Keynote-HE Emmanuel Macron
19 Feb 2026 10:15h - 10:30h
Keynote-HE Emmanuel Macron
Summary
Speaker 1 thanked the UN Secretary-General and introduced President Emmanuel Macron to address the gathering [1-3]. Macron opened with a story of a Mumbai street vendor who ten years ago could not open a bank account but now receives instant free payments on his phone, using it to illustrate a broader civilizational shift driven by digital identity, payments and health IDs in India [8-12][15-18]. He recalled that the France-India AI Action Summit in Paris a year earlier established a global principle that artificial intelligence should be an enabler for humanity across health, energy, mobility and public services [23-25]. He noted that since then the United States launched the Stargate program and China introduced DeepSeek, turning AI into a field of strategic competition and expanding the role of big tech [27-28]. Macron argued that hegemony is not inevitable and that both France and India can pursue innovation, independence and strategic autonomy together [33-35].
France has pledged €109 billion for AI, including €58 billion for data centres powered by decarbonised nuclear energy and a €200 billion European commitment to the Alice Recoque exascale supercomputer shared with the Netherlands and Greece [48-51]. India, by contrast, chose a granular approach, deploying 38 000 government-funded GPUs to startups, building a sovereign AI stack and training half a million engineers, the world’s second-largest developer community [38-40][52-54]. Both regions are investing in complementary technologies: Europe in large-scale models such as MIPAL and a European AI cloud, and France in four quantum-computing companies to make Europe a quantum power [42-44][57-59].
Joint projects were announced, including the Indofrench Institute for AI in Health linking the Sorbonne Brain Institute with EMS Delhi and collaborations to modernise hospital administration [80-81]. They also launched an open-hardware translation tool for Indian languages, a Coalition for Sustainable AI with over 200 supporters, and an international challenge on sustainable AI models with UNESCO [81-84]. The agenda extends to Africa, with a planned Africa Forward Summit in Nairobi and a commitment to provide inclusive digital tools for the continent’s rapidly growing youth population [86-88]. Both countries pledged to protect children online, with France moving to ban social-network access for under-15s and a G7 priority on safeguarding minors, a step India intends to mirror [92-99][96-98].
Macron highlighted a recent India-UAE AI partnership that combines Indian frugal models and engineering talent with Gulf capital and data-centre infrastructure to accelerate supercomputing [117-119]. He framed the overall message as a shift from a competitive “win-or-lose” mindset to a collaborative “connect-or-fall-behind” model, emphasizing that sovereign, responsible AI must be built together [126-128][130-132][136-137]. The discussion concluded with a shared conviction that France and India will jointly shape a sustainable, inclusive AI future [105-107][138].
Keypoints
– AI as a catalyst for inclusive digital transformation and sovereign infrastructure – Macron highlighted how India’s digital identity, payment system and health IDs have brought 1.4 billion people into the digital economy, and how India is developing “small language models…designed to run on a smartphone” and a government-funded AI platform with 38,000 GPUs for startups [8-12][15-18][38-40][63-66].
– Deepening France-India strategic cooperation on AI – The speech repeatedly stressed joint guiding principles from the 2023 AI Action Summit, shared investments in AI models, data-centres, talent pipelines, and concrete programmes such as the Indo-French Institute for AI in Health and multilingual translation tools [23-26][38-44][48-55][71-73][80-82][105-108].
– Balancing geopolitical competition with collaborative autonomy – Macron noted the rise of AI as a field of strategic rivalry (U.S. “Stargate”, China “DeepSeek”) while arguing that “hegemony … is not a fatality” and that France and India can achieve “strategic autonomy” together [27-34][35-36][46-47][126-128].
– Commitment to responsible and sustainable AI – The address called for child-online protection, safe-space regulations, and sustainable AI practices, citing France’s plan to ban social networks for under-15s and the “Coalition for Sustainable AI” with over 200 supporters [90-102][103][70-73][84-86].
– Expanding multilateral AI partnerships beyond the bilateral framework – Macron announced collaborations with the UAE (joint super-computing cluster), the G7 presidency, BRICS, UNESCO, and upcoming Africa-Forward Summit, positioning the France-India alliance as a hub for broader global AI cooperation [86-89][117-124][84-86].
Overall purpose/goal
The discussion aimed to reaffirm and deepen the France-India partnership on artificial intelligence, showcasing both countries’ sovereign AI achievements, announcing joint initiatives (health, language, sustainability), and urging broader multilateral cooperation to ensure AI remains inclusive, secure, and environmentally responsible while preserving strategic autonomy.
