Keynote-Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani

19 Feb 2026 11:00h - 11:15h

Keynote-Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani

Session at a glanceSummary, keypoints, and speakers overview

Summary

The Global AI Impact Summit in India was framed as a pivotal moment for the country’s ambition to become a fully developed nation, or “Vixit Bharat,” by its centenary in 2047 [4-5]. Mukesh Ambani highlighted Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s leadership of the summit and the government’s vision of AI-driven development for both India and the Global South [6-8]. He argued that, if used wisely, AI could generate “superabundance,” eliminating poverty and delivering prosperity for all 8 billion people [9-10]. Ambani described AI as more than a tool, calling it a new “human-like” technology that powers every machine and can augment knowledge and productivity without limit [11-15].


He framed the current global debate as a choice between AI concentrated in the hands of a few and an AI future that is affordable and beneficial for everyone [18-22]. According to him, India will emerge as one of the world’s leading AI powers because of its demographic size, democratic system, digital infrastructure and massive data generation [28-31]. He backed this claim with recent achievements: the world’s largest mobile data consumption, nearly a billion internet users, the Aadhaar ID system, the UPI payments platform, and a top-three global startup ecosystem [32-39].


Ambani announced that Jio will shift from connecting India to the internet era to connecting it to the “intelligence era,” delivering AI services at the cost of data and with the same reliability and affordability [43-49]. He also disclosed a 10 lakh-crore, seven-year investment by Reliance and Jio to build sovereign compute capacity, including multi-gigawatt AI-ready data centers, green-energy power surplus, and a nationwide edge-compute layer [50-64]. Five guiding principles were outlined: AI for deep-tech and manufacturing, multilingual AI for all Indian languages, security and data residency, job creation rather than displacement, and building an ecosystem of partners across industry and academia [69-78][81-86].


Concrete AI applications were cited, such as Jio Shikshak (multilingual AI tutor), Jio Arogya (instant medical guidance), Jio Krishi (weather advice for 140 million farmers), and GeoBharat IQ (voice-first AI companion for everyday services) [88-95]. Ambani emphasized that AI’s success depends on global cooperation rather than hoarding of chips or rare earths, positioning India as a bridge between the Global South and North [101-104]. He called on participants to pledge to combine intelligence with empathy and to use AI to build a better future for all [105-106]. The summit concluded with a reaffirmation of India’s commitment to make AI ubiquitous, affordable, and inclusive, marking the event as a significant step toward that national and global vision [67-68][107].


Keypoints


Major discussion points


A bold national vision for AI: Ambani frames AI as the engine that will drive “Vixit Bharat” – a fully developed, poverty-free India by 2047 – and argues that AI can either concentrate power or democratize opportunity for all [4-6][9-10][18-26].


Three flagship announcements from Jio:


1. Jio will shift from “connecting India to the internet era” to “connecting India to the intelligence era,” delivering AI at the cost of data [42-50].


2. Reliance/Jio will invest 10 lakh crores over the next seven years as patient, nation-building capital [51-58].


3. Jio Intelligence will build sovereign compute infrastructure – gigawatt-scale data centres, green-energy power surplus, and a nationwide edge-compute layer – to make AI affordable and ubiquitous [59-66].


Guiding principles and ecosystem strategy: Five non-negotiable pillars (deep-tech leadership, multilingual capability, security & trust, job creation, and ecosystem strength) will shape AI deployment, with partnerships across Indian enterprises, startups, IIT/IISC, and global tech leaders [69-84].


Social-impact AI applications: Concrete pilots are already running – Jio Shikshak for multilingual education, Jio Arogya for rapid medical guidance, Jio Krishi for farmer-focused weather advice, GeoBharat IQ as a voice-first companion, and cultural-heritage projects like GeoHotStar [88-98].


Call for global cooperation and India’s bridge role: Ambani stresses that AI’s future depends on sharing, not hoarding, positioning India as the vital link between the Global South and North and urging collective pledges to “combine intelligence with empathy” [100-105].


Overall purpose / goal


The discussion serves to launch a nationwide AI agenda, announce massive financial and infrastructure commitments, and position India-and Jio in particular-as a future global AI powerhouse. It seeks to rally domestic stakeholders (government, industry, academia) and international partners around a shared, inclusive vision of AI that fuels economic development, social inclusion, and geopolitical leadership.


