The india ai impact summit 2026 ended on february 21 in new delhi, drawing global leaders and securing major investment pledges. Organizers hailed it as the world's largest ai event, but logistical issues highlighted challenges in india's ai ambitions. The new delhi declaration on ai impact gained endorsement from 88 countries.
The india ai impact summit 2026, held from february 16 to 21 at bharat mandapam in new delhi, brought together heads of state, tech executives, and thousands of visitors. It was described by organizers as the world's largest and most historic ai summit. Key attendees included alphabet ceo sundar pichai, openai’s sam altman, anthropic’s dario amodei, google deepmind ceo demis hassabis, microsoft president brad smith, french president emmanuel macron, and un secretary-general antonio guterres.
The summit produced the new delhi declaration on ai impact, endorsed by 88 countries and international organizations, including the us, china, russia, the uk, france, and developing nations. This exceeded the 61 signatories at the paris ai action summit in february 2025, as noted by india's it minister ashwini vaishnaw. The declaration outlines a vision for collaborative, trusted, and inclusive ai, with voluntary commitments and no enforcement mechanism. A us official, michael kratsios, stated that washington totally rejects global governance of ai. China was largely absent from proceedings.
The event shifted focus from earlier summits' emphasis on ai risks, as at bletchley park in 2023 and seoul in 2024, toward inclusion, economic opportunity, and investment, resembling a trade expo. Investment commitments included over $250 billion for infrastructure and $20 billion for venture capital deeptech, according to vaishnaw. Partnerships announced featured openai and amd with tata group. Sarvam ai unveiled 30-billion-parameter and 105-billion-parameter models supporting multilingual indian languages. Microsoft’s brad smith remarked there would be a variety of different deepseek moments to come, some in india.
Logistical challenges marred the event, with delegates facing shortages of food and water during security lockdowns, prolonged traffic jams from road closures, and long walks to transportation. An indian university was evicted after presenting a chinese-manufactured robot dog as domestic innovation. Despite these, the summit positioned india as a convening power in global ai governance, though it exposed gaps in domestic ai capacity.