Domestic telecom equipment and fibre optic company HFCL has decided to participate in the production linked incentive scheme (PLI) for telecom and networking products manufacturing.
The Department of Telecommunications is expected to come out in the next few days with the final details of the Rs 12,195 crore PLI scheme for telecom which is offering incentives of between 4-6 per cent to eligible companies for five years.
Confirming the development, HFCL chairman Mahendra Nahata said: “We will surely participate in being eligible for the PLI scheme on telecom equipment which is meant to give a big push to ‘Make in India’ in this sector, especially with the coming of 5G.” HFCL will be the second homegrown company to avail itself of the scheme. The other is Dixon Technologies which has set up a joint venture with telecom operator Bharti Airtel, which will have a 24 per cent stake. Under the agreement, the joint venture is expected to sell the bulk of its products to Airtel, which will also be its largest client.
HFCL supplies telecom equipment and fibre optics to most of the current Indian operators. These include Reliance Jio (fibre-to-home, for instance), BSNL and other state-owned telecom infrastructure companies that are working on rolling out the Bharat Net fibre broadband network to connect rural India. Currently, about a fourth of HFCL’s revenues come from fibre.
The domestic telecom equipment market is also expected to open up with companies like Reliance Jio now testing their own indigenously-made 5G network. Reliance Jio has made it clear that it will support any indigenous technology as long as it offers similar quality.
The Department of Telecommunications is expected to come out in the next few days with the final details of the Rs 12,195 crore PLI scheme for telecom which is offering incentives of between 4-6 per cent to eligible companies for five years.
Confirming the development, HFCL chairman Mahendra Nahata said: “We will surely participate in being eligible for the PLI scheme on telecom equipment which is meant to give a big push to ‘Make in India’ in this sector, especially with the coming of 5G.” HFCL will be the second homegrown company to avail itself of the scheme. The other is Dixon Technologies which has set up a joint venture with telecom operator Bharti Airtel, which will have a 24 per cent stake. Under the agreement, the joint venture is expected to sell the bulk of its products to Airtel, which will also be its largest client.
HFCL supplies telecom equipment and fibre optics to most of the current Indian operators. These include Reliance Jio (fibre-to-home, for instance), BSNL and other state-owned telecom infrastructure companies that are working on rolling out the Bharat Net fibre broadband network to connect rural India. Currently, about a fourth of HFCL’s revenues come from fibre.
The domestic telecom equipment market is also expected to open up with companies like Reliance Jio now testing their own indigenously-made 5G network. Reliance Jio has made it clear that it will support any indigenous technology as long as it offers similar quality.

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