



As India builds chips and batteries, one chemical firm is betting on both
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. India’s ambitions to localize semiconductors and batteries hinge on an unglamorous but critical input: high-precision chemicals. As the country pushes to reduce dependence on imports across strategic supply chains, one mid-sized chemical company is quietly attempting something rare - leveraging its pharmaceutical chemistry roots to position itself at the intersection of both industries.
That company is Acutaas Chemicals, traditionally known for advanced pharmaceutical intermediates. Today, it is expanding into semiconductor-grade photoresist chemicals and battery electrolyte additives, two niches that demand extreme purity, deep process control, and long qualification cycles. The opportunity is large, but so are the execution risks.
The timing matters. Global battery demand crossed 1 terawatt-hour for the first time in 2024, driven by electric vehicle sales that rose 25% to 17 million units. Battery pack prices have fallen below $100 per kWh, accelerating adoption across mobility and grid-scale energy storage.
As deployment rises, demand for high-quality battery chemicals is growing in parallel. In India, battery chemicals are emerging as a sunrise industry, expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of over 15%, supported by policy initiatives such as the ₹18,100 crore Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme for Advanced Chemistry Cell battery storage. The Atmanirbhar Bharat mission reinforces this opportunity by pushing localisation across the value chain, from raw material processing to cell manufacturing, to reduce import dependence.
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