Casablanca – From billion-dollar venture funding to massive data center investments, India used last week’s AI Impact Summit to showcase an aggressive expansion of its AI ambitions.
The Indian government announced it will earmark $1.1 billion for a state-backed venture capital fund dedicated to AI and advanced manufacturing startups. The fund is expected to channel capital into early- and growth-stage companies building core technologies and industrial applications across the country.
India’s technology ambitions were further revealed in a major private-sector pledge from the Adani Group, which said it will allocate $100 billion by 2035 to build AI-focused data centers powered by renewable energy. The conglomerate said the initiative is expected to catalyze an additional $150 billion in related investments spanning server manufacturing, electrical infrastructure, and sovereign cloud platforms.
International AI firms also deepened their footprint. OpenAI said it will open two new offices in Bengaluru and Mumbai and partner with the Tata Group to deploy 100 megawatts of compute capacity in India, with plans to scale that to one gigawatt.
Chief Executive Sam Altman said India now accounts for more than 100 million weekly active ChatGPT users, making it the company’s second-largest market after the United States, with nearly half of usage driven by people aged 18 to 24.
In another infrastructure push, UAE-based G42 teamed up with US chipmaker Cerebras Systems to deploy a supercomputer in India capable of performing eight quintillion calculations per second.
The initiative also involves Abu Dhabi’s Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence and India’s Centre for Development of Advanced Computing.
The summit also produced a diplomatic milestone. India said more than 88 countries and organizations, including the United States, China, and Russia, signed the New Delhi AI declaration committing to the use of AI for social and economic good.
Taken together, the announcements signaled a coordinated effort by New Delhi and global technology leaders to position India as a central hub for AI research, infrastructure, and commercial deployment.
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