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The company will set up 10 gigawatt of ingot and 10 gigawatt wafer capacity at the said, the CBO said, adding the work is expected to begin soon View More
India's refined copper demand is set to surge, requiring an additional 500,000 tonnes of capacity every five years. Despite planned expansions, domestic production will remain insufficient to meet this growing need. Robust economic progress, infrastructure development, and the clean energy transition are fueling this demand, with building construction and renewables leading the charge. Further investment in smelting and refining facilities is crucial to bridge the supply gap. View More
New Delhi: India will require roughly 500,000 tonnes of additional refined copper capacity every five years to keep pace with rising demand of the metal, International Copper Association India (ICA India) Managing Director Mayur Karmarkar said on Sunday. Speaking on the outlook for the ongoing financial year, Karmarkar said copper demand is likely to track overall GDP growth and the association is anticipating at least around 9 per cent growth over 2026. Also Read: Hindustan Copper to seek Navratna status, eyes threefold ore output by 2029 On the supply side, restarting secondary smelter of Hindustan Copper and new secondary smelter of Hindalco will add capacity of 100,000 tonnes but that is small against the total demand of about 1.8 million tonnes, Karmarkar said. "It will help a bit, but the scale is relatively small," he added. Live Events Karmarkar said domestic cathode availability will further improve as smelter-refinery capacities expand. "Hindalco is putting up an expansion plant, and Kutch Copper's capacity is also coming on stream. These projects will make more cathode available in the country for domestic conversion," he noted. Despite these investments, he warned that domestic refined copper production will remain insufficient. "If you really see the demand trajectory versus supply in the long term, will require almost like another 500,000 tonnes capacity every five years to meet the growing demand," he said. Also Read: Anupam Misra takes charge as CMD of Hindustan Copper He added that under the current growth scenario, supply will need to chase demand, underscoring the urgency for further capacity additions and investment in refining and smelting facilities. India's copper demand grew 9.3 per cent to 1,878 kilo tonnes (KT) in FY25 as compared to 1,718 kilo tonnes in FY24 due to robust economic progress and increasing adoption of the metal across critical sectors, annual demand data of International Copper Association India had earlier said. India's continued emphasis on large-scale infrastructure projects, building construction, clean energy transition and emerging technologies has accelerated demand for key industrial materials, with copper emerging as a critical enabler across these sectors, the annual data anaylsis said. The building construction and infrastructure segments remained primary growth drivers registering 11 per cent and 17 per cent year-on-year growth, respectively. The renewable energy sector achieved one of the highest annual capacity additions in FY25, while the consumer durables sector saw a double-digit per cent increase, driven by strong sales of air conditioners, fans, refrigerators and washing machines. .Pbanner{display:flex;justify-content:space-between;align-items:center;background-color:#ec1c40;margin-top:20px;padding:5px 10px;border-radius:4px;color:#fff;line-height:10px;} .Pbannertext{display:flex;align-items:center;font-size:16px;font-weight:600;font-family:'Montserrat';} .Pbannertext img{height:20px;margin:0 6px} .Pbannerbutton a{display:flex;align-items:center;background-color:#fff;color:#ec1c40;text-decoration:none;font-weight:600;padding:4px 8px;border-radius:6px;font-size:15px;font-family:'Montserrat';} .Pbannerbutton img{height:20px;margin-right:6px} .Pbannerbutton a:hover{background-color:#f7f7f7} Add as a Reliable and Trusted News Source Add Now! (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel) (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)
Tata Steel plans a capital expenditure of Rs 20,000 crore this fiscal year, with 60% earmarked for its Indian operations. This investment will bolster expansions in tinplate, wires, and new facilities, alongside ongoing projects in mining and sustainability. The company aims to boost its long-term steelmaking capacity to over 50 million tonnes, primarily driven by growth in India. View More