Overall tone
The tone begins with diplomatic courtesy and optimism, shifts to a more urgent, strategic framing as it acknowledges global AI competition, then moves to a collaborative and solution-oriented stance emphasizing partnership and concrete actions, and concludes with a hopeful, rallying call to “shape the future together.” The progression moves from celebratory to strategic to proactive and finally to inspirational.
Speakers
– Speaker 1
– Role/Title: Event moderator / host (appears to be introducing the main address) [S1][S3]
– Area of Expertise:
– Emmanuel Macron
– Role/Title: President of the French Republic [S5][S6]
– Area of Expertise: Politics, International Relations, AI policy
Additional speakers:
– (none)
Speaker 1 opened the session by thanking UN Secretary-General António Guterres and formally welcoming President Emmanuel Macron to address the August AI Impact Summit, underscoring the diplomatic courtesy that frames the meeting [1-3].
Macron began with a vivid anecdote about a Mumbai street vendor who, a decade earlier, could not open a bank account because he lacked an address or official papers [8-9]. He contrasted this with the vendor’s present ability to receive instant, free payments on his phone from anywhere in India [10-11], declaring that the story illustrates a “civilisation story” rather than merely a technological one [12-13]. He then highlighted India’s unique digital infrastructure: a universal digital identity for 1.4 billion people, a payment system handling 20 billion transactions per month, and a health network issuing 500 million digital health IDs [15-17]. These achievements constitute the “IndiaStack Open Interoperable Sovereign” that underpins the summit’s focus [19-20].
Recalling the 2023 AI Action Summit co-hosted by France and India, Macron reminded the audience that the two nations had agreed on a global guiding principle that artificial intelligence should serve as an enabler for humanity, accelerating innovation across health, energy, mobility, agriculture and public services [23-25]. He affirmed that both countries remain committed to this revolutionary vision [26].
Turning to the evolving geopolitical landscape, Macron noted that the United States launched the “Stargate” initiative [27] and China introduced “DeepSeek” [28], signalling that AI has become a major arena of strategic competition with implications for geopolitics and macro-economics [30-31]. Despite this rivalry, he argued that “hegemony from any quarter is not a fatality” and that a path toward innovation, independence and strategic autonomy is available to India and France [33-35].
He contrasted two complementary development models. India made a “deliberate sovereign choice” to create small, task-specific language models that run on smartphones [38] and deployed the world’s first government-funded AI platform, providing 38 000 GPUs to startups at the lowest possible cost [39]. Europe pursued a “sovereign and scaled” approach, investing in large-scale models such as MIPAL, now valued at €12 billion by a Dutch leader, an SML, German SAP and French CMS-HM [42-45], and building a European AI cloud through data-centre investments in Sweden and the acquisition of Koyeb [42-44]. Both paths embody independence and are mutually reinforcing [44-46].
On the investment front, France announced a $109 billion AI programme, including €58 billion earmarked for data-centres powered by decarbonised nuclear energy, and highlighted the export of 90 TWh of low-carbon electricity to accelerate data-centre construction [48-49]. At the European level, €200 billion has been committed to the Alice Recoque exascale supercomputer, a joint asset shared with the Netherlands and Greece [50-51]. These commitments illustrate France’s strategy of coupling AI growth with sustainable energy supply.
Talent development was presented as a parallel priority. India trains “hundreds of thousands” of AI engineers annually, now boasting a community of 500 000 developers-the world’s second-largest [52-53]. France aims to double its AI scientists and engineers, supports over 1 100 AI start-ups, and has forged partnerships with Dassault, Gradium for voice AI, Poolside, Ash, and Hugging Face [54-55].
In quantum computing, France is placing bets on four domestic companies-Pascal, Pandela, Alison and Quably-to make Europe a quantum power [57-59].
Macron highlighted the societal impact of the Indian model, noting that AI solutions now reach 200 million farmers in their own dialects, provide travel advice to 400 million pilgrims, and deliver diagnostics to rural clinics-all built on India’s digital public infrastructure and offered at near-zero cost [63-66]. In Europe, AI factories are optimising energy grids, transforming the economy and supporting a sustainable future while maintaining a “safe space” for innovation; Macron asserted that Europe is the only continent that currently has the capacity to build a competitive AI industry while protecting citizens’ data [68-70].
