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When Investment Meets Execution: India’s Engineering Opportunity in the US

The announcement of a proposed $300 billion new refinery project in Brownsville, Texas, USA—made directly by Donald Trump yesterday—has been presented as a historic moment in American industrial revival. If realized, the facility would represent the first major new refinery project of its kind in about five decades in the US. Yet beyond the visible political symbolism lies a more structural question: how do large investment announcements translate into real industrial assets? The refinery project, reportedly organised by a new US venture called America First Refining (AFR), illustrates the answer. Projects of this scale require several layers of preparation—financing frameworks, land acquisition, intake and offtake agreements, tax incentives, and regulatory approvals. AFR appears to have assembled much of this political and financial architecture. What remained essential, however, was execution credibility: a partner capable of designing, building, and operating a complex refining syst...

The Engineering Talent Crunch Is an Opportunity in Disguise — But Only If India Acts

Open any business news app today and the employment headlines seem contradictory. On one side, India's IT sector is visibly pulling back on recruitment, mainly because of the rapid automation of IT (and other office-based) services by advanced agentic AI tools, like Anthropic's Claude Cowork. The sharp drop in Indian IT companies' market valuations last month was precisely because of this fear. On the other side, manufacturers, energy companies, defence contractors, and infrastructure builders are struggling to find engineers — not because engineers don't exist, but because the engineers they need don't quite exist yet. The Manpower Group 2026 Talent Shortage Survey (released a few days back), covering 39,000 employers across 41 countries including 3,051 in India, puts a sharp number on this: 82% of Indian employers report difficulty finding the right talent. That places India among the most talent-constrained markets in the world, worse than the global average of ...

India’s Gas Supply Crisis: The Case for a Multipronged Domestic Production Strategy

Structural Crisis, Not a Temporary Disruption  The ongoing war in West Asia has disrupted global energy supplies. Most recently, Qatar stopping it's natural gas production has given rise to a potential global gas crisis. For India, this vulnerability is not new. India produces about half of its total gas requirement from domestic fossil sources. The remainder is imported (about half of which from Qatar), leaving industrial supply chains, individual and commercial consumers, and the agricultural sector simultaneously exposed to the same external shock. The consequences are already visible. The government has ordered supply cuts to industrial consumers — steel, ceramics, glass, paper, and food processing among them — while prioritising piped natural gas for homes and commercial establishments, compressed natural gas for vehicles, and gas feedstock for fertilizer production ahead of the Kharif sowing season. These are triage decisions, not policy choices. They signal a supply position...

Why AI Sovereignty Without Cybersecurity Sovereignty Is Illusory

Government and industry leaders increasingly speak of an AI stack — chips, cloud, models, and applications — as the foundation of technological sovereignty. The ambition is clear: domestic compute capacity, indigenous foundation models, and national applications together reduce strategic dependence. Yet a structural asymmetry persists. While the AI stack is being articulated layer by layer, an equivalent cybersecurity stack is rarely defined with the same architectural clarity. This omission is no longer theoretical. It is operational.  Yesterday, Amazon Web Services (AWS) confirmed that two of its facilities in UAE were directly struck by drones, causing structural damage, power disruptions, and additional water damage from fire suppression efforts. A third facility in Bahrain was also affected by a nearby strike. The strikes led to widespread service outages, including elevated error rates for services like Amazon S3, EC2, RDS, Lambda, and others, with AWS warning of prolonged r...

From Repository to Circulation: Rethinking the University in the AI Era

Artificial intelligence is no longer simply another technological wave. It is rapidly becoming a general-purpose cognitive infrastructure, collapsing the boundary between knowledge production and real-world deployment. Across sectors, AI is shortening the half-life of expertise: models evolve faster than textbooks, and applied knowledge shifts more quickly than curricula can traditionally accommodate.  In such a landscape, the question facing universities is not whether AI should be taught. The deeper question is how universities must reorganize themselves when intelligence itself becomes computationally augmented. Adding AI electives or partnering with online platforms may signal responsiveness, but these remain surface-level adjustments. If AI is infrastructural, the response must be structural. Universities must move beyond offering AI as a specialized track and instead embed it within the epistemic core of each discipline. The challenge is not “AI education”. It is disciplinary...

From Transactions to Traditions: How Portfolio Expansion and Cultural Bundling Will Drive the Next Growth-Phase of Indian E-Commerce

India's e-commerce sector stands at a pivotal inflection point. According to a new BCG report released yesterday, the the Indian e-commerce market is currently worth $120–140 billion. It is on track to nearly double to $280–300 billion by 2030, fuelled by 440 million online shoppers (up from 300 million today), rapid rural penetration, and the explosive rise of quick commerce and connected formats. Yet beneath the headline growth lies a stubborn reality: most pure-play operators remain deeply unprofitable despite years of aggressive scaling. The first wave of Indian e-commerce was defined by single-category dominance and frantic geographical expansion. The next wave, I argue, will be won by platforms that evolve into multi-experience conglomerates—blending high-frequency daily services with emotionally resonant, culturally attuned offerings. This is not speculation; it is already playing out in real time. The Limits of Pure Geographical Expansion For much of the past five years, th...

When AI Meets Federalism: India’s Emerging Polycentric Knowledge Economy

According to the latest Quess Corp Pulse report, released yesterday, formal employment in India is no longer a metro-only story. In H1-FY26 (April to September, 2025), Tier-3 cities accounted for the largest share (40%) of organised workforce deployment, overtaking Tier-1 cities (31%) and Tier-2 cities (29%). Entry-level hiring is increasingly leaning toward local colleges rather than exclusively targeting top-ranked institutions. Companies cite cost efficiency, easier retention, better cultural fit, local market understanding, and operational exposure as key reasons. This is not an anecdotal adjustment. It signals a measurable redistribution in India’s labour geography. At the same time, a parallel development is unfolding at the other end of the corporate spectrum. Global corporations continue to build/expand global capability centres (GCCs) in India, deepening their presence in megacities such as Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, NCR, etc (just yesterday, Google secured 2 million ...