New Delhi: Tata Steel is looking to spend around Rs 20,000 crore as capex in the current financial year and a major share of it will be spent to support the India business, the company's management said. The capex for the ongoing FY27 will be around 38 per cent higher from Rs 14,559 crore that Tata Steel has spent on capital expenditure in the preceding 2025-26 financial year. Read more: Tata-owned IHCL CEO Puneet Chhatwal's remuneration climbs to Rs 25 crore in FY26 "In FY26, we spent Rs 14,559 crore on capital expenditure, and we plan to increase this to approximately Rs 20,000 crore in FY 2026-27, with 60 per cent allocated to India," said Tata Steel's CEO & MD T V Narendran, and Koushik Chatterjee, the company's Executive Director & Chief Financial Officer. The management made the statement in reply to a question related to Tata Steel's capex plans and long-term growth strategy. Live Events They said the capital allocation strategy for FY27 focuses on a balanced mix of sustenance projects, ongoing investments in value-added downstream and infrastructure projects, new technologies, and long-term growth projects, with a clear emphasis on India. "This includes expansions in tinplate and wires, the HRPGL (Hot Rolled Pickling & Galvanising Line) facility at Tarapur, and the Coke Ovens project at Jamshedpur. In addition, we are continuing to invest in mining, a stronger supply chain and sustainability of operations," the company officials said. Tata Steel has a consolidated steelmaking capacity of over 36 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) -- excluding the UK's 3.2 MT under transition -- in India (27.35 MT), the Netherlands (7 MT), and Thailand (1.7 MT) to cover South East Asian markets. The company aims to increase its capacity to over 50 million tonne in the long-term. The increase will be mainly in India, where the company is working on plans to add over 12 MT. In India, the company owns and operates an 11 MTPA steel plants at Jamshedpur, and 1 MTPA at Gamharia in Jharkhand. In Odisha's Kalinganagar, the company has 9 MTPA production capacity, that includes Neelancha Ipsat Nigam Ltd (NINL), which it had acquired through insolvency route. Tata Steel also operates a 5.6 MTPA plan in Odisha's Meramandali. With the expansion of capacities and transition to low-emitting steel making routes , the company aims to have 40 MTPA steelmaking capacity in India from present 27.35 MTPA, which includes recently commission 0.75 MT electric arc furnace in Punjab. Read more: Reliance market value now equals India's top five IT companies combined The company is pursuing 4.8 MTPA Phase-I expansion at NINL enhancing its presence in long-products segment and capitalising on growth in infrastructure and retail steel. It has also formed a strategic partnership with Lloyds Metals & Energy Ltd to develop the emerging Gadchiroli iron ore hub and evaluate a phased greenfield steel capacity of 6 MTPA. .Pbanner{display:flex;justify-content:space-between;align-items:center;background-color:#ec1c40;margin-top:20px;padding:5px 10px;border-radius:4px;color:#fff;line-height:10px;} .Pbannertext{display:flex;align-items:center;font-size:16px;font-weight:600;font-family:'Montserrat';} .Pbannertext img{height:20px;margin:0 6px} .Pbannerbutton a{display:flex;align-items:center;background-color:#fff;color:#ec1c40;text-decoration:none;font-weight:600;padding:4px 8px;border-radius:6px;font-size:15px;font-family:'Montserrat';} .Pbannerbutton img{height:20px;margin-right:6px} .Pbannerbutton a:hover{background-color:#f7f7f7} Add as a Reliable and Trusted News Source Add Now! (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel) (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)
The capex for the ongoing FY27 will be around 38 per cent higher from ?14,559 crore that Tata Steel has spent on capital expenditure in the preceding 2025-26 financial year View More
France said it has deployed mine countermeasures to the Middle East, including two mine-hunting ships. View More
Vessels are pictured off coast of the Khor Fakkan Container Terminal, the only natural deep-sea port in the region and one of the major container ports in Sharjah Emirate, along the Gulf of Oman on June 28, 2026. (Photo by AFP via Getty Images) / - | Afp | Getty Images Oman has agreed to work with the U.K. and France to ensure the Gulf country's territorial waters are safe for navigation, the U.K. said on Saturday, as oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz pick up since the U.S. and Iran signed an agreement last month to reopen the crucial sea lane."The U.K. and France also stand ready to deploy the wider Multinational Military Mission to support freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz," U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer said in a joint statement with French President Emmanuel Macron."The Strait of Hormuz is a vital artery for the global economy. Restoring safe transit for ships of all nations through the Strait is a matter of global concern," the statement read.France said it has deployed mine countermeasures to the Middle East, including two mine-hunting ships."Accompanied by two frigates and a maritime patrol aircraft, these assets are ready to contribute, alongside our partners, to the full resumption of navigation and to ensure the safety of traffic in the Strait of Hormuz," Macron said in a statement on X.The U.K., France and more than two dozen countries said in May that they would support freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz under the Multinational Military Mission for the waterway.Oman's Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to CNBC's emailed request for comment Saturday.Iran warned against the U.K. and French move."The Strait of Hormuz is not a theater for the military display of extra-regional