Why in News ?
- Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the₹1 lakh crore RDI Scheme (2025) during the Emerging Science, Technology and Innovation Conclave (ESTIC).
 - Objective: To fund high-risk, high-impact research projects, promote deep-tech innovation, and accelerate India’s transition from “ease of doing business” to “ease of doing research.”
 
Relevance:
- GS-2 (Governance):
• Institutional reform — role of Anusandhan NRF and ESTIC.
• Policy design for science, technology, and innovation governance. - GS-3 (Science & Technology):
• Promotion of deep tech, AI, clean energy, and biotech.
• Bridging R&D–industry gap; fostering innovation ecosystems.
• Ethical technology and AI governance. 

Background
- Replaces the Indian Science Congress (last held in 2023) with a modern, outcome-based platform — ESTIC.
 - The Anusandhan National Research Foundation (NRF), with a corpus of ₹1 lakh crore, provides the institutional backbone for this new R&D push.
 - Part of India’s vision of “Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan, Jai Vigyan, Jai Anusandhan.”
 
Key Announcements
₹1 Lakh Crore RDI Scheme
- Provides capital support for “high-risk, high-impact” scientific projects with commercial and societal potential.
 - Focus: Deep tech, clean energy, biotechnology, advanced materials, and AI.
 - Aims to bridge the gap between laboratory research and market-ready innovation.
 
Regulatory & Financial Reforms
- Eased procurement and financial rules to facilitate faster R&D execution.
 - New incentives and supply-chain support to enable quicker prototype-to-market transitions.
 - Encouragement of private sector investment in R&D — public-private innovation model.
 
Expansion of Atal Tinkering Labs
- 10,000 existing labs benefiting over 1 crore school students.
 - Target: 25,000 more labs to be set up nationwide — expanding grassroots innovation and STEM learning.
 
Prime Minister’s Research Fellowship (PMRF) Expansion
- 10,000 new fellowships to be awarded in the next five years.
 - Goal: Nurture young researchers, especially in frontier sciences and applied research.
 
India AI Mission
- Over ₹10,000 crore allocated to ensure AI for public good.
 - Focus on ethical AI applications in education, healthcare, logistics, and governance.
 
India’s R&D Progress (Data Points)
- R&D expenditure: Doubled in the last decade.
 - Registered patents: Increased 17-fold.
 - Startups: World’s 3rd largest startup ecosystem.
 - Deep-tech startups: 6,000+ in clean energy, semiconductors, advanced materials, etc.
 - Bio-economy growth: $10 billion (2014) → $140 billion (2025).
 
About ESTIC
- Organizer: Office of the Principal Scientific Adviser to the Government of India.
 - Replaces: Indian Science Congress (in decline due to credibility and management issues).
 - Focus Areas:
- Quantum science and computing
 - Bioengineering and biotechnology
 - Clean energy and environment
 - Climate technology and resilience
 
 - Objective: Foster inter-ministerial synergy and promote science-policy integration for “Viksit Bharat 2047”.
 
Context & Significance
- Shift from Output to Impact: From academic conferences to policy-oriented innovation conclaves.
 - India’s Global Standing:
- 3rd largest startup ecosystem globally.
 - 40th rank in Global Innovation Index (2024).
 - Target to reach top 25 by 2030.
 
 - Strategic Alignment:
- National Deep Tech Startup Policy 2024
 - National Quantum Mission
 - Green Hydrogen Mission
 - National Research Foundation (NRF) Act, 2023
 
 - Anusandhan National Research Foundation (NRF):
- Funds university-based research and innovation.
 - Encourages academia–industry collaboration.
 - Integrates R&D priorities with national missions (AI, semiconductors, bioeconomy).
 
 
Ethical and Inclusive Innovation
- Emphasis on “Ethical Tech” — ensuring technology aligns with human values and public good.
 - Ensures inclusion of rural innovators, women scientists, and regional universities in the innovation network.
 
Strategic Objectives
- Transition from food security to nutrition security through biofortified crops.
 - Develop low-cost, sustainable fertilizers.
 - Map India’s genomic biodiversity for personalised medicine.
 - Accelerate clean battery storage innovations for energy security.
 
Significance
- Economic: Strengthens India’s position in the global innovation economy; boosts exports of high-tech goods.
 - Social: Democratizes access to scientific opportunities; builds STEM capacity among youth.
 - Geopolitical: Positions India as a R&D hub of the Global South and an innovation partner for emerging economies.
 - Strategic: Reduces technological dependence on imports; builds indigenous capacities in AI, semiconductors, and biotech.
 
Challenges Ahead
- Bridging R&D–industry linkages and commercialisation gaps.
 - Ensuring ethical AI and data governance.
 - Balancing basic research funding with applied/market-oriented research.
 - Strengthening institutional coordination across ministries and research councils.
 
Way Forward
- Create National Deep-Tech Mission linking RDI, NRF, and AI initiatives.
 - Foster industry–academia clusters in Tier-II cities.
 - Build AI ethics and cybersecurity frameworks.
 - Introduce outcome-based funding models tied to innovation impact metrics.
 - Enhance international R&D partnerships (e.g., BRICS, QUAD Science Cooperation).
 
				

