Empowering MSMEs with News & Insights

Make in India through Industry 4.0 is an important transition in the manufacturing sector: Dr VK Saraswat

Updated: Apr 12, 2021 12:01:46pm
image

Make in India through Industry 4.0 is an important transition in the manufacturing sector: Dr VK Saraswat

New Delhi. Apr 12 (KNN) Make in India through Industry 4.0 is an important transition in the manufacturing sector that will bring new technologies, new operations, and will impact all sectors, said Dr V K Saraswat, Member, NITI Aayog on Monday.

''This will bring competitiveness, Atmanirbharta, and make our manufacturing sector a bigger contributor to the GDP,'' he added.

While addressing the virtual ‘FICCI-UNIDO Dialogue on Swachh Udyog- Manufacturing Excellence in India’, Dr Saraswat said that today there is a need to push the Make in India and Atmanirbhar Bharat programs in the Indian manufacturing ecosystem.

A service-based economy is prone to market risks and manufacturing is going to facilitate a stronger and stable growth. Atmanirbharta calls for high reliance on imports that limits our holistic growth, hence we need to have more indigenous production, he said.

Dr Saraswat, while highlighting the manufacturing vision of 2030, said that we will see factories that are green and sustainable adding, ''Factories should be in areas that are closer to both the workers and the customers.''

 

The Indian production system should be design-oriented, he added.

 

Further on, he said that our Industry 4.0 must be a human and process-oriented simulation and digitalization to ensure a major role for the workers. The 6-R approach in the manufacturing sector includes re-manufacture, redesign, recover, recycle, re-use and reduce and is what we want to achieve by 2030-35, added Dr Saraswat.

He further stated that R&D plays a crucial role in manufacturing and there is a need for smart manufacturing R&D centres to showcase new technologies so that industries can use them to grow further.

“This will also help in proving Atmanirbharta in these areas and we will not be dependent on importing these technologies,” he said.

“We all know that manufacturing is not at the level at which we would have wanted it to be. COVID-19 posed a challenge to the MSMEs to get up and start working on chapters that will take them to the next level. There are challenges, apart from the financial ones that MSMEs need to overcome,” said Alka Arora, Joint Secretary, Ministry of MSME.

Arora said that the change in the definition of MSMEs gives an opportunity to MSMEs to play a role in the global market adding, “We need to be a part of the global value chain.''

''We are also working to make India an export hub. We will shortly be coming up with a Global MSME Intelligence System to aid MSMEs towards this effect,” she added.

Rene Van Berkel, UNIDO Representative, Regional Office in India said that there is a dependence on the contribution of clusters of manufacturing MSMEs in India and there is a need to make the factories effective, efficient, and mature.

COMMENTS

    Be first to give your comments.

LEAVE A REPLY

Required fields are marked *