powers," Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi said in a post on X."The security of Hormuz lies with the coastal states; the crisis-makers will be held accountable for the consequences of their adventurism; this is a serious warning," Gharibabadi said. Key intermediary Situated on the southeastern coast of the Arabian Peninsula, opposite Iran across the strait, Oman has been in joint talks with Iran on a new maritime security order, amid reports that the two countries could push to establish transit fees.Oman has said that any agreement will comply with international law, although the prospect of a financial system on a waterway that typically handles around 20% of the world's oil has sparked alarm.The Gulf nation has served as a key intermediary in regional crises and remains one of the few countries trusted by both Tehran and Washington, which is keen to ensure the flow through the strait resumes after it was blocked during the war, triggering a global energy crunch.The Sultan of Oman, Haitham bin Tarik, met Starmer in London on Thursday. The two spoke about de-escalating the conflict in the Middle East and to "secure maritime navigation through the Gulf's strategic waterways", Oman's state news agency said in a post on X.The U.S. and Iran signed a memorandum of understanding on June 17 to end nearly four months of war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, and set âup 60 days of negotiations to work out a permanent peace deal. Oil shipments have ramped up since then. Saudi Arabia has shipped about 34 million barrels of oil through Hormuz since June 17, according to data from the trade intelligence firm Kpler. Riyadh's exports over the two weeks to July 2 were more than double the 15 million barrels the kingdom shipped through the strait from March 9 through June 17.Benchmark Brent crude oil prices have fallen 39% from their highs in March. Stock Chart IconStock chart iconBrent crude oil price per barrel, year to date. The U.S. has staunchly opposed any tolls in the Strait of Hormuz.U.S. President Donald Trump's administration has previously threatened to "aggressively" impose sanctions against Oman if it was seen to help Iran establish a tolling system."All nations should reject outright any efforts by Iran to disrupt the free flow of commerce," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a post on X on May 28.Under the terms of the U.S. and Iran's memorandum of understanding, Tehran cannot impose tolls on ships during the 60 days of negotiations to find a permanent settlement. watch nowVIDEO2:5902:59Trump on U.S. blockade of Hormuz: 'Not one ship got through to Iran'Fast Money In an interview with CNBC on Thursday, Trump said that "not one ship got through to Iran," suggesting the U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz during the Iran war was not penetrated."It was a wall of steel," he said.However, according to shipping industry information service Lloyd's List, the blockade was breached multiple times by an "Iranian shadow fleet."Iran's parliament speaker and chief negotiator Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said Tuesday that Iran has exported more than 40 million barrels of crude oil since the U.S. removed its naval blockade of Iranian ports, and is now selling oil at prices roughly 20% higher than before the war. 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The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has granted approval for the Initial Public Offerings of fintech unicorn Moneyview and Chandan Steel. Moneyview strives to raise Rs 1,500 crore through a combination of fresh issues and offer for sale, aiming to enhance its financial services and loan disbursement operations. This milestone showcases a vibrant uptick in India's IPO landscape, with Sebi's approval being a vital step for both entities. View More
Fintech unicorn Moneyview and Chandan Steel have secured Sebi's approval to raise funds through initial public offerings (IPOs), an update with the regulator showed on Friday. Moneyview filed preliminary IPO papers with Sebi in March, while Torrent Gas confidentially submitted draft documents with the regulator in April. The confidential filing route allows companies to submit draft offer documents to Sebi for review without immediately making commercially sensitive information public. After reviewing the draft papers submitted by the two firms, the regulator gave its 'observations' between June 29 and July 2, which, in Sebi's parlance, is equivalent to a go-ahead to float the public issue. Meanwhile, oilfield services provider Shivganga Drillers withdrew its draft papers on June 30, the update showed. Live Events The company filed preliminary papers with Sebi in December 2025 to mobilise Rs 400 crore through its IPO. The proposed maiden public offering was a completely fresh issue of shares with no offer for sale (OFS) component, according to the draft red herring prospectus (DRHP). Moneyview's IPO comprised a fresh issue of equity shares worth Rs 1,500 crore and an OFS of up to 13.6 crore equity shares by existing shareholders, according to the draft papers. The company plans to utilise the proceeds from the fresh issue to expand its financial