What Happened
- PM Narendra Modi inaugurated the India AI Impact Summit 2026 on February 19, 2026, at Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi — the world's largest AI summit to date
- The summit ran from February 16-21, bringing together heads of state, tech company CEOs, AI researchers, and policymakers from across the globe
- French President Emmanuel Macron and UN Secretary-General António Guterres addressed the opening ceremony alongside Modi
- India became the first Global South nation to host a summit in the global AI governance series (preceded by UK Bletchley Park summit in 2023 and Paris AI Action Summit in 2025)
- Key outcome: "Delhi Declaration" on AI — ~70 countries expected to sign, covering safe AI, open AI resources, and AI for development
- India launched BharatGen Param2 — a 17-billion parameter multilingual AI model supporting 22 Indian languages with multimodal capabilities
- The government announced plans to add 20,000+ GPUs to India's compute base of 38,000 via the IndiaAI Compute Portal
- Major investment pledges: Reliance and Adani combined pledged $210 billion in domestic AI and data infrastructure
- Partnership deals: OpenAI with Tata Group; Anthropic with Infosys (and announced its Bangalore office)
- PM Modi held bilateral meetings with 7 heads of state/government and 2 major tech CEOs at the summit
Static Topic Bridges
India's AI Governance Architecture: IndiaAI Mission and Policy Framework
India launched its National AI Strategy in 2018 and has progressively built a policy and institutional framework for AI development and governance. The IndiaAI Mission, launched in 2024, is the primary vehicle for executing India's AI ambitions — covering compute infrastructure, datasets, research, startups, and safety.
- IndiaAI Mission budget: ₹10,371.92 crore (~$1.25 billion) approved by Cabinet in March 2024
- IndiaAI Compute Portal: Provides subsidised GPU access to startups and researchers — currently ~38,000 GPUs; 20,000+ to be added
- National Supercomputing Mission: Earlier initiative (2015) building HPC infrastructure; being integrated with AI compute
- BharatGen: India's multilingual large language model (LLM) program — BharatGen Param2 (17 billion parameters, 22 languages) represents a significant capability milestone
- AI safety framework: India's approach emphasises "inclusive AI" and "open AI" — distinct from EU's restrictive regulatory approach (AI Act) and US's voluntary frameworks
- Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023: India's primary data governance law underpinning AI policy
Connection to this news: The AI Summit served as the global debut of India's AI governance vision — demonstrating compute scale (GPU announcements), model development (BharatGen), and international engagement (Delhi Declaration). UPSC tests knowledge of India's science & technology policy frameworks, of which IndiaAI Mission is now central.
Global AI Governance: From Bletchley to Delhi
The global AI governance process began in earnest with the UK's AI Safety Summit at Bletchley Park in November 2023. It has since evolved into a series of international summits where governments, industry, and civil society negotiate norms, safety standards, and development principles for AI. India's hosting of the 2026 summit marks a shift of this process toward the Global South.
- Bletchley Park Summit (November 2023): Focused on frontier AI safety; produced "Bletchley Declaration" signed by 28 countries including China and the US
- Paris AI Action Summit (February 2025): Broader agenda including AI for public good, open-source AI, and sustainable AI; ~60 countries participated
- India AI Impact Summit (February 2026): First Global South host; expanded agenda including AI for development, multilingual AI, and bridging the compute divide
- "Delhi Declaration": Emphasises open AI models, equitable compute access, and AI in under-represented languages — distinct from Western focus on safety restrictions
- G7 Hiroshima AI Process: Parallel governance track focused on trustworthy AI among advanced economies
Connection to this news: India hosting the AI summit is diplomatically significant — it positions India as the voice of the Global South in AI governance, advocating for open models and equitable access rather than restrictive regulation. This is directly relevant to UPSC's international relations and emerging technology governance sections.
AI and India's Digital Economy: Strategic Implications
Artificial intelligence is increasingly central to India's economic strategy. India's IT/ITeS industry — a $250 billion+ sector employing ~5.4 million directly — faces both disruption and opportunity from AI. The government's strategy is to build domestic AI capabilities that preserve India's tech workforce competitive advantage while unlocking productivity gains across sectors.
- India is the world's second-largest internet user base (900 million+ users) — generating massive datasets for AI training
- IT sector risk: Generative AI threatens to automate significant portions of software development, BPO, and KPO work — India's core IT export segments
- IT sector opportunity: Indian firms (TCS, Infosys, Wipro, HCL) are repositioning as AI service providers — Anthropic-Infosys deal exemplifies this
- IndiaStack + AI: Combination of India's digital infrastructure (Aadhaar, UPI, ONDC) with AI creates unique public service delivery opportunities
- AI in agriculture, healthcare, judiciary: Government is deploying AI pilots across sectors — UPSC frequently tests AI applications in governance
- Tata Group-OpenAI deal: Positions Tata as a major AI infrastructure and services player in India
Connection to this news: The AI Summit brought together the global investment (Reliance, Adani, OpenAI, Anthropic) and governance (Delhi Declaration, bilateral meetings) dimensions of India's AI strategy into one event. UPSC Mains questions on India's technology policy and digital economy regularly require this kind of integrated analysis.
Key Facts & Data
- February 16-21, 2026: India AI Impact Summit 2026 dates (Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi)
- February 19, 2026: Inauguration by PM Modi (with Macron and Guterres)
- ~70 countries: Expected signatories of the Delhi Declaration on AI
- BharatGen Param2: 17 billion parameters, 22 Indian languages, multimodal capabilities
- 38,000: Current GPUs in India's AI compute base (IndiaAI Compute Portal); 20,000+ to be added
- $210 billion: Combined AI investment pledged by Reliance and Adani
- OpenAI-Tata Group partnership: Announced at summit
- Anthropic-Infosys partnership + Bangalore office: Announced at summit
- ₹10,371.92 crore: IndiaAI Mission budget approved by Cabinet (March 2024)
- First Global South host: India, in the AI safety/governance summit series