a meter. These are
etched on the surface of a silicon wafer using extremely precise ultraviolet
lasers and then connected to create circuits.
India: The new kid on the block?
Given how advanced fab technology is and
how expensive fabs are to set up, run, and upgrade,
it is no surprise that a handful of fabs dominate the
world chip market – TSMC, Samsung, UMC, GlobalFoundries,
and SMIC, are the only chipmakers with a market share over one per cent. India
faces an uphill battle in breaking into this club, and government support is
essential.
In December 2021, the Union Ministry for
Electronics and IT (MeitY) invited applications under
the ₹76,000 crore India Semiconductor Mission (ISM). The MeitY invited proposals for silicon chip fabs, display fabs, and compound
semiconductor fabs as part of this mission. In
response, the MeitY received five proposals. The ISM
also seeks to build a semiconductor ecosystem around these fabs,
with programmes incentivising
testing, packaging, assembly of chips and boards, chip design, and building the
necessary talent base.
The level of support on offer is
impressive. "Anyone setting up a fab will get a capital investment
support, complete support for infrastructure, developing the supply chain, and
many other resources that would be required to create an ecosystem around that
fab," said Ashwini Vaishnaw,
Minister of Railways, Communications and MeitY at a
recent webinar. "The government is tackling the semiconductor mission on a
war footing," he said. This support is in addition to incentives being
offered by the state governments.
Chip and display fabs
The centrepiece
of the ISM is the scheme to bring chip fabs to India.
The MeitY invited bids for silicon CMOS fabs in the 65 nm (or smaller) nodes with a minimum
investment of ₹20,000 crore. The government is offering up to 50 per cent
in fiscal support, depending on the technology node being offered. Three
proposals were received for chip fabs – a joint
venture between Vedanta and Foxconn, Singapore-based IGSS Ventures, and India
Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation (ISMC) from Abu Dhabi-based NextOrbit Ventures in partnership with Israel's Tower
Semiconductor. These bids have proposed chip fabs
with investments totalling $13.6 billion, seeking
$5.6 billion in fiscal support from the Centre.
The MeitY's
proposed chip fab requirements, such as 28, 45, 65 nm nodes, are now 10 to
17-year-old technology. This is not unexpected since no company will be willing
to give up its hard-won technological advantage to provide India with the most
advanced technology. In addition, due to lower cost and complexity, these older
technologies still find use in the large market for lower-end chips used in
automotive electronics, consumer gadgets, mobile devices, IoT
(smart devices and internet-connected industrial machinery and sensors), and
smart wearables (such as fitness trackers and smartwatches).
Also critical for India's consumer market
needs are display fabs, which manufacture the LCD and
AMOLED displays that go into televisions, computers, smartphones, and screens
in other devices. Displays make up a significant portion of the value of such
appliances. Korean companies LG and Samsung lead the display market, followed
by Taiwan's Innolux Corp, a Foxconn subsidiary, and
the Chinese companies AU Optronics and BOE.
In contrast to chip fabs,
where transistors are becoming smaller, display fabs
follow the 'bigger is better' mantra. The latest Generation-11 fabs can manufacture LCDs on glass substrates that are over
10 ft by 10 ft in size, the
size of a small room. Larger glass substrates can result in lower costs, higher
profit margins, and higher yield efficiency. The MeitY
seeks to fund display fabs for Gen 8+ TFT LCD
displays or Gen 6+ AMOLED displays, the latter being increasingly useful for
smartphone displays. Bidders will need a minimum capital investment of
₹10,000 crore, of which the central government will fund up to 50 per
cent. Two companies have proposed display fabs –
Vedanta and Elest.
"I feel that display fab is the need
of the hour. It doesn't need much data investment. Wherever you see any
display, whether a touchscreen or a normal display, from 2 to 65 inches (the display
fab can serve that need).
