India’s electronics manufacturing industry is gaining strong momentum, driven by sustained policy support, maturing industrial clusters, and global supply chain diversification. This shift will be reflected at electronica India and productronica India 2026, scheduled from April 8–10 at India Expo Mart, Greater Noida. With participation from over 50 countries, including Germany, China, the United States, Japan and Taiwan, the platform underscores the growing global integration of India’s electronics ecosystem. Across its two editions in Greater Noida and Bengaluru, it connects over 60,000 participants and 1,000+ exhibitors, positioning it as one of India’s largest and most significant meeting points for the electronics industry. Anchored across these two key hubs, it marks a 50% expansion in scale and reinforces its role in advancing India’s electronics ecosystem.
Bhupinder Singh, President – IMEA, Messe München & CEO, Messe Muenchen India, says, “electronica India and productronica India is scaling in line with the industry it serves. What stands out this year is the intent shift—companies are coming in with defined sourcing plans, partnership frameworks, and timelines for execution. The platform is increasingly being used to close decisions, not just initiate conversations. Our focus remains on enabling meaningful industry connections that translate into long-term business outcomes.”
Dr Reinhard Pfeiffer, CEO, Messe München, notes, “India’s role in global electronics manufacturing is becoming more substantive. The alignment between policy initiatives, industry investment, and market demand is establishing a solid foundation for sustained growth. From a global perspective, we see increasing interest in India both as a manufacturing destination and a strategic partner in building resilient and diversified supply chains.”
“The Government of Uttar Pradesh is committed to strengthening the state’s position as a key hub for electronics manufacturing in India. With focused policy support, infrastructure development, and investor facilitation, we are working to enable both domestic and global companies to scale their operations here. Hosting electronica India and productronica India reinforces our intent to bring together the entire ecosystem in one place and accelerate industry growth,” mentions Shri. Alok Kumar, Principal Secretary, Department of IT and Electronics, Government of Uttar Pradesh.
Rajoo Goel, Secretary General, ELCINA emphasises that, “India’s next phase of growth in electronics manufacturing will depend on strengthening its component ecosystem. There is a clear need to build domestic capabilities across key segments of components including printed circuit boards, materials and other critical inputs. Thanks to MeitY, the ECMS Scheme conceptualised by ELCINA, has lent huge impetus to these sectors. Platforms like BPCA, electronica India and productronica India play an important role in aligning industry, policy, and technology towards this objective.”
Pankaj Mohindroo, Chairman, ICEA states, “India’s electronics manufacturing journey is now entering a phase where scale must be matched with depth. As demand expands across sectors such as mobile devices and automotive electronics, the focus is increasingly on building a resilient, locally integrated manufacturing ecosystem. In this context, industry platforms and collaborative forums play a critical role. By bringing together manufacturers, component suppliers, technology partners, and policymakers, these engagements enable faster alignment, encourage investment across the value chain, and help address bottlenecks in real time. Such interactions are essential to strengthening domestic capabilities, deepening value addition, and enhancing India’s long-term global competitiveness in electronics manufacturing.”
The event is expected to be inaugurated by Honourable Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, Shri Yogi Adityanath ji, underlining the state’s continued focus on electronics as a strategic growth sector.
The Government of Uttar Pradesh is the host state for this edition, reinforcing the growing importance of the Noida–Greater Noida corridor as a manufacturing hub. The region has seen a strong concentration of OEM assembly units, electronics manufacturing services (EMS) players, and component suppliers, supported by continued policy focus and infrastructure development.
Industry stakeholders attribute this acceleration to initiatives such as the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme and the proposed Electronics Component Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS). Together, these are enabling domestic capability building, reducing import dependence, and strengthening supply chain resilience.
Adding to the outreach, Rohit Sharma has been associated as the brand ambassador for this edition, aimed at expanding visibility beyond the core industry and bringing wider attention to the sector’s growing economic significance.