IndiaAI chief outlines pragmatic roadmap ahead of AI summit

Abhishek Singh, CEO of the IndiaAI Mission, has outlined a focused strategy for India's AI development, emphasizing practical, population-scale models over the global race for artificial general intelligence. In an interview, he highlighted India's potential as the world's inference capital and preparations for the upcoming AI Impact Summit in New Delhi. The approach prioritizes sovereign AI solutions tailored to Indian challenges in sectors like healthcare and agriculture.

As global powers race to develop ever-larger AI models in pursuit of artificial general intelligence (AGI), India is charting a more pragmatic course. Abhishek Singh, chief executive officer of the IndiaAI Mission, stated in an interview with Hindustan Times that the country is not competing in the AGI race. Instead, India aims to build AI systems that operate effectively at a population scale, focusing on smaller, task-specific models suitable for limited hardware and decentralized networks.

This aligns with recommendations in the recent Economic Survey, which advocates for efficient models addressing real-world problems in languages, healthcare, education, agriculture, and manufacturing. Singh emphasized that model size, measured in parameters, is less important than their ability to solve specific issues. The first phase of the IndiaAI Mission, backed by ₹10,372 crore, provides subsidized computing resources to 12 startups developing eight large language models and four smaller ones. These startups will showcase their work at the AI Impact Summit, scheduled from February 16 to 20 at Bharat Mandapam in New Delhi.

The summit's objective is to foster sovereign AI—built, hosted, and designed in India for local challenges—with potential for global scaling. Singh noted India's ambition to become the 'inferencing capital of the world,' where AI models run continuously for millions of users. Currently, the mission offers access to over 38,000 GPUs at subsidized rates, but Singh indicated this is insufficient; India may need 100,000 to a million GPUs for widespread use.

Electronics and IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw announced that the second phase of the mission will launch in about five months, including additional GPUs revealed at the summit. Recent policies, such as a tax holiday until 2047 for foreign companies routing global cloud services through Indian data centers, are expected to attract investments. Vaishnaw reported $90 billion already secured in AI and data center commitments, with $70 billion underway and projections up to $200 billion.

The summit anticipates over 100,000 attendees, including 20 heads of state, 100 government representatives, and 100 global AI leaders. India seeks more signatories for its joint declaration than previous events, such as the French summit with 58 signatories, despite potential absences from the US and UK. Singh remains optimistic, focusing on collaborative outcomes from seven international working groups. He acknowledged India trails the US and China in the global AI race but believes increased R&D investments, GPU access, and support for foundation models will enable catch-up and leapfrogging.

Related Articles

PM Narendra Modi inaugurating India AI Impact Summit 2026 at Bharat Mandapam with French President Macron and UN Secretary-General Guterres on stage amid AI-themed visuals.
Image generated by AI

India ai impact summit 2026 inauguration with pm modi's address

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

The fourth day of the india ai impact summit 2026 begins at bharat mandapam in new delhi, where prime minister narendra modi will address the inauguration session. French president emmanuel macron and un secretary-general antonio guterres will also be key speakers. Discussions on ai governance and global cooperation are on the agenda, alongside the spotlight on galgotias university's robodog controversy.

Top executives from global AI firms and world leaders are gathering in New Delhi for the India AI Impact Summit, the first such event in a developing country. India aims to attract more investment in the AI sector. The summit seeks to amplify the voices of developing nations in global AI governance.

Reported by AI

Heads of state and tech leaders from over 80 countries gathered in New Delhi to assess artificial intelligence's impact on humanity. The summit, convened by Narendra Modi, raised concerns about AI risks spiraling out of control. The New Delhi Declaration was signed after negotiations extended by one day.

Global IT spending will reach $6.31 trillion this year, propelled by artificial intelligence, according to Gartner. Indian IT firms face a margin squeeze as clients demand cost savings from AI adoption. The sector, however, spots opportunities in managed services.

Reported by AI

French President Emmanuel Macron has arrived in India for an official visit aimed at strengthening the bilateral strategic partnership with Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The agenda includes confirmation of the sale of 114 Rafale fighter jets and co-chairing the global AI summit in New Delhi. These discussions come amid global geopolitical tensions.

India has released a national strategy for advanced computational systems in healthcare, focusing on integration into the health system architecture rather than mere add-ons. The approach prioritizes infrastructure like interoperable records and ongoing oversight to ensure equity. This contrasts with global trends where regulation often lags behind innovation.

Reported by AI

Hong Kong is advancing an “AI for all” initiative to integrate artificial intelligence across society, including an allocation of HK$50 million for public awareness and skills-building through AI courses, seminars, and competitions on responsible use. The Employees Retraining Board will be rebranded as “Upskill Hong Kong” to offer skills-based AI training for workforce competitiveness. Industry leaders like Keith Li King-wah of Innopage have been adapting to the technology ahead of these government efforts, which also involve a major overhaul of school curricula and vocational retraining.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline