Department of Commerce organizes Regional Outreach Programme and Press Interaction in Pharmexcil’s Regional Office, Mumbai



Showcases India's Exports growth and achievements in the Pharmaceutical sector during the last 12 years

: Mumbai, 9 June 2026

The Department of Commerce, Government of India, organised an outreach programme at the Regional Office of the Pharmaceuticals Export Promotion Council of India (Pharmexcil) in Mumbai to highlight the Department’s major achievements, reforms and policy initiatives over the last 12 years.

The programme was attended by representatives of leading industry associations, including the Indian Drug Manufacturers’ Association, Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance and International Pharmaceutical Excipients Council of India. Industry representatives from ACG, FDC Limited and other stakeholders also participated.

During his media interaction, Shri Mohit Yadav, Joint Secretary, Department of Commerce, highlighted India’s strong export trajectory, growing market diversification and deepening trade relations with key partner countries. He said the Government is working closely with industry to strengthen export capabilities, improve competitiveness and support India’s transition from volume-led exports to value-led exports.

 

The Joint Secretary noted that, over the last 12 years, the Indian pharmaceutical sector has emerged as a strategic sector and a source of national pride. India is today widely recognised as the “Pharmacy of the World”, a reputation earned through scale, quality, affordability and dependable supply. The sector has grown from about US$ 20 billion in 2014 to nearly US$ 60 billion in 2026 and is expected to reach US$ 130 billion by 2030. India’s pharmaceutical exports have increased from US$ 14 billion in FY 2015 to about US$ 31 billion in FY 2026, registering a compound annual growth rate of 7.4 percent, with the ambition to reach US$ 50 billion by 2030.

He underlined that affordability remains India’s defining strength. Indian generic medicines have enabled access to treatment for millions across the world. India is the third-largest producer of pharmaceuticals by volume, supplies around 20 percent of global generic medicines demand, and exports pharmaceutical products to more than 200 countries. More than 60 percent of India’s pharmaceutical exports go to stringently regulated markets.

The Joint Secretary said the world today seeks quality, continuity and affordability in healthcare supply chains, and India offers all three. Quality is reflected in India’s strong regulatory footprint, including about 1,000 US FDA-registered sites, the highest number outside the United States. Continuity is reflected in India’s ability to deliver medicines during disruption, including during the pandemic and recent geopolitical challenges. Affordability is reflected in the global reach of Indian generics.

He noted that Maharashtra occupies a special place in India’s pharmaceutical journey. Mumbai, Pune, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, Tarapur and nearby clusters have emerged as important centres of pharmaceutical manufacturing, research, exports and skilled talent. Maharashtra’s pharmaceutical industry employs more than 200,000 people, including pharmacists, scientists and skilled manufacturing workers, and remains a major contributor to India’s pharma production and exports.

Industry representatives commended the efforts undertaken by the Government of India over the last 12 years to improve ease of doing business and strengthen the export ecosystem. These include digital issuance of Registration-cum-Membership Certificates, digital Certificates of Origin, the Trade Connect ePlatform, the Trade Infrastructure for Export Scheme portal, the Export Promotion Mission, research and development-linked support measures, and initiatives to strengthen quality, compliance and market access.

The Joint Secretary also highlighted Biopharma SHAKTI, formally Strategy for Healthcare Advancement through Knowledge, Technology and Innovation. The initiative has been proposed with an outlay of ₹10,000 crore over five years to position India as a global biopharmaceutical manufacturing hub. It seeks to build an ecosystem for domestic production of biologics and biosimilars, strengthen research and development, upgrade clinical trial infrastructure, promote collaboration between academia, research institutions and industry, and improve India’s competitiveness in the global biologics supply chain.

He further said that India is emerging as a hub for pharmaceutical knowledge services. Multinational pharmaceutical companies are increasingly establishing Global Capability Centres in India, employing more than 100,000 professionals and attracting investments of over US$ 1 billion. These centres support analytics, clinical operations, regulatory science, pharmacovigilance, digital health and research.

The Joint Secretary stated that India’s trade agreements with key partners will open new opportunities for the pharmaceutical sector. Agreements and ongoing engagements with partners such as the United Arab Emirates, Australia, the United Kingdom, the European Union, EFTA, the Sultanate of Oman and New Zealand are expected to support market access, regulatory cooperation, investment partnerships and technology collaboration. The India-EFTA Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement, backed by a commitment of US$ 100 billion in investment over 15 years, offers further possibilities in life sciences, research, manufacturing and advanced health technologies.

Looking ahead, he said the next phase of growth will be defined by India’s movement from volume to value. Generics will remain the foundation of the sector, while future growth will increasingly be shaped by biosimilars, biologics, gene therapies, specialty medicines, vaccines, complex generics, contract manufacturing, medical devices and greater self-reliance in Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients and Key Starting Materials.

The Joint Secretary reiterated that India brings scale, skill, science, standards and social commitment to global healthcare. He said the Department of Commerce will continue to work closely with industry stakeholders to maximise the benefits of India’s trade agreements, address regulatory and geopolitical challenges, and support India’s ambition to become a leading global hub for high-value pharmaceuticals, affordable innovation and innovative drugs.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Tamasha World HD premier on &pictures HD

Powerful, Soulful & Artistic #SMWMumbai

Oh My Merry Mantra