Concrete joint initiatives were announced. The Indo-French Institute for AI in Health, a partnership between the Sorbonne Brain Institute and EMS Delhi, will advance hospital administration and diagnostics [80-81]. A collaborative effort launched an open-hardware translation tool for Indian languages and dialects, the initiative dubbed “AI together”, underscoring the principle that AI must understand local tongues to be inclusive [81-84][136-138]. The “Coalition for Sustainable AI”, now with over 200 supporters, and an international challenge on sustainable AI models launched with UNESCO, signal a shared commitment to environmentally responsible AI [85-86].
Looking beyond bilateral ties, Macron outlined a broader multilateral agenda. An “Africa Forward Summit” will be held in Nairobi in May, aiming to equip the continent’s rapidly growing youth population with inclusive digital tools [86-88]. He added that AI and digitalisation will be a key theme for the months to come [86-88]. France will leverage its G7 presidency, while India will do the same through its BRICS chair, to promote this vision [89-90]. He stressed that no nation should become merely a market for foreign AI models that harvest citizen data [94-95].
On child protection, Macron referenced the Secretary-General’s earlier remarks on protecting children from AI-related digital abuse [99-101] and announced that France is preparing legislation to ban social-network access for users under 15 [96-98], positioning this as a G7 priority and inviting India to adopt a similar approach [102-103]. He framed safeguarding children as a civilisational duty rather than mere regulation [105-106].
The recent India-UAE AI partnership creates a super-computing cluster, shared data-centres and an innovation corridor, exemplifying “intelligent convergence” that combines Indian engineering talent with Gulf capital and infrastructure [117-124][125-128]. Macron contrasted the old paradigm of “compete or lose” with a new one: “connect or fall behind” [130-131], adding that while the financial scale of the AI “money race” is important, the outcomes and real value creation for our populations are even more critical [124-126].
In his concluding remarks, Macron reaffirmed that AI must be shaped by shared values-science, rule of law, multilateralism and innovation for the benefit of all [105-107]. He called for concrete actions: targeted funding, appropriate rules to prevent abuse, and strong partnerships that deliver safe, sustainable AI solutions [108-115]. He expressed confidence that “safe spaces win in the long run, and I am confident of that” [108-115]. He ended on an optimistic note, declaring that the future of AI will be built by those who blend innovation with responsibility, and that India and France will jointly shape that future [136-138][139]. The session closed with a rallying “Jai Ho!” signalling collective resolve [139].
Overall, the address reaffirmed and deepened the India-France strategic partnership on artificial intelligence, showcased each nation’s sovereign achievements, announced joint programmes in health, language and sustainability, and positioned the bilateral alliance as a hub for wider multilateral cooperation aimed at inclusive, responsible and environmentally-friendly AI development. The tone progressed from diplomatic courtesy, through strategic urgency, to collaborative optimism, culminating in a call for concrete, joint action.
Thank you, His Excellency Antonio Guterres, for your gracious address. Distinguished guests, it is my profound honor now to invite Honorable President of France, His Excellency Emmanuel Macron, to address the August gathering. Let’s extend a warm and respectful welcome to His Excellency Emmanuel Macron.
Mr. Prime Minister Deandre Ndramodi, heads of state and government, ministers, ambassadors, CEOs, ladies and gentlemen, namaste. Thank you very much for welcoming us in this magnificent city, in this magnificent country. And it’s great to be back. after my 2024 state visit for this Artificial Intelligence Impact Summit hosted by you, Mr. Prime Minister. And I want to start with a story. Ten years ago, a street vendor in Mumbai could not open a bank account. No address, no papers, no access. And today, the same vendor accepts payments on his phone, instantly. Instantly, for free, from anyone in the country. That is not just a tech story. That is a civilization story. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. And India built something that no other country in the world has built.
a digital identity for 1 .4 billion people. A payment system that now processes 20 billion transactions every month. A health infrastructure that has issued 500 million digital health IDs. Here are the results. They call it the IndiaStack Open Interoperable Sovereign. That, dear friends, is what this summit is about. We are clearly at the beginning of a huge acceleration, and you perfectly described it during your interventions. But let me just recap during one year what happened. Last year, when France and India co -hosted the AI Action Summit in Paris, we set a global guiding principle for technologies that would transform our societies and our economies. We said then artificial intelligence will be an enabler for our humanity to innovate faster, to disrupt health care, energy, mobility, agriculture, public services for the good of mankind.
