-
India has formally joined the US-led Pax Silica initiative, a coalition meant to secure “trusted” supply chains that power AI, semiconductors, advanced manufacturing and critical minerals. The announcement was made on the sidelines of the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, where officials framed India’s entry as a strategic step to reduce single-country choke points and build capacity across the full tech stack, from upstream minerals to downstream hardware.
What’s actually in it:
-
Tech supply chain security: Build alternative sourcing and production routes for key components and inputs used in chips/AI systems.
-
Critical minerals coordination: Align with partner nations on access to rare earths and other minerals that sit at the base of batteries, chips, and electronics.
-
Standards + cooperation among partners: The bloc includes several US allies (reporting mentions countries like Japan, South Korea, the UK and Israel), signalling a “trusted network” approach rather than open-ended global sourcing.
Why it’s happening now:
Coverage ties Pax Silica to intensifying competition with China in critical technologies, and to a broader reset in India-US ties after a turbulent period. The narrative is: secure the inputs and manufacturing pathways that underpin AI and next-gen industry, so trade shocks or export controls don’t cripple production.Why it matters for India:
This positions India to attract more “China+1” tech investment, especially in components and supply chain roles that sit adjacent to India’s semiconductor and electronics ambitions, while giving it a seat at the table as these trusted networks set priorities and norms. -