Karnataka is attempting to build what could become India’s first large-scale deep-tech economy, with quantum technology at its core. The state’s roadmap, released Wednesday, pegs the opportunity at $20 billion in economic value and more than 10,000 high-skilled jobs by 2035.What sets this push apart is its focus on execution. Backed by a Rs 1,000-crore state mission, the plan lays out how quantum technologies will be designed, built, and sold. The emphasis is on creating an end-to-end ecosystem, from labs and startups to fabrication and exports, rather than allowing breakthroughs to remain confined to academic institutions.From Lab To Real World For years, quantum research in India has been led by academic institutions, with limited commercial spillover. Karnataka’s approach aims to change that by building a structured pathway from discovery to deployment. A proposed hub, Q-City near Bengaluru, is expected to anchor this effort by bringing together research labs, startups, manufacturing units, and global companies.The goal is to shorten the time it takes for ideas to move from lab prototypes to real-world applications. This includes creating shared infrastructure for fabrication, testing, and system integration, allowing companies to scale without depending heavily on overseas facilities.Professionals In The PipelineThe economic ambition rests heavily on talent. Karnataka plans to create a workforce of over 10,000 quantum-ready professionals, supported by a steady pipeline of researchers, engineers, and industry specialists. This includes funding around 150 PhD scholars each year, while expanding quantum education into colleges across the state.The jobs expected to emerge will be specialised, ranging from quantum hardware engineering and materials science to software, cryptography, and advanced manufacturing. Unlike traditional IT roles, these positions sit at the intersection of physics, engineering, and computing.Wide Range Of ApplicationsThe roadmap focuses on four core areas: quantum computing, communication, sensing, and materials. Together, these technologies are expected to feed into sectors such as healthcare, cybersecurity, agriculture, and logistics.For instance, quantum computing could accelerate drug discovery and optimisation problems, while quantum communication promises highly secure data transmission. Quantum sensing, meanwhile, has applications in precision measurement, from medical diagnostics to environmental monitoring.Building Industry From ScienceThe state is also looking to support over 100 quantum startups and generate 100-plus patents, backed by a planned venture fund and industry partnerships. Large firms and multinational companies are expected to play a role in bridging research and commercial deployment.By 2035, Karnataka aims not just to develop quantum technologies, but to export them, positioning itself as a global hub. The broader objective is to capture a meaningful share of the global market while building a domestic deep-tech manufacturing base.Karnataka’s quantum push is ultimately an economic play. If it succeeds, it could replicate the IT sector’s trajectory — turning early research strength into jobs, companies, and exports, but this time in a far more complex and strategic technology domain.4 Pillars Of The Plan■ Talent & skilling: 10,000+ quantum professionals■ Research & tech: From 100-qubit to scalable systems■ Infrastructure: Research park, fabline, hardware park■ Industry & business: 100+ startups, 100+ patentsPhased Rollout (2025–35)■ Phase I (0–2 years): Foundation, policy, infrastructure setup■ Phase II (3+ years): Operationalisation, Q-City launch, early use-cases■ Phase III (4+ years): Manufacturing scale-up, 5,000+ jobs■ Phase IV (6–10 years): Exports, 100+ companies, 10,000+ jobsKey Numbers■ $20 billion projected quantum economy■ Rs 1,000 crore state investment■ 10,000+ jobs targeted■ 150 PhDs to be funded per year■ 100+ startups & patents expectedHub-and-Spoke Model■ Bengaluru as the core hub: research, hardware, global partnerships■ Regional spokes: Mysuru, Dharwad, Kalaburagi, Mangaluru and others■ Role of spokes: application development, testing, skilling, local industry use-cases■ Linked through digital backbone: Quantum-as-a-Service (QaaS) access across the state■ Aim: Create jobs, talent & infrastructure beyond Bengaluru while staying connected to a central innovation hub
