On February 28, 2026, Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated India's first Semiconductor Assembly, Test, Mark and Packaging (ATMP) facility of Micron Semiconductor Technology India Private Limited at Sanand, Gujarat. The inauguration marks a landmark moment in India's semiconductor journey, with the plant commencing commercial production and shipment of made-in-India memory modules.

The Sanand facility represents a combined investment of approximately $2.75 billion (around ₹22,516 crore) by Micron and its government partners under India's Semiconductor Mission. Once fully ramped, the first phase will feature more than 500,000 square feet of cleanroom space — making it one of the world's largest single-floor ATMP cleanrooms. The plant converts advanced DRAM and NAND flash wafers from Micron's global manufacturing network into finished memory and storage products including SSD modules. Micron expects to assemble and test tens of millions of chips at Sanand in 2026, scaling to hundreds of millions in 2027. As a symbolic milestone, Micron presented its first shipment of made-in-India memory modules to Dell Technologies for laptops made in India for India. Electronics and IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw stated that four semiconductor plants are expected to be operational in India by 2026. PM Modi remarked that 'India is now making its mark in hardware,' underlining the shift from software services to manufacturing.