Inaugurating 45th annual convention of Indian Society for Technical Education (ISTE), hosted by HVPM's College of Engineering and Technology here, Fadnavis said that excellence has been disconnected from technical education.
"Only 25 per cent of engineers produced in the country are of any use, which means the rest 75 per cent are useless. This is a very alarming situation," he said.
Speaking before the gathering which included delegates from foreign countries, Fadnavis said, "65 per cent of Indian population is below 35. It can be developed into a workforce but what we lack is the connect. The need of the hour is to transform this workforce into a skilled human resource."
"Technical education has been expanded through the private sector, but most of these colleges are in five states in the country, including Maharashtra," the CM said, adding that this uneven expansion was leading to half the engineering seats remaining vacant.
More From This Section
He also said that ratio of four diploma holders and eight ITI certificate holders for every engineering graduate was skewed, and "we are not being able to produce as many technicians as required."
said the world was now seeking a new manufacturing hub and India had the right combination of "demography, democracy and demand".
"Investors will invest only when the human resource is available. All big brands have invested in and around Pune because the city has been able to cater to their needs," he said.
The Chief Minister also warned that India had only 20 years' window to become a world provider of services. "If we do not exploit the demographic advantage we enjoy now, the focus will shift to African countries."
ISTE chairman Pratapsinh Desai, speaking on the occasion, said the engineering education in the country was only producing "engineering clerks" who are unfit for the industry.