![]() |
Local Manufacturing, Global Vision
Cisco’s Chennai production facility, developed in partnership with Flex, has emerged as a cornerstone of India's digital infrastructure narrative. By meeting the government’s requirement of at least 50% local value addition on routing hardware, Cisco is powering the digital backbone with Made-in-India routers—yet maintaining the scalability and resilience expected from a global tech giant.
These routers are key components of BharatNet’s IP-MPLS ring topology architecture, designed to provide high-speed, low-latency internet in rural areas. More impressively, they’re ready for export. Cisco estimates around $1.3 billion worth of gear will be produced over two years, serving both domestic and international markets.
The Sustainability–Export Equation
Cisco’s strategy isn’t just about hitting local policy targets. It’s about crafting an intersection of economic development, sustainability, and global competitiveness. Locally manufactured routers reduce carbon footprint and supply chain dependencies, while also enabling India to emerge as a tech hardware exporter in its own right.
By integrating sustainability goals with production scalability, Cisco is turning BharatNet into more than a connectivity mission—it’s a model of green infrastructure development.
Tech That Reaches the Last Mile
With BharatNet’s last-mile delivery built around Wi-Fi hotspots, fiber access, and integration with 4G/5G networks, Cisco’s hardware plays a role that extends beyond the wiring. It’s the glue that binds India’s digital future—from smart villages to e-governance, telemedicine, and online education.
Where Local Meets Global: A Strategic Blueprint
Cisco’s 70% imprint on BharatNet is not merely a statistic—it’s a strategic signal. It shows how multinational firms can align with national priorities, scale local manufacturing, and still meet global sustainability and export ambitions.
As India doubles down on self-reliance in technology, Cisco’s BharatNet involvement could be a blueprint for other sectors—be it MedTech, defense electronics, or AI infrastructure.