services business . Funds will be used to support loan disbursals under Default Loss Guarantee (DLG) arrangements, investment in the company's material subsidiary, Whizdm Finance, to strengthen its capital base and general corporate purposes. Founded in 2014 by IIT Delhi graduates Puneet Agarwal and Sanjay Aggarwal, Moneyview operates a digital-first fintech platform focused on consumer lending and financial services. Its mobile application offers a range of financial products across borrowing, payments, investments and insurance, allowing users to access multiple services on a single platform. .Pbanner{display:flex;justify-content:space-between;align-items:center;background-color:#ec1c40;margin-top:20px;padding:5px 10px;border-radius:4px;color:#fff;line-height:10px;} .Pbannertext{display:flex;align-items:center;font-size:16px;font-weight:600;font-family:'Montserrat';} .Pbannertext img{height:20px;margin:0 6px} .Pbannerbutton a{display:flex;align-items:center;background-color:#fff;color:#ec1c40;text-decoration:none;font-weight:600;padding:4px 8px;border-radius:6px;font-size:15px;font-family:'Montserrat';} .Pbannerbutton img{height:20px;margin-right:6px} .Pbannerbutton a:hover{background-color:#f7f7f7} Add as a Reliable and Trusted News Source Add Now! (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel) (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)
The electric arc furnace plant is part of the steelmaker's ?16,350 crore investment to expand capacity and produce lower-carbon steel. View More
JSW Steel has initiated construction on a significant 2 million tonne steel plant in Andhra Pradesh, a project valued at over Rs 16,350 crore. This ambitious venture, to be developed in two phases by its subsidiary JSW Rayalaseema Steel Ltd, will initially focus on a 1 MTPA integrated plant for low-carbon steel. View More
New Delhi: JSW Steel on Friday said it has commenced the construction of a 2 million steel plant project in Andhra Pradesh at an investment of over Rs 16,350 crore. The project will be set up in two phases through its 100 per cent subsidiary JSW Rayalaseema Steel Ltd, JSW Steel said in a statement. Also Read: Andhra Pradesh CM Chandrababu Naidu launches JSW's Rs 16,350 crore steel plant in Kadapa JSW Steel said it has begun work on the Rayalaseema steel project in Andhra Pradesh. The first phase, with a planned investment of Rs 4,500 crore, would be a 1-MTPA integrated steel plant to manufacture low-carbon-emission steel products. Live Events The company said the second phase, with an additional planned investment of up to Rs 11,850 crore, will expand capacity to 2 MTPA, taking the total project investment up to Rs 16,350 crore. Also Read: India initiates anti-dumping investigation into steel imports from China, Japan, Russia The project will be based on Electric Arc Furnace (EAF) technology using recycled scrap and high-grade direct reduced iron (DRI) as raw material inputs, to manufacture structural steel. Part of JSW Group , JSW Steel has a combined crude steel capacity of 37.9 million tonne per annum (MTPA), including 4.5 MTPA through the JSW JFE Steel JV. .Pbanner{display:flex;justify-content:space-between;align-items:center;background-color:#ec1c40;margin-top:20px;padding:5px 10px;border-radius:4px;color:#fff;line-height:10px;} .Pbannertext{display:flex;align-items:center;font-size:16px;font-weight:600;font-family:'Montserrat';} .Pbannertext img{height:20px;margin:0 6px} .Pbannerbutton a{display:flex;align-items:center;background-color:#fff;color:#ec1c40;text-decoration:none;font-weight:600;padding:4px 8px;border-radius:6px;font-size:15px;font-family:'Montserrat';} .Pbannerbutton img{height:20px;margin-right:6px} .Pbannerbutton a:hover{background-color:#f7f7f7} Add as a Reliable and Trusted News Source Add Now! (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel) (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)
As Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi visits India, industry sees the biggest opportunity not in tariff concessions but in supplier ecosystems, technology transfer, and MSME-to-MSME partnerships that can reshape manufacturing. View More
As India and Japan deepen economic cooperation amid rising geopolitical tensions and supply chain realignments, industry leaders say the next phase of the partnership will not be shaped by billion-dollar investment announcements alone, but by whether thousands of small manufacturers can become part of Japanese production networks. