India's Dedicated Cryptology Centre Gets Rs. 115 Crore Funding

India’s Dedicated Cryptology Centre Gets Rs. 115 Crore Funding is a SearchSecurity article by Harichandan Arakali, published on 28 July 2014. The report covers initial federal funding for India’s first dedicated cryptology centre and includes comments from Sunil Abraham on the need for much larger investment in cryptography and mathematical research.

Contents

  1. Article Details
  2. Full Text
  3. Context and Background

Article Details

📰 Published in:
SearchSecurity.in
📅 Date:
28 July 2014
👤 Author:
Harichandan Arakali
📄 Type:
News Report
📰 Article Link:
Not available online

Full Text

Work on India's first dedicated cryptology centre, plans for which were first announced in June 2012, will likely accelerate as the project has gained initial funding of Rs. 115 crore from the federal government, stepping up the nation's efforts to stay on top of an area critical to its military and financial interests.

The research facility, called the RC Bose Centre for Cryptology and Security, is to be built on the campus of the Indian Statistical Institute at Kolkata, where there is already ongoing cryptology research and consultancy work, albeit on a smaller scale, according to professor Rana Barua, the centre's head.

In a world where electronic transactions and access to an ever-increasing number of places, installations and objects have made physical borders less relevant, the task of securing them against threats means strong encryption of data is critical to national defense.

"This centre is of course a welcome initial step, but it can't be the only thing. We will have to, ideally, take a billion dollars from some of the big funds, such as the Universal Service Obligation fund or from the next (wireless) spectrum auctions, and throw it at cryptography," said Sunil Abraham, director for policy at the Centre for Internet and Society, a non-profit research organisation.

"If the country takes our military superiority seriously, then when it comes to cyber wars, without having an upper hand in cryptography, there is no use discussing anything else," he added.

The new cryptology centre will focus on basic research, but take on applied work for India's defense needs and those of its financial institutions, professor Barua said, developing algorithms, testing encryption products for robustness, detecting vulnerabilities and so on.

"The center will augment indigenous capabilities in cryptology and information security," Bimal K Roy, director of the Indian Statistical Institute, told Press Trust of India, which reported the funding earlier this month.

"It is an important element of the overall efforts and framework to enhance capabilities to ensure holistic security of the Indian cyber space. With an eminent body of world class experts, it will act as a hub for all cryptographic requirements, cutting edge research and technology development within the country."

Once the centre is up and running and, over the next two years, it will have the infrastructure to allow more than 30 researchers to work, but "the problem of course is to get good researchers in this area," Barua said.

Pretty much all the best mathematicians in the world today work with the US government either directly or as part of the American academia and via research projects funded by the US government, said the Centre for Internet and Society's Abraham.

Given that most of the standards used today are those set by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the US standard-setting organisation, "we should ensure that our participation at NIST is of the highest quality and we need an army of mathematicians," he said.

However, in India there may be a small number of mathematicians who are capable of the highest level of cryptology research. Even if there are more, there is another problem for them to keep abreast of the latest advances.

In the past, maths used to be an open science and all advances would be published and available for peers to learn from each other. With the militarisation of the areas of maths that deal with cryptology, the latest research isn't available and mathematicians have to essentially work things out on their own as well as conjecture what others might be doing.

Today, every country other than the US faces a shortage of skilled cryptographers, according to Abraham: "Everybody is in the soup, but India is in worse soup because we went with this engineering craze instead of pure sciences and math, we've ignored building capacity in that area."

Back to Top ⇧

Context and Background

This article appeared at a time when concerns about cyber security, encryption standards and national technological self-reliance were becoming more central to Indian policy discussions. The establishment of a dedicated cryptology centre at the Indian Statistical Institute reflected an effort to build domestic capability in an area often dominated by global military and research powers.

Sunil Abraham’s comments place the funding announcement in a much larger frame. His argument is that modest institutional support is not enough, and that India would need sustained investment in pure mathematics, cryptography and international standards participation if it wanted to be strategically competitive in cyber security.

📄 This page was created on 24 May 2026. You can view its history on GitHub, preview the fileTip: Press Alt+Shift+G, or inspect the .