Tone of the discussion


The tone is consistently optimistic and inspirational, beginning with reverent acknowledgment of national leaders and a visionary framing of AI as a transformative force. It then shifts to a pragmatic, business-like delivery of concrete investment and infrastructure plans, followed by a collaborative, inclusive appeal that emphasizes partnership, multilingual inclusion, and global cooperation. Throughout, the language remains confident, patriotic, and forward-looking, with no noticeable downturn in enthusiasm.


Speakers

Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani


– Role/Title: Business leader; keynote speaker representing Reliance Group and Jio Intelligence


– Area of Expertise: Business, industry [S1][S2]


Speaker 1


– Role/Title: Event moderator/host (introducing the keynote and delivering closing remarks) [S3][S5]


– Area of Expertise:


Additional speakers:


(none)


Full session reportComprehensive analysis and detailed insights

The Global AI Impact Summit was presented as a watershed moment for India’s ambition to become a fully developed nation – “Vixit Bharat” – by the centenary of independence in 2047. Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani opened by greeting the audience, lauding Prime Minister Narendra Modi as the summit’s guiding philosopher, and highlighting the government’s vision of an intelligence-driven future for both India and the broader Global South [3-8][S6].


Ambani framed intelligence as a new technology, likening it to the legendary “Akshay Patra” that endlessly feeds the heroes of the Mahabharata, and described it as “the mantra that powers every yantra” – a force that can generate “superabundance”, eradicate poverty and deliver prosperity for all eight billion people if used wisely [12-14][22]. He contrasted two possible trajectories: one in which intelligence power is concentrated in a few hands, deepening global inequality, and another in which intelligence is affordable, widely available and democratizes opportunity for everyone. Echoing the Prime Minister’s commitment to an inclusive future, he positioned India on the latter path [9-10][18-26].


To substantiate India’s readiness, Ambani listed the country’s digital foundations built over the past decade. India is the world’s largest consumer of mobile data, with nearly one-billion internet users, data costs are among the lowest globally while quality remains high, with no difference between Delhi and the remotest village, a 1.4-billion-strong Aadhaar digital-ID system, the UPI platform processing over 12 billion transactions each month, and a top-three global startup ecosystem that includes more than 100 000 startups and over 100 unicorns. These assets, together with a secure, inclusive public-digital infrastructure now being exported abroad, give India a unique advantage for intelligence leadership [32-39][S2][S14][33].


Against this backdrop, Jio announced three flagship initiatives. First, it will transition from “connecting India to the internet era” to “connecting India to the intelligence era”, delivering intelligence at the cost of data with the same reliability, quality, scale and extreme affordability that transformed connectivity [43-49]. Second, Reliance and Jio pledged a seven-year, INR 10 lakh-crore (≈ ₹1 trillion) investment described as patient, disciplined, nation-building capital designed to create durable economic value and strategic resilience [51-58]. Third, Jio Intelligence will construct sovereign compute infrastructure: gigawatt-scale, intelligence-ready data centres in Jamnagar (120 MW coming online in H2 2026 with a roadmap to gigawatt-scale capacity), leveraging up to 10 GW of surplus green solar power from assets in Kach and Andhra Pradesh, and deploying a nationwide edge-compute layer tightly integrated with Jio’s network to provide low-latency, affordable intelligence at the point of use. As Ambani put it, “when compute becomes infrastructure, innovation will become inevitable.” [57-65][66][45-46]. The rollout will also be complemented by ambient intelligence devices – wearables, fully-connected homes, “geo-frames”, an AI-glass device and next-generation AI appliances that make intelligence “effortless and natural as human conversations” [70-71].


Our geo-intelligence strategy rests on five non-negotiable principles: (1) intelligence as a catalyst for deep-tech and advanced manufacturing; (2) extending benefits beyond large enterprises to agriculture, small businesses and the informal sector; (3) delivering world-leading multilingual intelligence that works in every Indian language to ensure genuine inclusion; (4) embedding responsibility, security, data residency and trust as core guarantees rather than afterthoughts; (5) AI will create new high-skill jobs and upskill existing workers, proving that intelligence expands-not contracts-the labour market [68-71][69-84][81-86][S28][S29].


The ecosystem-first approach shifts the competitive focus from owning the best model to building the strongest, fastest-scaling usage network, forging partnerships with Indian enterprises, startups, IITs, IISc and research institutions, and co-architecting with leading global tech firms [69-84][81-86][S28][S29].


