Representative image / AI generated
The emergence of Artificial Intelligence (AI) as the defining technology of the 21st century has reshaped global power equations. Control over data, computing power, and algorithms is rapidly becoming as consequential as control over energy or finance.
Against this backdrop, the India-led AI Impact Summit, scheduled in New Delhi from Feb. 16–20, 2026, represents a decisive shift in how AI will be conceptualized, governed, and deployed. The unique feature of this summit lies in its emphasis on inclusion and development outcomes rather than scale, dominance, or monopoly.
India’s intervention comes at a critical moment as the world enters what many describe as the “AI Techade,” where prevailing AI models remain concentrated in a handful of countries and corporations. The Indian proposition advances a model of democratic, frugal, and sovereign AI, explicitly designed for the realities of the Global South. Drawing on its experience with Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), India has positioned itself as both a laboratory and a bridge—combining cutting-edge technology with the needs of large, diverse, and resource-constrained societies.
ALSO READ: Silicon Valley meets New Delhi
India has adopted a layered and strategic approach that prioritizes autonomy, efficiency, and scalability. This architecture spans five interlinked layers: applications, models, chips, infrastructure, and energy. Together, they form a vertically integrated ecosystem capable of sustaining national AI capabilities without excessive dependence on external vendors, geopolitically vulnerable supply chains, or growing trends toward the weaponization of technology.
India’s focus is on task-specific and medium-scale models optimized for population-scale governance to facilitate service delivery and productivity gains. Model design is aligned with real-world use cases such as agricultural advisories, welfare targeting, health diagnostics, and education delivery. This approach is reinforced by investments such as the 10,000-GPU national compute grid and initiatives like BharatGen, which aim to democratize access to AI resources for startups, researchers, and public institutions. The underlying principle is “diffusion first”: AI must be widely deployed and locally usable, rather than confined to elite research labs or corporate silos.
By reducing training costs, optimizing inference efficiency, and emphasizing return on investment, India offers a credible alternative to capital-intensive AI models that remain inaccessible to most developing countries. This approach has already yielded measurable outcomes. According to global benchmarks, India ranks among the top three countries in AI talent availability and preparedness. More importantly, it has demonstrated the ability to deploy AI at population scale, enabling India to function as a systems integrator capable of aligning AI with governance structures and developmental priorities.
One of the most consequential pillars of India’s AI ecosystem is its work on language technologies. With 22 official languages and hundreds of dialects, India confronts immense linguistic diversity. The Bhashini initiative, launched under the National Language Translation Mission, addresses this challenge by providing open, interoperable AI services for speech, translation, and voice interfaces. Bhashini operates as a public digital good. Its open APIs enable governments, startups, and civil society actors to build services in local languages at affordable cost.
The platform relies on participatory data creation through initiatives such as crowdsourced language contributions, ensuring that AI systems reflect local idioms and cultural nuance rather than imported linguistic norms. This linguistic capability is not merely technical; it is political. Language access determines who can participate in the digital economy, access public services, and exercise civic rights. By embedding linguistic inclusion into its AI stack, India advances the idea of digital citizenship as a universal entitlement.
ALSO READ: India built what no one else did: Macron
India’s AI experience holds particular relevance for Africa, a continent defined by demographic dynamism, linguistic diversity, and developmental urgency. With over 2,000 languages and a rapidly growing youth population, Africa faces challenges strikingly similar to those India has navigated over the past two decades. The Indian AI model therefore offers a natural foundation for South-South cooperation.
Low-resource language training techniques developed for lesser-spoken Indian languages can be adapted to African contexts, enabling local languages to become functional interfaces for governance, education, and commerce. This alignment supports the objectives of Agenda 2063 and its Second Ten-Year Implementation Plan (2024–2033), which identify digital transformation and AI as strategic enablers of inclusive growth.
Beyond language, India’s DPI-driven AI solutions provide ready-to-deploy templates for health systems, financial inclusion, agricultural extension, and logistics optimization. Rather than importing proprietary platforms, African countries can co-develop sovereign AI capabilities that retain control over data while benefiting from shared architectures and open standards.
The economic implications of such partnership are substantial. AI adoption has the potential to boost productivity, reduce transaction costs, and integrate fragmented markets. Applied strategically, AI can help operationalize the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and regional customs unions such as the East African Community (EAC), the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), and the Southern African Customs Union (SACU) by streamlining customs procedures, optimizing supply chains, and reducing logistics inefficiencies.
India’s experience in fintech-enabled credit assessment illustrates how AI can unlock financing for small and medium enterprises—the backbone of African economies. Similarly, AI-driven manufacturing optimization can support Africa’s transition from raw material exports to higher-value industrial activity, reinforcing economic resilience.
ALSO READ: AI must not replace human potential
A persistent concern surrounding AI is its impact on employment. India’s model offers a counter-narrative. Rather than emphasizing labor replacement, it prioritizes skill upgrading and augmentation. AI tools are deployed to enhance worker productivity, support decision-making, and expand service coverage.
For Africa, where millions of young people enter the job market annually, this distinction is critical. AI-enabled vocational training delivered in local languages can accelerate skill acquisition and align workforce capabilities with emerging sectors such as digital services, green manufacturing, and logistics. In this framework, AI becomes an enabler of decent employment rather than a source of displacement.
The broader significance of the AI Impact Summit lies in its contribution to global AI governance. By foregrounding impact, accessibility, and safety, India has catalyzed a collective conversation among developing countries about data sovereignty, algorithmic bias, and ethical deployment. Strong participation from governments, multilateral institutions, and industry leaders signals growing momentum for a more inclusive techno-legal framework.
ALSO READ: Education key to responsible AI use: Estonia President
In sum, the India-led AI Impact Summit marks a pivotal moment in the evolution of global AI. By advancing a sovereign, frugal, and inclusive model, India has expanded the realm of possibility for the Global South. Its AI stack demonstrates that technological leadership need not be synonymous with exclusion, and that innovation can be aligned with equity, autonomy, and shared prosperity.
The deepening convergence between India and Africa illustrates how South-South cooperation can shape the next phase of the digital revolution. As AI continues to redefine economies and societies, the principles articulated through this partnership—openness, sovereignty, and human-centric design—may well determine whether AI becomes a bridge to collective advancement or a barrier reinforcing old divides.
The author is Ambassador of India to Ethiopia and Permanent Representative to the African Union.
(The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of New India Abroad.)
Discover more stories on NewIndiaAbroad
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Comments
Start the conversation
Become a member of New India Abroad to start commenting.
Sign Up Now
Already have an account? Login