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India’s Quantum Valley Vision: A Bold Leap Toward Tech Leadership


Published: 03 Jul 2025

Author: Precedence Research

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The Andhra Pradesh government has passed a declaration to make India a leading country in quantum technology and its commercial applications. The declaration outlined specific goals and timelines to be achieved over the next four years. The declaration outlined the establishment of a global quantum collaboration council along with a national quantum mission as a partner in the same project. This is going to be built in Amaravati city in India. Moreover, to identify the use cases of quantum in different fields, the proposal was also made to establish a multi-stakeholder Amaravati Quantum Valley mission board by collaborating with different groups. Work will commence by attending the annual “World Quantum Expo” in Amaravati, scheduled to take place in 2026. 

Quantum

Amaravati Quantum Valley will lead the creation of a national startup forum, along with VC-backed milestone-based funding and guidance. There is a substantial amount of Rs 1 crore in the quantum fund, which will be used to access living-lab infrastructure. It will support at least 20 quantum hardware and software startups in the next year. They further aim to support 100 quantum startups by 2030, providing them with regulatory sandboxes. 

Amaravati Quantum Valley aims to secure at least USD 500 million for quantum technology by January 1st, 2027. The target is to secure USD 1 billion by January 1, 2029, across various domains, including quantum computing, sensing, chips, and communications. 

India’s largest open quantum testbed, QchipIN, will be developed by Amaravati Quantum Valley within one year. This will enable pilots across various sectors, including health tech, logistics, defense, BFSI, and space, by integrating quantum computers, QKD fiber links, and sensor platforms that are easily deployable. The intent of QchipIN is to offer end-to-end access to quantum hardware, algorithms, tools, and support from expert groups.  

Domestic production of Qubit platforms will also be supported by Amaravati Quantum Valley, which encompasses cryo-electronics, photonic packages, quantum chips, quantum dots, and quantum readout hardware, including photon detectors and homodyne detectors, along with control systems. The goal is to achieve Rs 5000 crore in annual exports by 2030. This will also help establish India’s first integrated quantum training ecosystem. 

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