Context:
India hosted the Global AI Impact Summit 2026, marking the first major global artificial intelligence summit organized by a Global South country. The event introduced the MANAV vision for ethical AI, adopted the Delhi Declaration on AI governance, and attracted massive investments in AI infrastructure.
Key Highlights:
Global Participation and Strategic Significance
• The summit brought together 20+ heads of state and over 500 AI leaders from 100+ countries.
• It positioned India as a leader of the Global South in shaping AI governance frameworks.
MANAV Vision for Ethical AI
• Proposed by the Prime Minister as a framework for human-centric artificial intelligence governance.
• Focus areas include:
• Ethical guardrails for AI development
• Data sovereignty and democratic oversight
• Inclusive access to AI benefits across society.
Delhi Declaration on AI
• A governance blueprint structured around three pillars: People, Planet, and Progress.
• Promotes responsible AI innovation, sustainability, and global collaboration.
AI Infrastructure Investments
Major investments announced in India’s AI ecosystem:
• Microsoft – $17.5 billion
• Google – $15 billion
• Amazon Web Services – $8.3 billion
• Adani Group – $100 billion.
Government Policy Support
• Union Budget 2026–27 introduced:
• Tax holidays for foreign companies using Indian data centres.
• $1.1 billion AI venture capital fund.
Sovereign AI Development
• India is developing indigenous AI models, including:
• Sarvam AI’s Large Language Model (LLM)
• BharatGen’s Param2 model supporting 22 Indian languages.
Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) as AI Base
• India’s UPI and JAM Trinity underpin digital governance:
• UPI processed 228 billion transactions in 2025.
• ₹3.48 lakh crore in welfare savings since 2015 due to digital delivery.
Global AI Supply Chain Partnerships
• India joined Pax Silica Declaration and India–US AI Opportunity Partnership.
• Focus on securing AI chips, semiconductors, and critical minerals supply chains.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Data Sovereignty: Principle that data generated within a country is governed by its national laws.
• Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): Shared digital platforms enabling services such as:
• Aadhaar
• UPI
• JAM Trinity (Jan Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile).
• AIKosh Platform: Provides 7,500+ datasets and 273 AI models to support research.
• AI Extractivism: Situation where developing countries’ data is used to train foreign AI systems without equitable benefits.
• UPI (Unified Payments Interface): Real-time payment system developed by NPCI.
Relevant Mains Points:
- India’s Emerging Role in Global AI Governance
• India aims to shape ethical, inclusive, and development-oriented AI frameworks.
• Provides a Global South perspective in technology governance debates. - Strategic Importance of AI for Economic Growth
• AI is expected to contribute significantly to productivity, digital economy growth, and innovation.
• Investments in data centres, semiconductor supply chains, and AI startups strengthen the ecosystem. - Digital Public Infrastructure as a Model
• India’s DPI demonstrates how large-scale digital platforms can enable AI-based governance solutions.
• Offers a scalable framework for population-scale AI applications. - Challenges and Concerns
• Risk of data exploitation by global tech companies.
• Digital divide and unequal access to AI technologies.
• Need for regulation of AI ethics, bias, and privacy issues. - Way Forward
• Strengthen domestic AI research and semiconductor manufacturing.
• Promote open AI ecosystems and multilingual AI models.
• Develop global norms on AI ethics and accountability.
• Ensure AI benefits reach rural and marginalized communities.
UPSC Relevance:
• GS Paper II: Technology governance, international cooperation in AI.
• GS Paper III: Science & technology, digital economy, innovation ecosystems.
• Prelims: DPI, UPI, data sovereignty, AI governance frameworks.
