NITI Aayog’s Strategy to Double Chemical Exports by 2030

Chemical Exports

Chemical Exports Latest News

  • NITI Aayog has proposed measures to nearly double India’s $44 billion chemical exports by 2030. 
  • Key recommendations include developing production clusters for scale, upgrading port infrastructure for improved logistics and storage, and introducing a sales-linked incentive scheme to localise production and enhance exports of critical chemicals. 
  • The initiative addresses limited domestic demand as a major growth constraint.

India’s Chemical Industry

  • India is the 6th largest chemical producer globally and 3rd in Asia, contributing 7% to the national GDP.  It ranks 14th in global chemical exports (excluding pharma).
  • In FY23, exports of major chemicals and petrochemical products stood at US$ 23.8 billion.
  • It had a $31 billion trade deficit in chemicals in 2023 and held a 3.5% share in global value chains, compared to China’s 23%.
  • India’s chemical market was valued at $220 billion in 2023, with ambitions to reach $1 trillion by 2040.
    • Experts emphasized the need to prioritize exports, noting that domestic demand alone cannot drive the sector to a $1 trillion valuation by 2040.

Regional Manufacturing Hubs

  • Chemical manufacturing is concentrated in Maharashtra and Gujarat, with West Bengal and Tamil Nadu also being major contributors.
  • India’s chemical industry produces over 80,000 commercial products and is classified into bulk chemicals, agrochemicals, specialty chemicals, polymers, petrochemicals, and fertilizers.

Global Leadership in Niche Segments

  • 4th largest agrochemical producer
  • 3rd largest polymer consumer
  • Major exporter of dyes and colourants, contributing 16–18% to global dyestuff production and holding a ~15% market share in colourants

Government Support to Chemical Industry

  • India has de-licensed the sector (except hazardous chemicals) and is promoting PCPIRs and plastic parks to provide modern infrastructure, increase output, and generate employment.

PCPIR Policy 2020–2035: Driving Massive Investment and Job Creation

  • The revised Petroleum, Chemicals and Petrochemicals Investment Region (PCPIR) Policy targets:
    • US$ 142 billion investment by 2025
    • US$ 213 billion by 2030
    • US$ 284 billion by 2035

Chemical Promotion and Development Scheme (CPDS)

  • CPDS supports the growth of the chemical and petrochemical industry through:
    • Creation of knowledge products
    • Knowledge dissemination via surveys and studies
    • Excellence awards for research and innovation in the sector

NITI Aayog Charts Roadmap to Boost Chemical Exports

  • NITI Aayog aims to nearly double India’s annual chemical exports from $44 billion by 2030, citing limited domestic demand as a major constraint.
  • Proposed measures include:
    • Developing new and existing production clusters
    • Upgrading port infrastructure for improved logistics and storage
    • Launching a sales-linked incentive scheme to promote local production and exports of critical chemicals

Shift to Specialty Chemicals to Raise Global Value Chain (GVC) Share

  • The report suggests India can double its share in global value chains to 5–6% by 2030 by moving from bulk to high-demand specialty chemicals and increasing exports by $35–40 billion with the right policy support.

Proposed Sales-Linked Incentive as Opex Subsidy

  • A sales-linked incentive scheme, structured as an operational expenditure (opex) subsidy, is proposed to:
    • Reduce dependence on specific countries for imports
    • Expand capacity in targeted sectors like agrochemical and pharma intermediates, battery chemicals, dyes, pigments, and petrochemicals

Identifying Supply Chain Choke Points

  • The report stressed the importance of identifying potential choke points in India’s chemical supply chain—mirroring China’s approach in 2018—to guide the strategic allocation of subsidies.

Revamping PCPIRs and Revitalizing Hubs

  • The report called for revitalizing existing Petroleum, Chemicals, and Petrochemicals Investment Regions (PCPIRs) in Dahej, Paradeep, and Vizag, which face infrastructure, financing, and regulatory challenges.

Port-Centric Cluster Development and Infrastructure Gaps

  • It recommended forming a Chemical Committee to address port infrastructure bottlenecks and proposed the development of eight high-potential chemical clusters linked to 14 major and 12 minor ports across the country.

Source: IE | IBEF

Chemical Exports FAQs

Q1: What is India’s current chemical export target by 2030?

Ans: NITI Aayog aims to nearly double India's chemical exports to $88 billion by 2030.

Q2: What incentives has NITI Aayog proposed?

Ans: A sales-linked operational expenditure (opex) subsidy is proposed to boost local production and reduce import dependency.

Q3: Which regions are key chemical hubs in India?

Ans: Maharashtra, Gujarat, West Bengal, and Tamil Nadu are key manufacturing regions for India’s chemical industry.

Q4: How is the government supporting infrastructure?

Ans: Revamping PCPIRs and creating chemical clusters at major ports are central to the proposed infrastructure plan.

Q5: Why is export focus necessary for the chemical industry?

Ans: Limited domestic demand cannot drive growth alone; exports are crucial to reach the $1 trillion industry target by 2040.

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