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Karnataka aims to attract Rs 40,000 crore investment in KHIR City

Bengaluru. The Karnataka government today deliberated on conceptualization of the development of Knowledge, Healthcare, Innovation and Research (KHIR) City on the outskirts of Bengaluru. The government aims to attract Rs 40,000 crore investment in the areas of healthcare, innovation and knowledge sectors besides creating 80,000 jobs in the proposed KHIR City. The new investment region will be spread over 2,000 acres within 60 kms from Bengaluru and developed in a phased manner.

Addressing the Ideation Session for setting up KHIR City, Shri M B Patil, honourable minister for large and medium industries and infrastructure development said, "We are embarking on a transformative journey to build a city that goes beyond conventional boundaries — a Knowledge, Healthcare, Innovation & Research City (KHIR City).” He further said, “Today, we have a diverse and influential group gathered here — from the Government, Medical Institutes, Private Companies, Research Centers, and Academia, to the Strategic Investment Committee of Karnataka. It's a convergence of minds that holds tremendous potential and I believe, collectively, we possess the potential to create not just a city but a hub of excellence." Apart from ensuring job creation and attracting investments from leading global and Indian hospitals and research centres, universities and private companies, the initiative has the potential to contribute towards the state’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) due to increased economic activity. “Besides attracting investments, it is aimed at contributing at least Rs 1 lakh crore to the state GDP,” Shri Patil said.

The captains of Indian industry drawn from healthcare, medical education, real estate, financial services and insurance sectors attended the ideation session and shared their suggestions. The industry representatives such as Shri Kris Gopalakrishnan, Dr Devi Prasad Shetty, Dr C N Manjunath, Smt Gitanjali Kirloskar, Shri Prashant Prakash, Shri Nitin Kamath, Dr Deepak Venugopalan, Dr Sharan Prakash Patil, and Dr L S Shashidhar among others participated in the session. The proposed KHIR City is being developed to attract investments from leading global and national hospitals, research institutions, universities, private companies, etc. This will help in strengthening Bengaluru’s position as a hub of medical tourism, providing employment to local people, and also help in attracting skill sets from across the globe.

Bengaluru has the largest skilled talent pool in India and is best suited for development of KHIR City. Karnataka has a strong innovation ecosystem with many global companies’ R&D units set up here. Leading healthcare players are already present in the state. About 60% of India’s biotech companies are in Karnataka,” said Shri Patil. With Karnataka being home to 60 per cent of India’s biotech companies and over 350 medical devices and supplies manufacturers across categories, the development of KHIR near Bengaluru, the fastest-growing innovation cluster globally, augurs as an ideal location. KHIR City is poised to redefine the city's global position by fostering the growth of cutting-edge knowledge institutions, healthcare facilities, innovation hubs, and research centres.

Karnataka is already among top five states in India in terms of economic value and contributes about 8.7 percent to the National GDP. Such initiatives further strengthen the state's position in the country. Speaking on the occasion, Shri Priyank Kharge, honourable minister for IT/BT, and S&T said KHIR City will be the first such centre of knowledge which will have innovators from healthcare, knowledge and global research centres coming together in one place. “Bengaluru will transform from being a call centre of the world to global centre of research and innovation,” he said. The government is planning to come out with a separate policy to promote the medical tourism in the state, said Shri Kharge. The state is home to 350 medical device and suppliers across categories and multiple institutes of excellence are present providing collaboration opportunity, he added.

Speaking on the occasion, Kris Gopalkrishnan, Co-founder of Infosys and Chairman of Axilor Ventures said, “The implementation speed is important for the development of KHIR City. We need to first develop a metro station before the KHIR City takes shape. Also, we want to generate IPs owned by India or Karnataka so that jobs and wealth is created here. We need to have an institute which trains scientists and researchers on how to move from lab to market.” The establishment of KHIR City has a strong global reference point with the Government of Karnataka aiming to bring this research city in line with Singapore’s Biopolis Cluster or Japan’s Kobe Biomedical Innovation Cluster.

afreen.choudhury@adfactorspr.com

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