India AI Impact Summit 2026
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Last reviewed
Jun 2, 2026
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18 citations
Review status
Source-backed
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v1 · 2,399 words
Add missing citations, update stale details, or suggest a clearer explanation.
The India AI Impact Summit 2026 was a major international summit on artificial intelligence governance and development held at Bharat Mandapam in New Delhi, India, in February 2026. Hosted by the Government of India through its Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), it was the fourth gathering in the series of global AI summits that began with the United Kingdom's AI Safety Summit at Bletchley Park in 2023 and continued through Seoul in 2024 and Paris in 2025. It was the first summit in the series to be hosted by a country of the Global South.[1][2][3] The summit's headline outcome was the New Delhi Declaration on AI Impact, a non-binding statement endorsed by roughly 88 to 89 countries and international organisations, including the United States, China and Russia, that called for "secure, trustworthy and robust" AI whose benefits are shared broadly rather than concentrated in a few nations or companies.[4][5][6]
The summit was convened under the banner "AI for All" and organised around three guiding principles, branded the three Sutras of People, Planet and Progress, and seven thematic tracks branded the seven Chakras.[2][3] Its stated ambition was to move the global AI conversation "from dialogue to demonstrable impact," shifting the agenda established at earlier summits away from a primary focus on frontier safety risk toward questions of access, inclusion, development and the diffusion of AI to poorer countries.[2][7]
India announced its intention to host the event after Prime Minister Narendra Modi co-chaired the Paris AI Action Summit in February 2025 alongside French President Emmanuel Macron.[3][7] The New Delhi meeting drew delegations from more than 100 countries, over 20 heads of state or government, dozens of ministers, and a large contingent of executives from the global and Indian technology industries. Indian and international press described it as one of the largest AI gatherings held to date.[1][3][8]
The India summit was the fourth in a sequence of intergovernmental meetings sometimes called the AI summit series or the "Bletchley process," which emerged as a recurring forum for international cooperation on AI after 2023. Each host has shaped the agenda differently, with the early meetings concentrating on the safety of frontier models and the later ones broadening toward economic action and inclusion.[7][9]
| Summit | Host and venue | Dates | Principal outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| AI Safety Summit | United Kingdom, Bletchley Park | 1 to 2 November 2023 | Bletchley Declaration, signed by 28 countries and the EU, on managing frontier AI risk [9][10] |
| AI Seoul Summit | South Korea (co-hosted with the UK), Seoul | 21 to 22 May 2024 | Seoul Declaration and the Frontier AI Safety Commitments by leading developers [7][9] |
| AI Action Summit | France, Paris | 10 to 11 February 2025 | Statement on inclusive and sustainable AI; the United States and the United Kingdom declined to sign [7][11] |
| India AI Impact Summit | India, New Delhi (Bharat Mandapam) | February 2026 | New Delhi Declaration on AI Impact, endorsed by roughly 88 to 89 countries and organisations [1][4][5] |
The first meeting at Bletchley Park produced the Bletchley Declaration, in which 28 countries and the European Union agreed to cooperate on identifying and managing the risks of frontier AI.[9][10] The Seoul summit a year later yielded the Seoul Declaration and a set of voluntary Frontier AI Safety Commitments from major model developers.[7][9] The Paris meeting reframed the gathering as an "Action Summit" focused on inclusive and sustainable AI and on investment; notably, the United States and the United Kingdom declined to sign its concluding statement, a split that made the broad endorsement of the New Delhi text the following year a point of emphasis for Indian organisers.[7][11] An International AI Safety Report, a scientific assessment first commissioned at Bletchley and chaired by Yoshua Bengio, accompanied the series as a recurring input to the discussions; the wiki covers it separately as the International AI Safety Report.[9]
The summit was hosted by the Government of India, with MeitY as the lead ministry, under the umbrella of the country's India AI Mission and Digital India programmes.[2][12] The full programme ran from 16 to 21 February 2026 at Bharat Mandapam, the convention centre at Pragati Maidan in New Delhi, with the high-level leaders' segment and formal inauguration taking place on 19 February.[1][3][13] Several outlets described the core ministerial and leaders' days as a roughly three-day window centred on 18 to 20 February, while government sources and the official programme presented the wider exhibition and events as spanning 16 to 21 February.[5][1] Organisers said the public-facing portions were extended by demand.[1]
According to figures released by Indian authorities and reported in the press, the summit was attended by representatives of more than 100 countries (some Indian sources cited 118) and around 20 international organisations, with several hundred thousand people taking part in person across the week and large online viewership.[1][3][8]
The summit's framework rested on three Sutras and seven Chakras.[2][3] The three Sutras were:
The seven Chakras were thematic working tracks covering human capital and skilling; inclusion for social empowerment; safe and trusted AI; science; resilience, innovation and efficiency; democratising AI resources; and AI for economic development and social good.[2][3] Across these tracks the organisers staged an India AI Impact Expo with several hundred exhibitors, a research symposium, and three flagship global "Impact Challenges": AI for ALL, aimed at AI solutions across sectors; AI by HER, promoting women-led AI; and YUVAi, a youth challenge for participants aged 13 to 21.[2][12]
The summit was inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 19 February 2026, and the opening sessions featured addresses by French President Emmanuel Macron and United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres.[13][14] In his remarks Guterres warned that "the future cannot be left to the whims of a few billionaires" and called for a multibillion-dollar global fund to widen access to open AI technology, while Modi argued that AI would be beneficial "only when it is shared and its core systems are open."[14]