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Japanese counterpart Sanae Takaichi on Thursday agreed to strengthen cooperation across energy, artificial intelligence (AI), critical minerals, and resilient supply chains, as both countries seek to reduce dependence on China and build trusted manufacturing partnerships. While large Japanese companies are expected to continue driving investments, industry experts believe that the real test lies further down the value chain. They believe India’s micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), which form the backbone of the country's manufacturing ecosystem and supplier base, could emerge as the most practical bridge between strategic intent and factory-floor collaboration. According to industry experts who spoke to The Economic Times Digital, the opportunity for MSMEs extends across sectors such as precision engineering, automotive components, electronics, industrial machinery, specialty chemicals, food processing, and textiles. Notably, bilateral merchandise trade between India and Japan increased to about $27.5 billion in FY2025-26 from $25.2 billion in FY2024-25, although Japan continues to enjoy a significant trade surplus. India’s exports largely comprise petroleum products, organic chemicals, marine products, textiles, iron and steel, and engineering goods, while Japanese shipments to India are dominated by machinery, transport equipment, electrical and electronic machinery, iron and steel products, and high-value industrial equipment. Live Events MSME-to-MSME collaboration About 1,500 registered Japanese companies operate in India, as per the government, with thousands of downstream firms and vendors across automobiles, electronics, engineering, and industrial manufacturing. For India, Japan is also among India’s largest long-term investors. Between April 2000 and March 2026, cumulative Japanese foreign direct investment (FDI) into India exceeded $45 billion, spanning automobiles, electronics, industrial machinery, logistics, and infrastructure, according to the government data. The biggest untapped opportunity lies not in merely increasing Indian exports to Japan but in creating direct partnerships between small businesses in both countries, says Anil Bhardwaj, Secretary General of the Federation of Indian Micro and Small & Medium Enterprises (FISME). “The biggest untapped potential for collaboration between India and Japan lies in MSME-to-MSME cooperation. Not from the perspective of Indian MSMEs exporting to Japan, but through Japanese MSMEs entering technical collaborations with Indian MSMEs, sharing best manufacturing practices and setting up joint ventures.” According to him, such collaborations could help Indian manufacturers leapfrog productivity by adopting Japanese manufacturing techniques while giving Japanese companies access to India’s rapidly expanding domestic market and a competitive production base for global exports. The focus on MSMEs assumes significance, given the sector’s central role in India's economy. According to the Economic Survey 2025-26, India has more than 74.7 million MSMEs, employing over 328 million people. The sector contributes 31.1% to India’s gross domestic product (GDP), 35.4% to manufacturing output, and nearly 48.6% to the country’s exports, making it a critical driver of industrial growth and global supply-chain integration. Beyond buyers and sellers Industry officials believe the partnership also needs to move beyond conventional buyer-supplier relationships towards joint product development and technology-led manufacturing. Gopal Agrawal, Chief Executive Officer at speciality chemicals manufacturer Anupam Rasayan India , says the India-Japan partnership presents an opportunity to reshape global speciality chemicals supply chains as companies diversify manufacturing beyond China. “The next phase of the India-Japan partnership should move beyond traditional buyer-supplier relationships towards co-developing next-generation specialty and performance chemistries through joint R&D, technology transfer and long-term manufacturing partnerships,” Agrawal says. According to him, sectors such as specialty chemicals, electronics, semiconductors, advanced materials, and pharmaceuticals offer significant headroom for collaboration. He says stronger policy alignment, faster regulatory harmonisation, and greater industry-to-industry engagement could help both countries build globally competitive manufacturing ecosystems while strengthening supply-chain resilience. Experts highlight that Japanese manufacturers typically place equal emphasis on long-term supplier relationships, process discipline, quality consistency, and continuous improvement. They emphasise that for Indian MSMEs integrating into Japanese supply chains, therefore, require far more than competitive pricing, demanding sustained investments in quality systems, certification and manufacturing excellence. Quality, compliance remain the real challenge Even though India and Japan signed the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) in 2011, experts highlight that tariff liberalisation has not automatically translated into stronger exports. Nisha Taneja, Senior Visiting Professor at the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER), says although the agreement eliminated tariffs on nearly 95% of tariff lines for India, many exporters continue to struggle because they fail to meet Japan’s stringent quality and compliance requirements. “Japanese and Indian MSME joint ventures can help bridge this gap by facilitating technology transfer, the adoption of Japanese management practices, and improvements in production processes while enabling Indian firms to meet Japanese quality standards and certification requirements,” Taneja says. In her view, such partnerships can also provide Indian companies with market intelligence, established distribution