The Department of Electronics and Information Technology is working on a policy to give entrepreneurs incentives to set up electronics testing laboratories, as part of its plans to introduce a standards regime for all electronic products.
The Government recently notified 15 categories of electronic products including computers, multi-media products and phones that should comply with certified safety and efficiency standards by April 2013.
“Even for certifying standards for these categories of products, we do not have adequate electronics testing labs. We are working on a new policy under which we will provide start-up incentives to investors willing to set up such labs,” Ajay Kumar, Joint Secretary, Department of Electronics and Information Technology, told
It is estimated that at least 50 labs are required to enable makers of these categories of electronic products get the required certificate before they hit the market. Some of the makers of these products are setting up their own labs, but there will still be a need for independent labs, he said.
In the second phase, the Government will bring in other products under this regime. Medical electronic products will not immediately brought under the certified standards regime.
This initiative is part of the government’s target of achieving a turnover of $400 billion for electronic products by 2020 from the current level of $80 billion. “Of the targeted $400 billion, $55 billion will come from the chip design segment, about $80 billion from semiconductors and $34 billion from telecom equipment,” Kumar said.