India's share of the global electronics
market is 3.6 per cent (as of 2019), but much of this is in final assembly from
semi- and completely-knocked-down kits (SKD and CKD), with only 10-30 per cent
value addition. A homegrown display fab can provide a low-cost supply for
India's burgeoning electronics industry, which is now valued at ₹4.97
lakh crore and growing at 17 per cent CAGR, according to the MeitY. This will be crucial for Indian electronics
companies as they seek to move up the value chain.
The display fab industry is itself at an
inflexion point. Korean companies that lead the field are withdrawing from
manufacturing LCD displays (used in TVs and computer monitors) to focus on
AMOLED displays (which are thinner and currently used in cell phones and
tablets), ceding space to Chinese display makers to fill the LCD production
void. This provides an opportunity for India.
A new day or more of the same?
Setting up wafer fabs
is just the first of many steps. "The semiconductor industry is complex,
high value, high demand, and high risk, with a long gestational business model.
Creating national champions in this field requires political, commercial,
social, and techno-nationalist outlooks to converge, backed by a long-term
vision," says Ajay Jalan, Founder and Managing
Partner of NextOrbit Ventures Fund. Ashwini Vaishnaw concurred with
this assessment, saying, "We gave a 20-year roadmap to the industry;
short-term action, medium-term planning, and long-term vision."
While the ISM is ambitious, India's history
of failed attempts to set up chip fabs makes for
depressing reading. In mid-2005, a major multinational semiconductor company
started operations in South India, hired seasoned experts, and set up a
class-100 cleanroom to check for impurities in semiconductors. The endeavour faced roadblocks at each step.
Equipment imported from the US was stuck at
the port for several months. Leave alone receiving any concessions, they were
levied heavy import duties and had to pay huge sums as demurrage. Several trips
to South Block did nothing to move the bureaucratic needle. Eventually, the
equipment left without touching Indian soil. We lost a good semiconductor
facility and 4000 jobs to China, which welcomed the project with generous
incentives. Another multinational in the process of setting up their fab here
withdrew after seeing the horrific experience of this MNC. As for the
cleanroom, it was sold as scrap.
Besides power, water, land and other
infrastructure support, another very critical area that needs attention are the
consignment handlers at the airport and ports. The semiconductor industry
completely depends on the import of highly sensitive equipment and materials,
such as gases, chemicals, and wafers, all of which are time-critical
requirements. When IIT Mumbai set up a centre of
excellence for nanoelectronics in 2007-08, they had
to import an electron lithography system worth Rs
eight crore. The consignment was mishandled at the Mumbai airport, and the
broken pieces reached IIT Mumbai in gunny bags.
There is cautious optimism among industry
watchers that this latest attempt to right some of these past wrongs will buck
the trend and find success. There is also trepidation that we might yet revisit
our old bad habits.
Considering the stakes and the generous
support for land acquisition, there are also apprehensions among industry
specialists about the integrity of the process, especially the risk of
land-grabbing in the guise of development. These fears are not unfounded;
indeed, this was the case with Andhra Pradesh's Fab City project.
Ashwini Vaishnaw
assured, "It's a transparent process. Unlike tenders, we are dealing with
very complex proposals. Our focus now is to quickly assess the proposals, sign
agreements, and decide site locations. We have a laser focus on
execution."
Expert consensus points to the need for an
integrated vision to develop the entire electronics ecosystem and build
competency and partnerships at all levels of the electronics manufacturing
chain – with researchers, fab equipment manufacturers, and design companies.
"Our job is to put together a plan where in the next three to four years,
we have an ability to import technology and advanced fab R&D," says a
former managing director of a semiconductor MNC.
The stakes could not be higher. "The
whole country needs to come together for an initiative like this," says
Professor B Ramgopal Rao, former director, IIT Delhi.
Raj Kumar, founder and Group CEO of IGSS Ventures (which has submitted a wafer
fab proposal), agrees, "For this to be transformational for India, it is a
journey that needs to be supported for the next 20 years at least, and if
executed well, the eventual pay-off is huge."