Both of us, we do believe in this revolution. One year ago, the landscape started to shift. The U .S. announced Stargate. China launched DeepSeek. AI has become a major field of strategic competition and big tech got even bigger. And a lot of them are in this room and still accelerated during the last year. AI, GPU, chip extensions are now directly translated in geopolitical and macroeconomic terms. Sometimes for the best, sometimes for the worst, I have to say. But clearly one year ago, we demonstrated something else. Hegemony from any quarter is not a fatality. There is a path for innovation, independence, and strategic autonomy. And this path, I am convinced, is one that countries like France and India must take together.
And we have already achieved a lot. If we speak about models, you perfectly described the acceleration and the diversity of these models. India made a deliberate sovereign choice, small language models, task -specific, designed to run on a smartphone. And India built the first government -funded AI and deployed 38 ,000 GPUs at the cheapest rates to every startup in the country, as you perfectly described, Mr. Minister. We took a complementary path. We invested in the technology. We invested in European large language models, MIPAL, founded in Paris a little bit more than two years ago. is now valued at 12 billion euros by a Dutch leader, an SML, German SAP, and French CMS -HM, serving over a million major clients all over the place in Europe and elsewhere.
They announced last week a new investment in data center in Sweden and a new acquisition of Koyeb, building an actual European AI cloud. India chose granular and smart, and Europe chose sovereign and scaled. But both chose independence, and both were right. And this is as well the cooperation with LLMs coming from the U .S. and through cooperation, but cooperation based on mutual respect and independence, which could pave the way for progress. After the model of the infrastructure, you just described all the infrastructure made by a lot of large companies in India and in the United States, and all of us, we are building new infrastructure. computing capacity. One year ago in Paris, we announced $109 billion in AI investments, and we are delivering this project with a lot of data centers, 58 billion in 2025, powered by our decarbonated nuclear energy with a great asset, and this is very important indeed to have low carbon and available energy.
Last year, France exported 90 terawatt hour of low carbon energy and pilotable energy, which is a huge opportunity to build faster and bigger data centers. At the European level, 200 billion euros have been committed with the arrival of the Alice Recoque Exascale supercomputer, key component of our AI factory ambition shared with Netherlands and Greece, and we share the computer with them. Models. Infrastructures. Talent. India trains hundreds of thousands of AI engineers every year. With 500 ,000 engineers, India has the second largest developer community in the world. In France, we are doubling the number of AI scientists and engineers trained, and we have now more than 1 ,100 AI startups thriving in France, creating dozens of thousands of jobs. Armattan AI partnering with Dassault, Gradium for voice AI, Poolside, Ash, Hugging Faith.
I could quote the stories of these unicorns and large caps, and this is clearly one of our strengths. In quantum computing, the next frontier, France is not placing one bet. We are placing four, four technologies, four French companies, Pascal, Pandela, Alison, Bob, Quably. And one ambition, to make Europe a quantum power, which is also the ambition of Amilab. advanced machine intelligence labs, from our dear Yann Lequin for frontier research. The smartest AI is not the most expensive. It is the one built by the best people and for the right purpose. Models, infrastructure, talents, capital, and adoption. This is where the Indian model is truly revolutionary, providing solutions for everyone in the country. From 200 million of Indian farmers in their own dialects to travel advice for 400 million of pilgrims.
Our AI diagnostics for rural clinics, all running on India’s digital public infrastructure. Open rails, near zero cost, adoption is key. And being inclusive is key. In Europe, our AI factories optimize energy grids, transform our economy, and build a more sustainable future. We are the only country in the world that has the capacity to do this. health care administration, and we are proving you can build a competitive AI industry while protecting your citizens’ data. And opposite to what some misinformed friends have been saying, Europe is not blindly focused on regulation. Europe is a space for innovation and investment, but it is a safe space. And safe spaces win in the long run. I’m sure of that.
Now, the point of this summit was not only to say, let’s do more. It was to say, let’s do better together. AI may be a powerful accelerator of productivity and a major shift for labor markets. This is why access to AI for all is critical. France and India share a common vision, a sovereign AI used to protect our planet and to foster prosperity for all. In the health of our people, we must be able to do more. We launched the Indofrench Institute for AI in Health, a partnership between Sorbonne Brain Institute and EMS Delhi, and the partnership between ASH and St. John’s Research Institute in Bangalore will use AI to transform hospital administration as well.
