NEW DELHI: India’s industrial production expanded at a slower pace of 4.9 per cent in April due to tepid growth in the energy sector amid the West Asia crisis, according to official data released on Monday.
This is the first data released after the revision of the base year to 2022-23 and the rejigging of the index constituents. The factory output, measured in terms of the Index of Industrial Production (IIP), expanded by 5.7 per cent in April 2025.
The growth rate was 3.2 per cent in March 2026. “Driven by strong growth of 6.2 per cent in manufacturing sector, IIP records 4.9 per cent growth in April 2026,” the Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation (MoSPI) said in a statement.
The growth rates of the four sectors — mining & quarrying, manufacturing, electricity & gas supply, water supply, sewerage and waste Management — for April 2026 stood at (-) 5.1 per cent, 6.2 per cent, 4.9 per cent and 6.6 per cent, respectively, it said. The quick estimate of IIP stands at 118.9 against 113.1 in April 2025.
The MoSPI has revised the base year of the IIP from 2011-12 to 2022-23. The revised basket consists of 1,042 products mapped to 463 item groups, including 120 new item groups.
The base year revision exercise was undertaken under the aegis of the Technical Advisory Committee for Base Year Revision of the All India Index of Industrial Production (TAC-IIP). The committee’s report was released on May 25, 2026, laying the foundation for a more robust, relevant, and comprehensive measure of industrial production in India.
This is the 10th revision of the base year for IIP. The first IIP was prepared with a base year 1937. According to the MoSPI, the new IIP series provides greater granularity with separate indices for the generation of electricity through renewable and non-renewable, gas supply, fuel minerals, metallic minerals and non-metallic minerals, water supply, sewerage and waste management.
In the new IIP series, a total of 120 new item groups have been added, including cards with a magnetic stripe (debit card, credit card), CCTV camera, articles of non-woven textiles, parts of aircraft and spacecraft, stents, and vaccine.
Also, 64 item groups, including kerosene, fluorescent tubes and CFLs, tubes for bicycle/ tricycle/ rickshaw/LMV tyres, printing machinery, and sewing machines, have been dropped.
An expanded item basket improves representativeness, captures diversification in industrial production, and reflects emerging industrial products and technologies, MoSPI said, adding that the IIP will be released every month with a time lag of 28 days from the reference month.
Briefing the media after the release of the index, MoSPI Secretary Saurabh Garg said the new IIP series plugs gaps in previous batch, and has included minor mineral. Also, greater weightage has been assigned to plastic, rubber, and automobiles in the new series, he informed. “I would also like to highlight that the data gaps that we had in the previous IIP we have filled that,” the secretary said, and explained about the new additions in the series, including gas supplies, minor minerals and rare earth minerals.
According to the new IIP series, within the manufacturing sector, 17 out of 23 industry groups recorded a positive growth in April 2026 over April 2025. The top three positive contributors during April 2026 were: ‘manufwacture of motor vehicles, trailers and semi-trailers’ (12.7 per cent), ‘manufacture of electrical equipment’ (19.2 per cent) and ‘manufacture of machinery and equipment n.e.c’ (12.9 per cent), the IIP data showed.
Source: Millennium Post
