Amazon investment in india – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Wed, 10 Dec 2025 05:55:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Amazon investment in india – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Amazon to invest $35 billion in India by 2030 across its businesses https://artifex.news/article70379116-ece/ Wed, 10 Dec 2025 05:55:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70379116-ece/ Read More “Amazon to invest $35 billion in India by 2030 across its businesses” »

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Amazon has already invested $3.7 billion in India between 2016 and 2022. File
| Photo Credit: Reuters

E-commerce giant Amazon plans to make a mega investment of $35 billion — more than ₹ 3.14 lakh crore — in India by 2030 across its businesses with a focus on AI-driven digitisation, export growth and job creation, a senior company official said on Wednesday (December 10, 2025).

Making the announcement during the Amazon Smbhav Summit, Senior V.P. Emerging Markets, Amit Agarwal, said the company has set a target to quadruple exports from India to $80 billion from about $20 billion it has facilitated as of now and create an additional one million direct, indirect, induced and seasonal jobs by 2030.

“Amazon to date has invested $40 billion in India since 2010. Now we will invest another $35 billion by 2030 across all our businesses in India,” Mr. Agarwal said.

Amazon’s investment plan is twice that of Microsoft’s investment plan of $17.5 billion and close to 2.3 times that of Google’s $15 billion investment plan by 2030.

“Amazon is the largest foreign investor in India, according to a Keystone report compiled from publicly available data,” said Mr. Agarwal said.

Also Read | GST simplification will do good for sellers and buyers, says Amazon Country Manager

In May 2023, Amazon announced plans to invest $12.7 billion in India by 2030 into its local cloud and AI infrastructure across Telangana and Maharashtra. The company has already invested $3.7 billion in India between 2016 and 2022.

Mr. Agarwal said that the company has invested at scale towards building physical and digital infrastructure, including fulfilment centres, transportation networks, data centres, digital payments infrastructure and technology development.

According to the Keystone report, Amazon has digitised over 12 million small businesses and enabled $20 billion in cumulative e-commerce exports, while supporting approximately 2.8 million direct, indirect, induced and seasonal jobs across industries in India in 2024.

To push export growth from India, Amazon launched a manufacturing-focused initiative, “Accelerate Exports”, designed to connect digital entrepreneurs with trusted manufacturers while enabling manufacturers to become successful global sellers.

As part of the program, Amazon will host on-ground onboarding drives in over 10 manufacturing clusters across India, including Tirupur, Kanpur and Surat.

At the Smbhav Summit, Amazon announced a key partnership with the Apparel Export Promotion Council of India to expand and scale the programme nationwide.



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Amazon’s investment in India to make up for its losses; not to support Indian economy: Piyush Goyal https://artifex.news/article68550149-ece/ Wed, 21 Aug 2024 11:04:48 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68550149-ece/ Read More “Amazon’s investment in India to make up for its losses; not to support Indian economy: Piyush Goyal” »

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Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal on Wednesday (August 21, 2024) questioned Amazon’s announcement of $1 billion investment in India, saying the U.S. retailer was not doing any great service to the Indian economy but filling up for the losses it had suffered in the country.

He said that their huge losses in India “smells of predatory pricing”, which is not good for the country as it impacts crores of small retailers.

Launching a report on ‘Net Impact of e-commerce on Employment and Consumer Welfare in India’, the Minister lambasted the e-commerce companies, questioning their business model that has been impacting small retailers in the country.

“When Amazon says that we are going to invest a billion dollars in the country, we celebrate, and we forget that the billion dollars are not coming in for great service or investment to support the Indian economy. They made a billion-dollar loss in their balance sheet that year, they had to fill in that loss,” he said.

”And how did that loss get caused, they paid ₹1,000 crores to professionals. I do not know who these professionals are…I would love to know, which chartered accountants, professionals, or lawyers get ₹1,000 crores unless you are paying all the top lawyers to block them so that nobody can fight a case against you,” the Minister said.

He wondered whether the ₹6,000 crore loss in one year does not smell of predatory pricing, as they are just an e-commerce platform and those companies are not allowed to do B2C (business to consumer) business.

As per the policy, the e-commerce platform legally can not do B2C in the country.

The Minister alleged that these companies only re-route all the businesses through an entity to show that it is B2B.

“How are they doing it? Should this not be a matter of concern for us,” he said.

He added that the e-commerce sector has a role, but one has to think “very” carefully and cautiously about what that role is.

“How that role can be in an organised fashion. Is predatory pricing policies good for the country?” Mr. Goyal asked.

He also said that e-commerce companies are eating into the small retailer’s high-value, high-margin products that are the only items through which the mom-and-pop stores survive.

The Minister also said that with the fast-growing online retailing in the country, “Are we going to cause huge social disruption with this massive growth of e-commerce”.

Citing examples of Western countries, Mr. Goyal said Europe and America have seen the consequences of this.

“What has happened to the mom-and-pop stores there? How many do you see surviving, why did Switzerland allow e-commerce until recently (so late),” he said, adding “…I am not wishing away e-commerce, it is there to stay”.