The United States was represented by Michael Kratsios, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. The US delegation used the platform to set out the Trump administration's position, rejecting what it called "global governance of AI" and a risk-based regulatory approach, even as Washington went on to endorse the summit's concluding declaration.[4][6] More than 20 heads of state or government and dozens of ministers attended, among them Singapore's Minister for Digital Development and Information, Josephine Teo.[3][15]
The technology industry was heavily represented. Reported attendees and speakers included Sundar Pichai of Google, Sam Altman of OpenAI, Dario Amodei of Anthropic, Demis Hassabis of Google DeepMind, Arthur Mensch of Mistral AI, and Mukesh Ambani of Reliance Industries, alongside the computer scientist Yoshua Bengio and other researchers.[1][3] Microsoft founder Bill Gates was scheduled to speak but withdrew shortly before his session.[14]
The summit's central diplomatic outcome was the New Delhi Declaration on AI Impact, a voluntary, non-binding statement that Indian officials described as the broadest multilateral consensus on AI reached to date.[4][16] Reports placed the number of endorsing parties at 88 to 89 countries and international organisations; signatories named in coverage included the United States, China, Russia, the European Union, the United Kingdom, France, Israel, Canada, Saudi Arabia and Singapore.[5][6] The declaration's adoption was tied to the leaders' plenary of 19 February, with the full agreed text reported toward the close of the summit.[13][4]
The text was framed around the Indian principles of "Sarvajan Hitaya, Sarvajan Sukhaya" (welfare and happiness for all) and "Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam" (the world is one family), and affirmed that the benefits of AI must be equitably shared across humanity.[5][16] It was structured around the seven Chakras and committed signatories, in broad terms, to democratising access to AI resources, promoting economic growth and social good, building secure and trusted AI, expanding AI for science, advancing social empowerment, developing human capital, and pursuing resilient and efficient AI systems.[16][3] As with previous declarations in the series, it imposed no binding legal obligations.[4][16]
Indian authorities reported AI-related investment pledges exceeding 200 billion US dollars over roughly the following two years, spanning infrastructure, foundation models, hardware and applications; the Union Minister for Electronics and IT, Ashwini Vaishnaw, cited a figure above 250 billion dollars when describing the summit's infrastructure commitments.[4][5] Individual pledges reported in connection with the summit included around 110 billion dollars over seven years from Reliance Industries and its Jio unit, about 100 billion dollars from the Adani Group for renewable-powered data centres, and a global commitment from Microsoft of up to 50 billion dollars to expand AI in lower-income countries.[4]
Beyond the declaration, the summit produced a set of accompanying instruments. These included the New Delhi Frontier AI Impact Commitments, taken on by a group of about 13 global and Indian frontier model developers; the launch of a Global AI Impact Commons, a voluntary repository of AI deployment case studies; Voluntary Guiding Principles for Resilient, Innovative and Efficient AI, endorsed by more than 20 countries; Voluntary Guiding Principles for Reskilling in the Age of AI; and a Charter for the Democratic Diffusion of AI supported by around 22 countries and institutions.[4][3] India also used the occasion to showcase domestic AI work, including new large language models from Sarvam AI and the BharatGen initiative and an expansion of national generative AI compute capacity.[1]
Indian officials presented the summit as a diplomatic and economic success and as evidence of the country's arrival as a convening power in AI governance, pointing to the breadth of the declaration's endorsement and the scale of investment announcements.[5][16] International observers noted that securing signatures from both the United States and China, after the US and the UK had declined the 2025 Paris statement, marked a notable contrast with the previous summit.[6][11]
Coverage was nonetheless mixed. Several analysts argued that the gathering resembled a trade fair as much as a diplomatic negotiation, with the headline investment figures overshadowing the substance of the agreement.[4] Commentators observed that the declaration sidestepped the concentration of computing power and offered limited operational detail, and that it said little about child safety, national security risks, or loss-of-control concerns associated with advanced systems.[4] Writing for Tech Policy Press, critics contended that the summit's multistakeholder format granted corporations a degree of parity with governments while giving comparatively little room to civil society, labour and human-rights perspectives.[17] Reporters Without Borders argued that the declaration left a "gaping hole" by failing to address the right to reliable information and the effect of AI on the integrity of news.[18] The Institute of South Asian Studies in Singapore characterised the event as a "technological turning point" for India's global positioning while cautioning that the practical follow-through on the commitments remained to be seen.[2]
The summit was also marked by organisational and political incidents reported in the Indian press, including a venue closure to the public during the leaders' day and protests near the site by members of an opposition youth wing.[1]
The India AI Impact Summit consolidated a shift in the summit series away from its original framing around AI safety and frontier risk and toward access, development and the distribution of AI's benefits, a reorientation already visible at Paris in 2025 and amplified by New Delhi's "AI for All" message.[2][7] By hosting the first summit in the Global South and securing endorsement of its declaration from a wide range of governments, including major powers that had split over the Paris text, India sought to position itself as a bridge between advanced economies and developing countries in the emerging architecture of AI governance.[2][6] The non-binding character of the New Delhi Declaration, like its predecessors, left open the question of whether the series would eventually move toward enforceable commitments, a step some participating researchers said they hoped the process would reach.[4]
The summit was widely understood as part of a broader contest over who would shape the rules and infrastructure of AI, with the United States and China dominant in frontier model development and a group of so-called middle powers, India among them, seeking influence and access.[6] Future meetings in the series were reported to be planned for Switzerland in 2027 and the United Arab Emirates in 2028, indicating that the recurring summit format established at Bletchley would continue beyond New Delhi.[3]