Concrete intelligence applications already in pilot or deployment illustrate the social-impact agenda. “Jio Shikshak” provides an adaptive, multilingual teaching assistant in 22 languages for 250 million schoolchildren and 50 million higher-education students; “Jio Arogya” offers first-line medical guidance in local languages within five minutes on any phone; “Jio Krishi” converts satellite imagery into voice-first, precision-weather advice for 140 million farmers; “GeoBharat IQ” acts as a voice-first companion that helps citizens learn, earn and access government services at Bharat scale; and “GeoHotStar” uses intelligence to multiply Indian creativity through multilingual storytelling, enhancing India’s cultural soft-power globally. As Ambani emphasized, “Jio AI will speak in India’s language, bloom in India’s culture, and grow in India’s soil” (Jio AI Bharat ki bhasha mein bolega, Bharat ki sanskriti mein phulega, aur Bharat ki mitti mein phalega) – a promise of deep localisation [88-97][S31][84-85].


Ambani concluded by stressing that intelligence’s success hinges on global cooperation rather than the hoarding of chips or rare-earths. He positioned India as the vital bridge linking the Global South and the Global North, urging participants to pledge collective action that combines intelligence with empathy. The closing rallying-cry – “one earth, one family, one future” – reaffirmed the commitment to make intelligence as ubiquitous and affordable as connectivity, and expressed gratitude to the audience and the nation [100-107][108][S19][102-104].


Overall, the summit launched a comprehensive national intelligence agenda: a visionary narrative of intelligence-driven prosperity, a massive financial and infrastructural commitment, a principled governance framework, and a suite of inclusive applications, all framed within a call for international collaboration and India’s role as a diplomatic and technological conduit.


Session transcriptComplete transcript of the session
Speaker 1

services impacting millions of lives. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Mr. Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani.

Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani

Distinguished guests, my fellow Indians, namaste. The Global AI Impact Summit is a defining moment in India’s tech history. A moment when India pledges to make AI one of the driving forces to realize its dream of a Vixit Bharat, the dream of becoming a fully developed nation by 2047, the glorious centenary of our independence. We are deeply honored that our most respected Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi, is the guide, philosopher and leader of this summit. Honorable Minister Sri Vaishnav and his wonderful team deserve full praise for organizing this summit on a grand scale befitting India’s ambition. Modiji’s vision of AI -powered Vixit Bharat is also a template for a Vixit Global South. If wisely used, I believe AI can usher in an era of superabundance.

A world without poverty and a future of prosperity for all the 8 billion people on our beautiful planet is now within sight, within reach. Friends, artificial intelligence is a technology that can be used to create It is not just another technology. For the first time, we are going to create a new technology Humans are creating human -like systems that can learn, speak, analyze, move, and produce autonomously. AI is the mantra that powers every yantra or every machine and system to work faster, better, and smarter. I see AI as a modern -day Akshay Patra, the legendary vessel in Mahabharata that provided endless nourishment to all. Likewise, AI offers limitless augmentation in knowledge, efficiency, and productivity. We are only at the dawn of this era.

The best of AI is yet to come. Distinguished participants in this summit, today the world is debating a profound question. Will AI concentrate power in the hands of a few or will it democratize opportunity for all? Do we act as isolated nations or as a united global family? Our polarized world stands at a fork. One path has led to a situation where AI is scarce and expensive. Compute is concentrated, data is controlled, and capability is locked behind barriers of capital and geography in the global north. In this dismal scenario, inequality widens between nations within societies and across generations. But there is another path, a future where AI is available, affordable, and beneficial to all. As our Prime Minister said, India believes in this second future.

Dear friends, from the podium of this summit today, I want to make a bold prediction. India will emerge as one of the greatest AI powers in the world in the 21st century. My confidence is validated by an undeniable truth. In the coming decades, no country in the world can match India’s strength in demography, democracy, development, digital infrastructure, data generation, AI harvest. Let me begin, as was said many times this morning, what India has achieved in the past 10 years. First, India is the world’s largest mobile data consumer. Nearly 1 billion internet users. Data costs are higher than the world’s largest mobile data consumer. Among the lowest globally and in terms of quality, there is no difference between Delhi and the remotest Indian village.

Second, Aadhaar, 1 .4 billion digital IDs. Third, UPI processes over 12 billion transactions monthly. Fourth, India ranks among the top three startup ecosystems with 100 ,000 startups and 100 plus unicorns. Fifth, India’s secure and inclusive digital public infrastructure stack is now being adopted by countries around the globe. Friends, in all humility, I wish to state that Jio, with over 500 million loyal subscribers, was privileged to play a leading role in this transformation across broadband, 4G, 5G and home connectivity. With equal humility, I would like to announce that Jio will play an even bigger role in India’s AI transformation. Today, on behalf of the Reliance Group and Jio Intelligence, I want to make three announcements. Announcement 1. Jio connected India to the internet era.

