India's building its own supercomputers by 2030
India announced at the Supercomputing India 2025 conference plans to create fully homegrown supercomputers by 2030.
Right now, about half of the tech in Indian high-performance computing (HPC) is made locally, but that's set to jump past 70% soon.
Amitesh Kumar Sinha, head of the India Semiconductor Mission, shared that market-ready products are expected by 2032.
What's happening on the ground?
At the Supercomputing India 2025 conference, 10 new projects were approved—think chip-making, packaging, and advanced servers—all part of the indigenization effort.
The Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC) has developed indigenous servers and cooling systems.
Why does it matter?
This push isn't just about national pride—it means more affordable AI compute for startups and researchers here at home.
Over 38,000 GPUs have already been handed out to local teams.
Plus, with big goals like making ultra-advanced 2nm chips and competitive GPUs by 2030, India's aiming to be a serious player in global tech—while working closely with partners from over 20 countries along the way.