Global business leaders and heads of state gathered in New Delhi this week for India’s AI Impact Summit 2026, which concluded on February 20. This summit marks the fourth in an annual series that commenced in the UK in 2023, followed by events in Korea and France. India’s ambitions to emerge as a leader in artificial intelligence were underscored by significant investments from major technology firms announced during the summit.
Despite India’s vast pool of tech talent, challenges remain. As noted by The New York Times, “India brims with tech talent but not the companies that command it.” While the country has been slow to evolve its technology, it boasts a massive AI user base, with around 100 million weekly ChatGPT users among its population and a large underutilized workforce. However, the summit was marred by logistical issues, with delegates facing blocked roads and lengthy queues to access the event. Local residents, particularly those from poorer communities, accused state leaders of displacing them from their homes to beautify the area for international guests.
Amid these challenges, technology giants such as Microsoft, OpenAI, and Nvidia made significant announcements that could shape the future of AI in India. Microsoft revealed plans to invest $50 billion in the “global south,” a term referring to developing countries. The company highlighted that AI usage is approximately twice as high in the “global north” compared to its southern counterparts. The investment aims to improve AI adoption in India by building necessary infrastructure, fostering local innovations, and developing multilingual AI capabilities.
This announcement follows Microsoft’s previous commitment to invest $17.5 billion in AI in India last year. Meanwhile, Gautam Adani’s Adani Group disclosed its own ambitious plans, announcing a $100 billion investment to establish what it calls the “world’s largest integrated data centre platform” in India. This move aims to expand AdaniConnex’s existing 2 GW national data centre capacity to a target of 5 GW, with a promise that these facilities will operate on renewable energy.
Adani’s initiative includes partnerships with technology giants like Google and Microsoft, and the company indicated ongoing discussions for additional large-scale data centre projects with other prominent players. The Adani Group estimates that its latest investment will contribute an additional $150 billion to India’s economy by 2035 through advancements in manufacturing, electrical infrastructure, and cloud platforms, projecting a total AI infrastructure ecosystem worth $250 billion over the next decade.
In a similar vein, Reliance Industries, a leading telecommunications company, announced an investment of 10 trillion rupees, approximately $110 billion, aimed at enhancing AI computing infrastructure across the nation. Mukesh Ambani, the company’s owner, described this capital infusion as a commitment to building India’s sovereign compute infrastructure, which will encompass extensive data centres, a nationwide edge computing network, and newly integrated AI services.
“This is not speculative investment; this is patient capital to build India,” Ambani stated at the summit. In another noteworthy development, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) revealed OpenAI as its first customer for its newly launched data centre business, Hypervault. OpenAI has committed to an initial 100 MW of AI capacity, which could eventually scale to 1 GW as part of its Stargate venture, a $500 billion private initiative aimed at establishing AI data centres globally.
The partnership will also enable the deployment of ChatGPT Enterprise across subsidiaries of the Tata Group over the next seven years. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman emphasized the collaboration’s goal of creating the infrastructure, skills, and local partnerships necessary to develop AI tailored for India, thereby allowing broader access and benefits for its population.
Meanwhile, Larsen & Toubro (L&T) announced its plan to construct India’s “largest gigawatt-scale AI factory” leveraging Nvidia’s AI infrastructure, which includes GPUs, CPUs, and accelerated storage solutions. This collaboration aims to enhance Nvidia GPU clusters in L&T’s data centres located in Chennai and Mumbai. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang remarked that AI is driving unprecedented infrastructure growth globally, stating, “Everyone will use it, every company will be powered by it, and every country will build it.”
The announcements made during the AI Impact Summit illustrate a pivotal moment for India’s aspirations in the global AI landscape, with both public and private sectors investing heavily in the technology. As these initiatives unfold, the potential for AI to transform India’s economy and social fabric appears promising, although execution and equitable development will be critical in ensuring that benefits reach the wider population.
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