In language, we jointly launched Current AI for sustainable and sovereign AI access, and this year we announced an open hardware tool for translation into Indian languages and dialects because AI that doesn’t understand dialects is not AI for all. And this is why we do endorse this initiative for diversity in language. In sustainability, our Coalition for Sustainable AI now has more than 200 supporters. Today with India and UNESCO, we launched an international challenge for sustainability of sustainable AI models. we call it action. This year in Delhi we call it impact but the real name is simpler AI together. AI and digitalization will be a key theme for the months to come and the key theme of the Africa Forward Summit we will cause with Kenya and Nairobi in May.
The continent, the African continent with the youngest population that will double in 25 years deserves the best digital tools and at the time when tensions are raising there is an increased sense of urgency to direct all our digital tools towards this inclusive approach and in order indeed to be strong here in India but to be strong as well on the African continent and let’s focus all together towards bridging racism dividing creating a new digital world. Dividing racism destroying, sharing racism taking. France intends to use its G7 presidency to foster that vision. I know, Mr. Prime Minister, that India will do the same through your BRICS presidency. No country is bound to serve only as a market where foreign companies sell their models and download their citizens’ data.
No country. One of our G7 priorities will be, as well, children’s protection against AI and digital abuse. You just mentioned it, Mr. Secretary -General. There is no reason our children should be exposed online to what is legally forbidden in the real world. Our platforms, governments and regulators should be working together to make Internet and social media a safe space. Thank you. This is why, in France, we are embarking on a process to ban social networks for children. under 15 years old. And we are committed here in this journey with a lot of several European countries being present here today. Greece, Spain. I know, Mr. Prime Minister, you will join this club. And this is a great news that India will join such an approach in order to protect children and teenagers.
And we stand ready to take all necessary actions to ensure that our young citizens are truly safe and wish to engage with all willing partners to make this vision happen for all. And this is a new coalition of willings in order to protect our children and teenagers. Protecting our children is not regulation as well. It is civilization. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. The message I have come to convey is that we are determined to continue to shape the rules of the game and to do with our allies such as India because we believe in core shared values, science, rule of law, global balance, efficient multilateralism, innovation for the benefit of all. Now is the time to channel our forces toward what works.
Concrete action and solutions that make AI more sustainable, efficient, and accessible. Targeted funding to leverage talents and creativity. Appropriate rules to prevent abuse and protect all our citizens. Strong partnerships that help build new AI solutions. More safe and more sustainable. I want to thank all the governments and business leaders present in this room and engage in this journey. I know your goodwill and how your commitment in order to deliver this concrete results. We do believe in innovation, but we do believe in a better place, in a better world as well. And I don’t believe once again it’s incompatible. And let me say one more thing about partnerships, because this is not a two -player game.
Last week, India and the UAE announced a joint AI partnership, a supercomputing cluster, shared data centers, an innovation corridor. And India brings the engineers and the frugal models, and the Gulf brings the capital and the infrastructure. And together, they build faster than either could alone. France knows this equation well. With UAE, we engage. And they committed billions of euros for innovation and data centers in our country. And this partnership creates more value together. This is not dependency. This is intelligent convergence between governments with companies, large caps, start -ups, and this is clearly this intelligent convergence which can provide results. The old world said you compete or you lose. The new world says you connect or you fall behind.
And I started with a story about a street vendor in Mumbai. Ten years ago, the world told India that 1 .4 billion people could not be brought into the digital economy. India proved them wrong. Today some say that the digital economy is a big problem. Today AI is a game only the biggest can play. That you need 400 billion dollars to be in the race. that nothing can exist between the two blocks, India, France, Europe, together with our partners, those who believe in our approach. Companies, governments, investors might have a different way. The money race is important and we cannot discount it, but the outcomes and real value creation for our population is even more. The future of AI will be built by those who combine innovation and responsibility, technology with humanity.
And India and France will help to shape this future together. And the journey has just begun. Jai Ho! Thank you.
