Chip Foundry Group ISMC Plans $3b Semiconductor Plant In India

An international semiconductor consortium called ISMC Digital plans to invest $3 billion in a new manufacturing plant in India and Intel could eventually own a piece of it.

ISMC is a joint venture between United Arab Emirates-based investment firm Next Orbit Ventures and Israel-based Tower Semiconductor, which Intel plans to acquire for $5.4 billion in a deal that is set to close by early next year.

The semiconductor consortium announced its plan for a $3 billion plant in the southern state of Karnataka on Sunday, with an eye on a slice of the $10 billion in chip subsidies the Indian government is offering chipmakers, The Economic Times reported.

The ISMC plant will manufacture 65nm analog semiconductors, Tower's specialty and a critical component for a wide range of electronics. It's estimated to create about 1,500 jobs, plus 10,000 indirect jobs because of the plant's expected economic impact, according to the Economic Times report.

The report also notes ISMC's Karnataka plant will be "one of the first and largest" fabs created under the India Semiconductor Mission, a government-led initiative that aims to turn the country into an electronics manufacturing powerhouse. The plant will take seven years to complete.

Two other organizations have lined up for chip subsidies from India so far: Singapore-based IGSS and a joint venture between Taiwan-based Foxconn and Indian firm Vendanta.

India is hoping it can also convince Intel and TSMC to set up fabs in the country as part of their multibillion-dollar manufacturing expansions, but no commitments have been made yet.

The country is keen on building out its semiconductor industry in multiple ways, and this includes a newly announced plan to develop "industry-grade" chips based on the open-source RISC-V architecture for servers, mobile devices and other applications.

India's government made several other announcements to boost the semiconductor industry during last weekend's SemiconIndia conference:

  • New deals to design and manufacture 5G IoT chips and base station chips in the country
  • New partnerships to make chip design tools available for India's Chips to Startup Program
  • New collaborations to boost semiconductor research, development and education efforts

Rajeev Chandrasekhar, a former Intel engineer who is now coordinating India's semiconductor efforts as the minister of state for technology and entrepreneurship, said these efforts will help make India a much more significant player in the global electronics industry. ®

RECENT NEWS

Tech Industry Takes On Nvidias CUDA With Open-Source AI Software Solutions

Seattle, WA — In a bid to diversify the AI development ecosystem, OpenAI and a coalition of tech companies are working... Read more

Huawei's 'AI-in-a-Box' Solutions Threaten Cloud Market Leaders

Shanghai, China — Huawei is at the forefront of a new trend in the tech industry: 'AI-in-a-box' products that empower ... Read more

AI Companies Bet On Profits With Small Language Models

In a notable shift within the artificial intelligence (AI) industry, leading companies Microsoft, Meta, and Google are f... Read more

Google Leverages AI To Automatically Lock Phones During Theft

Amid increasing incidents of mobile phone thefts, Google has launched an AI-based feature that automatically locks the s... Read more

Microsofts Emissions Surge Nearly 30% Amid AI Demand Growth

Microsoft has reported a nearly 30% increase in its emissions from 2020 to 2023, underscoring the challenges the tech gi... Read more

Impact Of AWS Leadership Change On The Global AI Race

The recent leadership transition at Amazon Web Services (AWS), with Adam Selipsky stepping down and Matt Garman taking t... Read more