
Excelsior Correspondent
NEW DELHI, Apr 9: Union Minister for Science & Technology and Earth Sciences Dr Jitendra Singh today called upon the private sector to accelerate its participation in Research & Development (R&D) activities, emphasising that industry engagement is essential to strengthening India’s innovation ecosystem.
The Minister said the Government has taken a series of enabling steps – including opening up sectors such as space and nuclear energy to private players and creating dedicated mechanisms like the RDI fund-and stressed that industry must now respond by investing more actively in R&D and partnering in the country’s scientific and technological advancement.
Speaking at the release of two NITI Aayog reports on easing research and development processes, Dr. Jitendra Singh emphasised that the focus must shift from how systems are designed to how they are actually experienced by researchers on the ground. He said evidence-based documentation of these lived challenges strengthens the case for reform and helps carry concerns beyond the scientific community to policymakers.
“There is no denying that research can flourish only when there are no impediments, no slowdowns and no avoidable interruptions,” Dr. Jitendra Singh said, adding that even when external disruptions are unavoidable, “the ponderables must be addressed” to prevent compounding delays.
The Minister pointed to a growing mismatch between India’s expanding scientific capabilities and the systems that support them, noting that while the country has “no dearth of human resources” and its scientific talent is increasingly recognised globally, institutional and procedural frictions continue to constrain outcomes.
Highlighting the changing nature of research, Dr. Jitendra Singh said scientific work is now deeply interconnected with industry, finance and global collaboration, making it essential for systems to facilitate interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral engagement. He noted that the government has taken steps to open sectors such as space and nuclear energy to private participation, signalling a broader shift in the research and innovation landscape.
At the same time, he flagged the limited participation of private industry in research funding and execution, arguing that government support alone cannot sustain long-term innovation. Referring to the recently introduced Research, Development and Innovation (RDI) funding approach, Dr. Jitendra Singh described it as an unusual intervention aimed at incentivising private sector engagement, even as he acknowledged that industry readiness remains uneven.
Suman Bery, Vice Chairman, NITI Aayog, said the initiative on easing R&D processes is rooted in long-standing calls from the scientific community to reduce administrative burdens and improve system efficiency. He emphasised that as India’s research ecosystem expands, the focus must shift towards ensuring coherence across the entire research lifecycle-from approvals and funding to execution and application-so that avoidable delays do not disrupt outcomes.
V. K. Saraswat, Member, NITI Aayog, said India’s research ecosystem is at a “point of transition”, with systemic inefficiencies-such as funding delays and administrative bottlenecks-continuing to affect both the pace and quality of research. He called for greater institutional autonomy, reduced compliance burden on researchers, and stronger linkages between research, innovation and industry, alongside coordinated, top-down reforms in funding and policy frameworks.
The Principal Scientific Adviser Prof. A.K.Sood said improving ease of doing R&D must remain a continuous effort, noting that despite recent progress, key gaps persist. He flagged low funding success rates, unresolved issues such as the Treasury Single Account (TSA) framework, and constraints in hiring and infrastructure, urging stronger coordination and follow-through to translate recommendations into action.