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India's Shipbuilding Sector: Eyeing a Spot in the Global Top 10.
Date 13 May 2025
Written By
Transforming Maritime Sector: India's Bold Strategy to Elevate Shipbuilding Capabilities and Capture Global Market Potential
India aims to become a top 10 global shipbuilding nation through strategic policy interventions. Budget 2025 announced a comprehensive support framework including a maritime development fund, production-linked incentives, and research grants. Despite challenges like high capital costs and low productivity, the country seeks to leverage its strategic location, naval capabilities, and emerging green ship technologies to capture regional maritime market opportunities and boost industrial competitiveness.

Here's a concise and insightful article on India's ambition to enter the Top 10 global shipbuilding nations, with reference to the Budget 2025 announcement:

Introduction

India, with its expansive 7,500 km coastline and strategic location along major global trade routes, has long held untapped potential in the shipbuilding sector. Historically dominated by naval and defense shipbuilding, the commercial sector has remained underdeveloped, despite India's rising trade and maritime traffic.

However, a bold announcement in Budget 2025 may mark a turning point—India has set its sights on becoming one of the top 10 shipbuilding nations in the world, signaling a new era of industrial ambition, maritime strength, and export competitiveness.

The Budget 2025 Push: What Was Announced?

In Budget 2025, the Finance Minister laid out a multi-pronged support framework for India's shipbuilding ecosystem:

Key Announcements:

  • ₹10,000 crore Maritime Development Fund to modernize shipyards and support green shipbuilding.
  • Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme for commercial shipbuilding.
  • Shipbuilding Finance Corporation to offer easy credit and export guarantees.
  • Upgraded ship repair clusters under the Sagarmala programme.
  • 50% government-backed R&D grants for green and autonomous ship technologies.

This marks the most comprehensive policy intervention in India’s shipbuilding sector in decades.

Why Shipbuilding Matters Now

India’s vision is timely and aligned with global megatrends:

  • Shipping demand is booming, with post-COVID supply chain diversification.
  • IMO 2030 & 2050 mandates are forcing a global fleet upgrade to greener, fuel-efficient vessels.
  • Geopolitical tensions (Red Sea, Taiwan Strait) underscore the need for indigenous maritime capability.
  • India’s naval modernization (Project 75I, aircraft carriers, frigates) requires stronger domestic industry.

Where India Stands Today

Metric

Status

Global market share

<1%

Commercial ship exports

Minimal, mostly tugs & small ships

Naval shipbuilding

Strong (Mazagon Dock, Cochin, GRSE)

Infrastructure

Growing but outdated in parts

Global rank

Outside Top 10

Challenges on the Horizon

Despite this positive momentum, India faces structural hurdles:

  • High capital costs, limited ship finance instruments
  • Low productivity compared to Korean or Chinese yards
  • Shortage of marine design and skilled workforce
  • Dependence on imported marine components
  • Fragmented governance, split between ministries

Opportunities to Seize

With the right execution, India can unlock:

  • 📈 $20–25 billion in shipbuilding orders over the next decade
  • 🌏 A regional export hub for South Asia, Africa, and Middle East
  • Synergies with defense exports under Atmanirbhar Bharat
  • 🛳️ A green ship manufacturing niche, leveraging early investments

How to Reach the Top 10

To rise among the global leaders like China, South Korea, and Japan, India must:

  1. Modernize public and private shipyards with global technology partnerships.
  2. Implement single-window maritime clearances for ease of doing business.
  3. Scale up maritime skilling programs aligned with global certifications.
  4. Localize marine components through MSME cluster development.
  5. Boost R&D and IP creation for next-gen autonomous and green vessels.

Conclusion

India's Budget 2025 signals more than just financial outlay—it represents a strategic pivot to maritime industrialization. With consistent policy support, targeted incentives, and private sector participation, India has the potential to break into the Top 10 shipbuilding nations, boosting exports, jobs, and geopolitical standing.

The ship has finally set sail—now, it's all about navigating skillfully toward the global shipbuilding league.

*** 

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