Jio will now connect India to the intelligence era. We will deliver intelligence to every citizen, every sector of the economy, and every facet of social development and every service of government. Jio will do so with the same reliability, quality, scale, and extreme affordability that transformed connectivity. India cannot afford to rent intelligence. Therefore, we will reduce the cost of intelligence as dramatically as we can. We will deliver intelligence to every citizen, every sector of the economy, and every facet the cost of data. Announcement 2. Jio together with Reliance will invest 10 lakh crores over the next 7 years starting this year. This is not speculative investment. It is not for chasing valuation. This is patient, disciplined, nation -building capital designed to create durable economic value and strategic resilience for decades to come.

Distinguished participants, the biggest constraint in AI today is not talent or imagination. It is scarcity and high cost of compute. Therefore, here is my third announcement. Jio Intelligence will build India’s sovereign compute infrastructure through three bold initiatives. One, gigawatt -scale data centers. We already started construction on multi -gigawatt AI -ready data centers at Jamnagar. Over 120 megawatts will come online in the second half of 2026 this year and a clear path to gigawatt -scale compute for training and large -scale inference. Two, our green energy advantage. We have an in -house energy advantage with up to 10 gigawatts of ready green power surplus anchored by solar in both Kach and Andhra Pradesh. Three, a nationwide edge compute. An edge compute layer deeply integrated with Jio’s network will make intelligence responsive, low latency and affordable, close to where Indians live, learn, and work.

From kirana stores to clinics, from classrooms to farms, intelligence will live at the edge. Our resolve is clear. Make intelligence as ubiquitous as connectivity. When compute becomes infrastructure, innovation will become inevitable. Friends, geo -intelligence is guided by five non -negotiable principles. First, AI for India’s deep tech and advanced manufacturing leadership. Reaching not just large enterprises but agriculture, small businesses and the informal sector. Geo -intelligence will not simply be a search or an ask tool. It will primarily be a resource for multiplying productivity and efficiency. Thank you. Second, world leading multilingual AI capability across all Indian languages. When farmers and artisans speak to AI in their own words and students learn in their own mother tongue, this is not convenience, this is inclusion.

Jio AI Bharat ki bhasha mein bolega, Bharat ki sanskriti mein phulega, aur Bharat ki mitti mein phalega. Third, responsibility, security, data residency and trust as Jio’s core guarantees, not afterthought. Fourth, we will prove that AI does not take away jobs. Rather, it will create new high -skill work opportunities. And fifth, the AI system will not only provide jobs for the people, but also provide jobs for the people. Our story has shifted from who has the best model to who can build the strongest ecosystem for speed and scale of usage. Therefore, we will build deep partnership ecosystem with Indian enterprises, startups, IIT, IISC and research institutions. We will work shoulder to shoulder with India’s leading industrial groups to embed AI across manufacturing, logistics, energy, finance, retail, agriculture and healthcare.

We will empower startups with affordable compute and co -development platforms. We will aspire to produce global breakthroughs in compute architecture, foundation models and energy efficiency, designed in India, rooted in our values, powered by our talent and scaled for humanity. And we will partner with the very best tech companies in the world, not as importers of intelligence, but as co -architects of a new AI century. Dear friends, I believe that social relevance, not momentary craze, should drive AI growth in India. Jio has already started AI applications for the most pressing challenges in inclusive development. In education, we have Jio Shikshak, an adaptive AI teaching assistant in 22 languages. When 250 million school children and 50 million students in higher education are empowered by AI, teachers no power on earth can match India’s talent wealth.

In healthcare, Jio Arogya AI delivering first medical guidance in under five minutes in local languages on any phone. In agriculture, Jio Krishi converting satellite imagery and programming AI into a new technology. Precision weather into simple voice -first advice to 140 million farmers to help improve their income. In everyday life, GeoBharat IQ, a voice -first AI companion, helping Indians learn, earn, and access government services at Bharat scale. From wearables to fully connected homes, geo -frames, an AI glass device, and next -generation AI devices will make intelligence truly ambient, as effortless and as natural as human conversations. Through GeoHotStar, AI will multiply Indian creativity with multilingual storytelling. We will popularize India’s rich cultural heritage with futuristic technology, enhancing India’s soft power globally.

