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Steel’s Powerful ₹11,887 Cr Growth Breakthrough
Steel’s Powerful ₹11,887 Cr Growth Breakthrough
Steel’s Powerful ₹11,887 Cr Growth Breakthrough

Steel Industry

India’s Steel Revolution: A ₹11,887 Crore Leap Forward

Imagine a world in which India not only builds with steel, but also creates the most sophisticated alloys known to modern engineering. This week, that vision got a lot closer to becoming a reality. The Ministry of Steel has signed MoUs for 85 high-impact projects.

This isn’t a typical government signing. 55 organisations have committed to investing a staggering ₹11,887 crore. The goal is straightforward yet audacious: to establish India as the ideal worldwide powerhouse for speciality steel.



The Power of PLI 1.2

The signing event was held at the historic Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi. Union Minister H.D. Kumaraswamy has formally launched the third cycle of the Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme, abbreviated as PLI 1.2.

This phase focuses on downstream steel and alloy production. By offering financial incentives, the government encourages businesses to produce high-value products that were previously imported. It’s a classic “Make in India” success story in the works.


Massive Capacity Expansion

What can ₹11,887 crore buy? For starters, it is planned to increase speciality steel capacity by 8.7 million tonnes. This isn’t your typical construction rebar; we’re talking about advanced steel utilised in precision industries.

This capacity growth applies to anything from tank armour to the core of an electric car engine. The initiatives are divided into 22 product sub-categories, ensuring that no technical niche is overlooked in India’s industrial drive.


Strategic Sectors in Focus

The program recognises four key product areas that are vital to national growth. The first covers steel grades for key industries such as defence and aerospace. These are materials that must resist harsh environments without ever failing.

The other categories include commercial grade and coated wire goods. By mastering these, India lessens its reliance on foreign sources. This shields our economy from global supply chain disruptions and keeps our foreign exchange reserves strong and intact.


Strengthening the Value Chain

One of the most intriguing parts of PLI 1.2 is the way it expands the domestic environment. Minister Kumaraswamy emphasised that these investments would help India become a “reliable supplier” to the world. We’re moving up the value chain.

Instead of simply exporting raw iron ore, we are now focusing on finished, high-tech steel products. This transformation has a “multiplier effect” throughout the economy, helping everyone from local MSMEs to large infrastructure companies.


Incentives That Drive Results

The government is not just encouraging investment; it is also rewarding performance. The PLI 1.2 scheme provides incentive rates that range from 4% to 15%. These incentives are directly related to increased sales and output over a five-year period.

Disbursements are anticipated to begin in fiscal year 2026-27. This timeframe provides organisations with a clear financial path for commissioning new plants and upgrading existing technologies.


A Legacy of Growth

To comprehend the scope of PLI 1.2, we must consider what came before it. Between PLI 1.0 and 1.1, the government received nearly ₹43,000 crore in promised investments. These rounds have already resulted in thousands of direct jobs and millions of tonnes of capacity.

PLI 1.2 serves as the “booster rocket” for this momentum. It explicitly solves the structural voids that remained, guaranteeing that even the most difficult speciality steels have the “Made in India” label.


The Pathway to Global Leadership

Steel Secretary Sandeep Poundrik made it clear that the success of this objective is dependent on timely execution. The Ministry has promised “all necessary support” to guarantee that these 85 projects begin without bureaucratic delays.

The emphasis is now on the 55 participating companies to turn these paper agreements into operational factories. As these projects come up by 2030, the global steel market will have to look to India for high-end materials in the future.


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