networks and greater credibility among Japanese buyers, while helping them better understand consumer preferences in Japan. Although collaborations have traditionally been concentrated in automobiles, she sees significant scope to expand into precision engineering, electronics, semiconductors, renewable energy equipment and even labour-intensive sectors, such as textiles and leather. “While access to finance will remain a critical bottleneck for India’s MSMEs, addressing complementary challenges, such as technology upgrading, managerial capabilities, quality compliance, market access, and a better understanding of consumer preferences, is equally essential for enabling them to compete successfully in Japan and other advanced economies,” she says. Building supplier ecosystems Seiji Ota, Partner at Deloitte India, believes that Indian MSMEs could become the most practical vehicle for translating the growing strategic partnership between India and Japan into deeper industrial collaboration. According to him, the strongest opportunities lie in automotive components, precision engineering, industrial tooling, electronics sub-assemblies, specialty chemicals, and factory automation equipment, where Japanese manufacturers depend on highly specialised supplier ecosystems. “The principal challenge is achieving the combination of cost competitiveness, near-zero defects, full traceability, process stability, and on-time delivery that Japanese manufacturers require to compete effectively while protecting the integrity of tightly integrated production systems,” Ota says. According to him, supplier development programmes backed by joint ventures or equity participation tend to deliver the best outcomes by aligning incentives and encouraging long-term technology transfers. He also says Japanese companies should increasingly look beyond established manufacturing hubs, such as Delhi-NCR, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, and Maharashtra, and integrate capable MSMEs in Tier II and Tier III industrial clusters into Japan-linked supply chains. “Policy support should prioritise certification assistance, supplier matchmaking platforms and co-investment mechanisms to accelerate MSME integration into Japan-linked global manufacturing networks,” Ota says. Looking beyond traditional export markets Industry representatives also believe that Indian MSMEs need to rebalance their export strategy by paying greater attention to Asian markets. Vikas Singh Chauhan, Director of the Home Textile Exporters Welfare Association (HEWA), highlights that Indian exporters continue to focus heavily on traditional destinations, such as the US and Europe, even though markets like Japan, South Korea, and Thailand remain significantly underpenetrated. “Japanese consumers and businesses have a strong preference for Indian products, but our MSMEs are not adequately prepared for that market. We have traditionally focused on the US and Europe, while a much larger opportunity exists in Asia,” he says. According to Chauhan, India’s exports to markets such as Japan, South Korea, and Thailand account for less than 2%, highlighting the untapped opportunity for export-oriented MSMEs. He says the bigger constraints are not financing but inadequate market understanding, limited R&D, and weak supply-chain capabilities. Many MSMEs continue to struggle to meet Japanese quality expectations and delivery timelines, while inconsistencies in raw material quality also affect export competitiveness. “The government should facilitate study tours, buyer-seller meetings, and greater participation in trade exhibitions so that Indian and Japanese MSMEs can understand each other’s requirements. Joint ventures can also play an important role because they help Indian companies understand exactly what Japanese buyers are looking for,” Chauhan says. FISME’s Bhardwaj says for now, the biggest challenge is creating institutional mechanisms that bring enterprises from both countries together. According to him, sustained engagement through business delegations, supplier matchmaking, joint ventures and technology partnerships will be critical to converting the strategic momentum generated by the leaders' meeting into long-term industrial collaboration. “There is a huge distance between Indian and Japanese MSMEs that needs to be bridged to bring them together,” he says, advocating for identifying potential partners, developing trust and institutionalising cooperation by reducing risks to fully realise the potential of this partnership. .Pbanner{display:flex;justify-content:space-between;align-items:center;background-color:#ec1c40;margin-top:20px;padding:5px 10px;border-radius:4px;color:#fff;line-height:10px;} .Pbannertext{display:flex;align-items:center;font-size:16px;font-weight:600;font-family:'Montserrat';} .Pbannertext img{height:20px;margin:0 6px} .Pbannerbutton a{display:flex;align-items:center;background-color:#fff;color:#ec1c40;text-decoration:none;font-weight:600;padding:4px 8px;border-radius:6px;font-size:15px;font-family:'Montserrat';} .Pbannerbutton img{height:20px;margin-right:6px} .Pbannerbutton a:hover{background-color:#f7f7f7} Add as a Reliable and Trusted News Source Add Now!