India made a deliberate sovereign choice, small language models, task -specific, designed to run on a smartphone. And India built the first government -funded AI and deployed 38 ,000 GPUs at the cheap…
EventAbsolutely, Ankit, just trying to, this is something which I know two years back when we said that I’m putting 8000 GPUs, everybody started laughing. Because we were starting with the base when India …
Event38,000 GPUs available through public-private partnership as common compute facility. Cost is one-third of most other countries. Access provided to students, researchers, and startups. Systematic progr…
EventAbsolutely, Ankit, just trying to, this is something which I know two years back when we said that I’m putting 8000 GPUs, everybody started laughing. Because we were starting with the base when India …
EventThe speech outlined several specific collaborative initiatives between France and India that demonstrate practical cooperation beyond rhetorical commitments. These include the launch of the Indo-Frenc…
EventEstelle David from Business France opened by showcasing the strong French AI delegation of about 100 companies across sectors like quantum computing, cybersecurity, and green tech. She emphasized that…
EventThis transcript captures discussions from the AI Impact Summit, a collaborative event between France and India focused on building trusted AI partnerships and advancing AI for scientific discovery. Th…
EventThis comment shifts the discussion from acknowledging competition to actively proposing strategic alliances. It introduces the concept of ‘coalitions of the willing’ and positions countries like Franc…
EventThis comment introduced a different geopolitical perspective that complicated the discussion in important ways. While it may have been met with some skepticism, it highlighted the possibility that som…
EventHe referenced France’s proposed ban on social media for under-15s and asked whether such restrictions are effective solutions for protecting young people from misinformation.
EventHowever, concerns were raised about the potential misuse of regulations, particularly in the context of encryption and other narratives like counterterrorism. The protection of online safety for every…
EventOpenAI committed to continuing their multi-pronged child safety approach including age verification, parental controls, and prohibition of targeted advertising Recommendation for adoption of Open Age…
EventFrance’s G7 Presidency and Multilateral Cooperation
Event“Speaker 1 thanked UN Secretary‑General António Guterres and formally welcomed President Emmanuel Macron to address the AI Impact Summit.”
The knowledge base records that António Guterres delivered an opening address before Macron’s speech, confirming his presence at the start of the summit [S6].
“India has a universal digital identity for 1.4 billion people, a payment system processing 20 billion transactions per month, and a health network issuing 500 million digital health IDs.”
These statistics are corroborated by multiple sources that list the Aadhaar identity system, the UPI payment platform handling 20 billion monthly transactions, and the issuance of 500 million health IDs [S9] and [S24].
“India’s digital public infrastructure (IndiaStack) provides a strong foundation for AI development.”
Additional context notes describe Aadhaar, UPI and other digital public infrastructure as world-class assets that underpin AI and digital services in India [S40] and [S42] and explain the broader concept of Digital Public Infrastructure [S46].
The dialogue shows clear consensus on diplomatic courtesies and a shared vision that AI should be developed sovereignly, inclusively, and responsibly. While Speaker 1’s contribution is limited to formal welcome, Macron elaborates on multiple policy strands—strategic autonomy, inclusive digital infrastructure, partnership models, and child protection—creating internal coherence across his arguments.
Moderate to high on overarching principles (respect, cooperation, sovereign and inclusive AI) but limited substantive agreement between the two speakers, as the detailed policy agenda is presented solely by Macron.
The transcript contains virtually no direct conflict between the two speakers. Speaker 1’s brief opening is limited to gratitude and a formal welcome, whereas Macron’s extensive remarks focus on showcasing India‑France cooperation, sovereign AI, and concrete policy initiatives. The only point of convergence is the shared intent to deepen collaboration at the summit. No substantive disagreement emerges from the material provided.
Minimal – the dialogue is largely complementary, indicating a high degree of consensus on the summit’s objectives and on the need for joint, sovereign AI development. This consensus suggests that, at least within this session, the participants are aligned on the strategic direction for AI and digital inclusion, reducing the risk of policy deadlock.
Macron’s remarks repeatedly redirected the conversation from a binary competition narrative to one of collaborative sovereignty, inclusivity, and sustainability. By grounding abstract AI policy in vivid stories, concrete investment figures, and specific partnership examples, he introduced new thematic strands—human‑centred impact, green infrastructure, linguistic diversity, child protection, and multi‑regional convergence—that reshaped the dialogue’s focus. These pivot points prompted other participants to align with his vision, broadened the scope of the summit, and laid the groundwork for concrete joint actions between France, India, and other global partners.
Disclaimer: This is not an official session record. DiploAI generates these resources from audiovisual recordings, and they are presented as-is, including potential errors. Due to logistical challenges, such as discrepancies in audio/video or transcripts, names may be misspelled. We strive for accuracy to the best of our ability.
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