On February 20, the United States and India formalized India’s entry into the Pax Silica coalition by signing the Pax Silica Declaration. The signing reflected a shared view among participating nations that economic security and national security are inseparable concerns. India brings considerable assets to the coalition, including a large and highly skilled talent base, capacity for critical mineral processing and refining, growing investment in AI infrastructure, and a demonstrated commitment to trusted technology frameworks.
The Declaration was signed by U.S. Ambassador to India Sergio Gor, Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs Jacob Helberg, and Indian Secretary of the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology Shri S. Krishnan. Both governments reaffirmed their intent to advance regulatory environments that support AI innovation and the rapid development of secure technology ecosystems in each country.
With India’s accession, Pax Silica now counts ten signatories, joining Australia, Israel, Japan, Qatar, the Republic of Korea, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom. The agreement also advances the broader bilateral agenda outlined by President Trump and Prime Minister Modi under the Transforming the Relationship Utilizing Strategic Technology (TRUST) initiative, with further members expected to join the coalition.
For executives operating in semiconductors, AI infrastructure, or critical minerals, this is not a diplomatic footnote. It is a structural signal about how supply chains will be governed, financed, and regulated in the decade ahead.
What Pax Silica is and why its scope matters
Launched by the U.S. Department of State in December 2025, Pax Silica is a multilateral initiative to secure supply chains across the full technology stack. Unlike frameworks that address a single layer, such as chip fabrication agreements or minerals procurement deals, it integrates the entire value chain into one coordinated architecture: rare earth extraction and processing, semiconductor fabrication and advanced packaging, AI compute infrastructure, advanced manufacturing, and logistics systems.
This end-to-end design is deliberate. Policymakers have concluded that supply chain resilience and technology governance in the AI era cannot be achieved by addressing chokepoints in isolation. Vulnerability at the minerals layer flows through to chip availability and AI deployment capacity. Pax Silica is built around that integrated logic.
Why India’s accession changes the calculus
India’s entry is the coalition’s most consequential expansion to date, and its significance runs across several dimensions.
Scale and market reach
India’s inclusion transforms Pax Silica from a predominantly Western and East Asian alliance into a genuinely global coalition. That geographic broadening increases the initiative’s collective market weight and its ability to establish de facto standards in technology supply chain governance and procurement.
Critical minerals and processing capacity
India holds meaningful deposits of strategic minerals and is well-positioned to expand its processing and refining capacity within the coalition’s trusted-network framework. According to the Economic Times, shares of Gujarat Mineral Development Corporation (GMDC) rose following India’s accession, indicating that investors quickly recognized the upstream implications of India’s participation.
Human capital at scale
At the summit, Indian officials noted that the global semiconductor industry will need one million skilled professionals to support new fabrication and technology infrastructure. India’s workforce scale and its established engineering talent base make it a natural partner in addressing that gap.
Corporate engagement
The summit was not attended solely by government officials. According to the Times of India, major global technology figures were present, including Google’s CEO. That reflects how closely corporate strategy and geopolitically-aligned industrial policy are now operating in parallel, and signals that Pax Silica’s architecture is expected to shape private-sector investment decisions, not just government procurement.
“Economic security is national security, and national security is economic security.” — U.S. Department of State, Pax Silica Declaration, February 20, 2026
The broader geopolitical context
Official communications around Pax Silica emphasize shared values, economic security, and the reduction of what policymakers describe as “weaponized dependencies”: strategic supply chain concentrations that create leverage risk. While no specific country is named in official statements, international reporting and industry analysis consistently interpret the initiative in the context of diversifying away from supply chain nodes where a single geography holds dominant control.
According to AP News, India’s accession arrived alongside a new interim U.S.–India trade framework that included tariff reductions, reinforcing that Pax Silica sits within a broader and accelerating bilateral momentum across trade, digital policy, and supply chain cooperation.
What this means for your supply chain
Pax Silica’s expansion creates both strategic opportunity and compliance complexity. Several developments warrant close attention.
Sourcing and investment geography will shift
As the trusted-network framework matures, companies will face growing incentives, and in some cases requirements, to align sourcing and capital investment with signatory nations. This dynamic is already visible in adjacent policy frameworks such as the CHIPS and Science Act, which conditions significant incentives on domestic production and supply chain provenance. Pax Silica extends that logic multilaterally. Organizations that have not yet mapped sub-tier exposure to non-signatory geographies should treat that as a near-term priority.
Compliance obligations are expanding
The initiative’s emphasis on investment screening, technology provenance, and sensitive technology protection suggests that governance requirements and supply chain risk for companies in semiconductor and AI hardware sectors will continue to grow. Participation in trusted-network ecosystems will carry specific transparency and documentation obligations, potentially extending to AI compute hardware and data infrastructure.
Capital allocation is following alignment
Companies positioned within Pax Silica-aligned supply chains are likely to benefit from preferential access to financing instruments, public-private partnerships, and government-supported infrastructure investment. Organizations with significant exposure to non-aligned supply chain nodes may face elevated cost pressures or financing friction as the coalition’s architecture develops. Understanding where your supply chain sits within that landscape is increasingly a strategic question, not an operational one.
Fragmentation risk is real and near-term
Pax Silica promotes resilience within its coalition while accelerating a structural shift toward parallel supply chain ecosystems globally. For multinationals operating across both aligned and non-aligned geographies, this fragmentation creates tangible costs: duplication of infrastructure, increased compliance complexity, and tension between diverging regulatory environments. These are not hypothetical long-term scenarios. They are planning considerations for capital expenditure cycles already underway.
Architecture, not announcement
Pax Silica is an effort to build enduring architecture: a coordinated, multilateral framework for technology supply chain governance across AI, advanced semiconductors, and next-generation industrial systems.
India’s accession expands that architecture’s economic scale, geographic reach, and upstream minerals capacity. As a tenth signatory, its participation signals that this coalition is building toward durable institutional weight, with more members expected to follow.
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