Further, he said one has to see the impact of cloud kitchens on restaurants and people buying food items online.

“We will land up becoming a country of couch potatoes, watching OTT and having food at home every day,” he said.

Commenting on online pharmacies, the Minister said, “We have to assess what is happening to 5 lakh pharmacies of the country”.

He expressed concern over these firms selling medicines online.

“Online, you can order whatever you want…it is a matter of concern,” Mr. Goyal said, adding “How many mobile stores do you see in the corner, and how many were there 10 years ago”.

He pointed out that India is not a developed nation like the U.S. and Switzerland with high per capita income, and a large section of people need affirmative action and help here.

“Of course, I do not deny that technology will play its part, technology is a means to empower, to innovate, to meet consumer requirements, probably sometimes more efficiently, but we will have to see that it grows in an orderly fashion,” he said.

People have to see that this connectivity and convenience is citizen-centric, he said, adding that in the race for market share of online retailers at 27% a year, “we do not land up causing huge disruption for the 100 million small retailers across the country”.

Amazon India is facing rising competitive intensity in India from players like Flipkart and SoftBank-backed Meesho, as well as the onslaught of firms like Blinkit, Swiggy’s Instamart and Zepto that are making aggressive inroads into the market as busy consumers opt for the convenience of instant delivery of grocery and many other household items.

Last year, Amazon had talked of plans to invest $5 billion more in India, taking its total investment in the country to $26 billion.

After meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his visit to the U.S. in 2023, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said: “I had a very good and productive conversation with Prime Minister Modi. I think we share a number of goals. Amazon is one of the biggest investors in India. We have invested $11 billion to date and intend to invest another $15 billion, which will bring the total to $26 billion. So, we are very much looking forward to the future of partnering”.

Mr. Goyal also criticised the report, saying he does not agree with the findings of the study ‘Net Impact of e-commerce on employment and consumer welfare in India’.

“I would like to completely disassociate myself from this report…I do not agree with any of these findings….I think, in the urge to show that this has not had an impact on employment in India, the researchers have lost sight of even the statistics, which EY has put out,” the Minister said.



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Amazon To Invest $3 Million In Nature-Based Projects In India https://artifex.news/amazon-to-make-initial-investment-of-usd-3-mn-in-nature-based-projects-in-india-4357618/ Mon, 04 Sep 2023 08:19:18 +0000 https://artifex.news/amazon-to-make-initial-investment-of-usd-3-mn-in-nature-based-projects-in-india-4357618/ Read More “Amazon To Invest $3 Million In Nature-Based Projects In India” »

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Amazon India has also committed to deploying 10,000 EVs in its delivery fleet by 2025. (File)

New Delhi:

E-commerce major Amazon on Monday said it will make an initial investment of $3 million in nature-based projects in India. The allocation is part of the company’s $15 million fund it has allocated for nature-based projects in Asia Pacific (APAC).

“The first USD 3 million from the fund’s APAC allocation will support nature-based projects in India.

“For its first project, Amazon will be working with the Centre for Wildlife Studies (CWS) to support communities and conservation efforts in the Western Ghats, which is home to more than 30 per cent of all of India’s wildlife species, including the world’s largest population of wild Asiatic elephants and tigers,” the company said in a statement.

Amazon will provide $1 million to help CWS establish the “Wild Carbon” program, which will support 10,000 farmers in planting and maintaining one million fruit-bearing, timber and medicinal trees, according to the statement.

“The Asia-Pacific region is home to vast forests and rich coastal environments, but it is also highly vulnerable to climate change, biodiversity loss and land degradation.

“To protect the region from the impacts of climate change and preserve biodiversity, we will need both large-scale and local action – and we are committed to investing in both,” Amazon’s Global VP for Sustainability, Kara Hurst said.

The $15 million allocation draws from Amazon’s $100 million Right Now Climate Fund, which was created in 2019, to support nature conservation and restoration projects that enhance climate resilience and biodiversity, while driving social and environmental benefits in communities where they operate.

“Amazon’s support enables us to plan and build a program that is self-sustaining in the long-term. The farmers will receive upfront support to select tree types that serve both their livelihoods and the wildlife, whilst also receiving technical assistance, agroforestry training, and support for replanting failed saplings,” CWS Executive Director Krithi Karanth said.

In 2019, Amazon co-founded The Climate Pledge, committing to reach net-zero carbon by 2040 — 10 years ahead of the Paris Agreement.

The Pledge now has more than 400 signatories across 55 industries and 38 countries including nine Indian companies — BluPine Energy, CSM Technologies India, Godi, Greenko, HCL, Infosys, Mahindra Logistics, Tech Mahindra, and UPL.

In 2022, Amazon launched six utility-scale projects in India, and the company claims to be on track to power its global operations with 100 per cent renewable energy by 2025 — five years ahead of the initial 2030 target.

The projects include three wind-solar hybrid projects located in Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka, as well as three solar farms in Rajasthan, representing a total renewable energy capacity of 920 megawatts.

Amazon India has also committed to deploying 10,000 electric vehicles in its delivery fleet by 2025.

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