India ranks 3rd in global semicon backend index
While Taiwan leads the index, followed by Malaysia, Mainland China ranks fourth, Korea ninth, Vietnam tenth, Singapore 12th, and Japan 13th.
While Taiwan leads the index, followed by Malaysia, Mainland China ranks fourth, Korea ninth, Vietnam tenth, Singapore 12th, and Japan 13th.
Micron is making its first major foray into backend semiconductor manufacturing in India with the construction of an Assembly, Testing, Marking, and Packaging (ATMP) facility in Sanand, Gujarat.
India’s top companies are making bold moves in the semiconductor space, seizing the momentum of the global “chip gold rush.”
Taiwan houses around 64.8% of the foundry capacity across Logic and Memory chips and over 90% of capacity for world most advanced chips across 5, 4, 3nm technology nodes, per Fab Economics R&A.
These efforts aim to boost India’s supercomputing infrastructure in response to growing demands from academic institutions, MSMEs, researchers, and startups
While the agreement does not specify the financial investment from PSMC, the Taiwanese company is expected to provide design and construction expertise for this greenfield facility.
The two leaders signed a pivotal agreement to set up a semiconductor fabrication plant in India.
New York-based Corning, which supplies optical materials used in chipmaking, looks to partner with semiconductor players as the ecosystem grows.
“India is simply trying to get the entire semiconductor ecosystem together,” said Malini, Country Head, India, Renesas Electronics, in an exclusive interaction with Fortune India during Semicon India.
From chip design services to assembly & packaging, and leveraging its well-established EMS vertical, Tata electronics aims to become an end-to-end player in the electronics value chain.