Apple tries to woo India with investment, job opportunities 

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi shaking hands with Chief Executive Officer of Apple Tim Cook. (AFP/Indian Press Information Bureau)
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Updated 21 April 2023
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Apple tries to woo India with investment, job opportunities 

  • Tech giant’s chief meets India PM Narendra Modi, members of Cabinet 
  • IT minister says Apple and India are charting a long-term relationship

NEW DELHI: Apple is trying to woo India with investment commitments, as its chief met Prime Minister Narendra Modi and members of his Cabinet ahead of the opening of a second official store in New Delhi on Thursday. 

Apple CEO Tim Cook landed in India on Monday and launched the company’s first and long-anticipated official store in the country’s financial hub, Mumbai, a day later. 

On Wednesday evening, he met Modi, as well as Electronics and Information Technology Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw and Deputy IT Minister Rajeev Chandrasekhar, ahead of the opening of another Apple store in an upscale mall of the national capital.   

Cook’s India trip is the strongest sign yet that the region is in now in Apple’s strategic focus as supply chains move away from China. 

Modi tweeted after his meeting with Cook that it was “an absolute delight to meet” him, as the Apple chief also took to Twitter to thank the PM for the warm welcome.
“We share your vision of the positive impact technology can make on India’s future — from education and developers to manufacturing and the environment, we’re committed to growing and investing across the country,” Cook said. 

With Vaishnaw, he discussed increasing Apple’s engagement “across manufacturing, electronics exports, app economy, skilling, sustainability and job creation especially for women,” the IT minister said, adding that they are “jointly charting a long-term and strong relationship.” 

Apple began the assembly of an iPhone model in the country in 2017, but until now its presence in the Android-dominated country has not been significant, as most phones sold in India cost much less than even the least-expensive iPhone. 

Apple’s share in India’s smartphone market was less than 4 percent last month, according to data portal Statista, compared with China, where it is around 20 percent.
But India could take over the role China has played in Apple’s business for the last 15 years. 

 

 

Apple has begun to cut its dependence on China — a home base for the production of millions of its devices — as a trade war between Washington and Beijing intensifies and after COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns battered the biggest iPhone plant in Zhengzhou. 

According to Nikhil Chawla, tech expert and founder of The Unbiased Blog, demand for Apple phones in China is also decreasing. 

“China is saturated now, the amount you could sell in China has already reached the peak, but India is very much a growing market, a growing ecosystem that Apple always wanted to expand to,” he told Arab News. 

Producing Apple devices in India would also be logical, Chawla added, as it would save the company from dependency on one country. 

“It’s not necessary for them to move production from China to India, but they can have two separate workhorses, working in tandem, producing for all the markets,” he said.
“So, if there is, God forbid, another lockdown in China, they would have production going on in India.” 

Hundreds of people gathered at the Select Citywalk Mall in Delhi to be the first ones to shop at its store as Cook arrived to open it. 

Tirjot Singh, who arrived for the shop’s opening from Punjab, said he was at the venue already at 6 a.m. 

“I am so very excited to meet him,” Singh said of the Apple CEO. 

“As a kid, I used to read about Steve Jobs, and the things he has set up still continue in Apple. That’s why Apple is special to me. I am a fan of Apple, not just a customer of Apple.” 

Ayush Jain, social media strategist and Apple enthusiast who brought his vintage Apple devices to the store, told Arab News he was there, like other Apple fanboys, to meet the company’s CEO. 

“I became passionate about Apple when I was 17 years old,” he said. 

“The first time I saw an iPhone, in 2008, I fell in love with it. And that time, I knew that the technology had been revolutionized.” 


Saudi Arabia boosts global 3D printing presence amid 20% annual growth

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Saudi Arabia boosts global 3D printing presence amid 20% annual growth

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia aims to become the world’s fifth-largest 3D printing market by 2030, placing it at the center of global competition, Faisal Adnan, founder and CEO of Namthajah, told Al-Eqtisadiah.

Founded in 2015, Namthajah is a Saudi company specializing in 3D printing, with investments in the sector totaling around SR30 million ($8 million).

Adnan said the industry is experiencing rapid global growth, with the market valued at roughly $20 billion and an annual growth rate of 20 percent, adding that the sector is expected to expand to $100 billion over the next five years.

The CEO emphasized that this trend represents a strategic opportunity to expand Saudi industrial leadership and enhance the global competitiveness of its products, noting that the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources is working to build advanced industries with added value based on knowledge and intellectual property.

Adnan added that Fourth Industrial Revolution technologies have become central to global industrial transformation, as highlighted at the current industrial exhibition focused on these advancements.

Modular production lines

Namthajah announced it has received a grant from the Innovative Factories Promotion Initiative to develop a modular production line for manufacturing 3D-printed structures, making it one of the first specialized production lines of this scale globally.

The company aims to expand to 200 advanced manufacturing centers worldwide over the coming years, up from 11 centers currently in Saudi Arabia, with its first international expansion to be announced before year-end.

Strategic partnerships 

Namthajah signed a partnership agreement with the Ministry of Industry to serve as an innovation partner with the Advanced Manufacturing Center, providing consulting services and support programs to promote 3D printing adoption across the local industrial sector.

The company is also preparing to announce a new agreement with China’s Enigma, one of the world’s largest 3D printing technology firms, to establish a center of excellence for developing metal part manufacturing applications for the energy sector.

This collaboration is expected to transfer advanced knowledge and develop high-quality industrial solutions, strengthening the Kingdom’s position as a regional hub for advanced tech industries.

Promising sector

These rapid initiatives highlight Saudi Arabia’s ambition to build a sophisticated 3D printing sector capable of enhancing the national economy and creating new industrial opportunities.

With international strategic partnerships and the development of innovative production lines, the Kingdom is paving the way for a new era of leadership in advanced manufacturing technologies regionally and globally.