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Make India Competitive Again
Make India Competitive Again
Author: The Ken
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© 2025 The Ken
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The audio edition of The Ken’s Make India Competitive Again newsletter, spearheaded by Seetharaman G. Every Wednesday, our editors and reporters read the latest edition and chronicle what India is doing, will do, and should do—to not just survive but thrive in the chaos unleashed by Donald Trump.
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There’s one company that exemplifies the current moment in India’s AI investments. It doesn’t make advanced semiconductors or train large language models. Instead, it rents out space to companies that do.The arrangement is called colocation—think of it as real estate for servers, where clients plug in their machines while the “landlord” provides power, cooling, and connectivity.Sify Infinit Spaces, the data-centre arm of Sify Technologies, is India’s poster child for this setup. It will be behind the country’s first IPO for a company of its kind.By tracking the colocation industry’s growth around the world, there’s incredible promise based on demand. Capacity worldwide has more than doubled since 2019 to hit 42 gigawatts (GW) in 2024, and could reach 65 GW by 2027. Sify should head the same way, if not grow even faster.But that assumes India has enough power to support rapid scaling. One Nvidia GB300 rack can draw enough electricity to power 100 homes in the US, and it takes thousands of racks to train a foundational model. Even Sify acknowledges the problem in its DRHP by referring to power supply risk, grid reliability risk, and related issues.Sumit Chakraborty, The Ken’s head of desk, looks into Sify Infinit Spaces’ IPO and the company’s promise in this edition of Make India Competitive Again, as read by Rahel Philipose.*Read this edition as a newsletter: https://the-ken.com/newsletter/make-india-competitive-again/indias-first-data-centre-ipo-shows-what-to-fix-before-india-can-scale-ai/Download our app and subscribe to The Ken to listen to all our podcasts: iOS: https://apps.apple.com/in/app/the-ken/id1282944688 Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.ken.core&hl=en&gl=US&pli=1 Check out Make India Competitive Again on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/make-india-competitive-again-premium/id1810672381 Or Spotify:https://open.spotify.com/show/5yxzxRmN7idKJen5QdezPl
Artificial intelligence is no longer an option or privilege. It’s here to stay, even in schools.OpenAI and India’s education ministry have partnered to distribute free ChatGPT licences to government schools, and AI is being introduced into CBSE and ICSE’s curricula.The Ken conducted a survey in August to find out what our readers thought about language models becoming a constant presence in India’s education facilities. These were some of the questions in the survey:What do you think OpenAI’s goal is in Indian schools?Who should be responsible if data is misused?What data do you think OpenAI is most interested in?On the ground, most schools haven’t figured out how to bring AI into the classroom, so they’re using it for everything except teaching, such as administration tasks and applicant interviews. That hardly lines up with the goal to make India’s students AI-literate.The Ken reporter Atul Krishna unpacks the implications of ChatGPT’s proliferation in India’s education sector in the latest edition of Make India Competitive Again, as read by Snigdha Sharma.Read this edition as a newsletter: https://the-ken.com/newsletters/make-india-competitive-again/
India is relaxing rules for states to approve and fund standalone battery-storage systems. There’s a rush to build those projects, and tariffs are going lower and lower.Rajasthan set a “lowest tariff” record last week at Rs 1.77 lakh per megawatt per month, undercutting Andhra Pradesh. Maharashtra is now sending out feelers, so there may be an even lower figure soon.It’s a situation that has played out in renewable energy before. Solar and wind projects were rapidly installed, but little was done to build local manufacturing muscle. The current rush of activity in the battery-storage space is only leading to market distortion. With government funding and other incentives, it’s “almost a risk-free business”, as one executive told The Ken.There’s also the matter of relying heavily on Chinese imports, which also happened when solar and wind energy projects were being built. The result is an insecure supply chain for battery storage in India. The Ken editor Seema Singh has the details in the latest edition of Make India Competitive Again, as read by Brady Ng.*Read this edition as a newsletter: https://the-ken.com/newsletter/make-india-competitive-again/states-confuse-cheap-with-sustainable-in-battery-storage-gold-rush/
The Indian Semiconductor Mission, or ISM, is one of the most ambitious initiatives undertaken by the government in decades. Out of Rs 76,000 crore earmarked for production-linked incentives, roughly Rs 65,000 crore has already been committed, and the mission supports 10 major projects across the value chain.This is all good and great for building the infrastructure and facilities for making chips, but the right kind of human capital is just as important—and largely absent.The ISM launched a skilling programme in July 2023 to address precisely that problem, aiming to train the professionals who would then populate India’s fledgling fabs. To do this, the ISM, the Indian Institute of Science, and California-headquartered Lam Research teamed up to use the latter’s virtual fab simulator, SEMulator3D, to prepare Indian college students for a career in semiconductor manufacturing.The hitch is that this doesn’t really give students hands-on learning, so they aren’t truly prepared for life in fabs. The Ken reporter Keshav Pransukhka found out why in the latest edition of Make India Competitive Again, as read by Rachel Varghese.*Read this edition as a newsletter: https://the-ken.com/newsletters/make-india-competitive-again/
The audio edition of The Ken’s Make India Competitive Again newsletter, spearheaded by Seetharaman G. Every Wednesday, our editors and reporters read the latest edition and chronicle what India is doing, will do, and should do—to not just survive but thrive in the chaos unleashed by Donald Trump.