Friends, this inaugural global AI impact summit in India has received a massive response. What does that show? It shows that AI is now becoming a people’s movement worldwide. The success of this movement hinges critically on global cooperation and not polarization. Be it chips or rare earths, AI works its magic through sharing, not hoarding, through collaborations, not conflicts. The unique strength of India is that India serves as the vital bridge connecting the global south and the global north. After all, south or north, east or west, all of us have only one earth, one family and one future. Today, at this summit, let us all pledge to transform this noble aspiration into reality using the most powerful gift of the human mind, AI.

Let us combine intelligence with empathy and let us build a better future for all. Thank you. Jai Hind.

Speaker 1

Thank you so much.

Related ResourcesKnowledge base sources related to the discussion topics (12)
Factual NotesClaims verified against the Diplo knowledge base (5)
Confirmedhigh

“The Global AI Impact Summit was presented as a watershed moment for India’s ambition to become a fully developed nation – “Vixit Bharat” – by the centenary of independence in 2047.”

The knowledge base records that Ambani framed artificial intelligence as the cornerstone of India’s transformation into a fully developed nation by 2047, describing the summit as a defining moment for ‘Vixit Bharat’ [S2] and [S6].

Confirmedmedium

“Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani opened by greeting the audience, lauding Prime Minister Narendra Modi as the summit’s guiding philosopher, and highlighting the government’s vision of an intelligence‑driven future for both India and the broader Global South.”

The sources note that Ambani positioned AI as central to Prime Minister Modi’s vision for a ‘Vixit Bharat’ and highlighted the government’s intelligence-driven agenda, aligning with the report’s description [S6].

Confirmedmedium

“India is the world’s largest consumer of mobile data, with nearly one‑billion internet users.”

S47 confirms widespread internet adoption in India with nearly a billion users, supporting the user-base part of the claim; it does not explicitly verify the ‘largest consumer of mobile data’ qualifier [S47].

Additional Contextlow

“Ambani framed intelligence as a new technology, likening it to the legendary “Akshay Patra” … and described it as a force that can generate superabundance, eradicate poverty and deliver prosperity for all eight billion people if used wisely.”

S38 characterises artificial intelligence as a technology that can be used to create new possibilities and address global challenges, providing broader context for Ambani’s portrayal of AI as a transformative technology, though the specific mythological analogy is not mentioned in the knowledge base.

Additional Contextlow

“He contrasted two possible trajectories: one where intelligence power is concentrated in a few hands, deepening global inequality, and another where intelligence is affordable, widely available and democratizes opportunity for everyone.”

A similar dual‑future framing appears in S42, where Guterres outlines two possible worlds—one of heightened inequality and another of equitable, technology‑driven development—offering contextual support for the narrative of divergent AI pathways.

External Sources (51)
S1
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S2
Keynote-Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani — – Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani- Moderator Artificial intelligence | Social and economic development
S3
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Responsible AI for Children Safe Playful and Empowering Learning — -Speaker 1: Role/title not specified – appears to be a student or child participant in educational videos/demonstrations…
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Building Trusted AI at Scale Cities Startups & Digital Sovereignty – Keynote Vijay Shekar Sharma Paytm — -Speaker 1: Role/Title: Not mentioned, Area of expertise: Not mentioned (appears to be an event host or moderator introd…
S6
Keynote-Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani — Distinguished guests, my fellow Indians, namaste. The Global AI Impact Summit is a defining moment in India’s tech histo…
S7
AI-driven Cyber Defense: Empowering Developing Nations | IGF 2023 — Audience:Hello everyone, I’m Prabhas Subedi from Nepal. It’s been so interesting in discussion, thank you so much panel….
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Leaders’ Plenary | Global Vision for AI Impact and Governance- Afternoon Session — Reliance Industries made perhaps the most ambitious commitment, with Mukesh Ambani pledging 10 lakh crores over seven ye…
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Leaders’ Plenary | Global Vision for AI Impact and Governance- Afternoon Session — Thank you, Nikesh. We go to the Captains of Indian Industry, Mr. Mukesh Ambani. You have given a vision for the world. …
S10
India’s Reliance Jio partners with Polygon for blockchain growth — Polygon Labs has partnered with Reliance Jio, India’s largest telecom operator, to bring blockchain and Web3 capabilitie…
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Masterclass#1 — Gratitude was expressed towards both presenters and participants for engaging in the dialogue. The speaker expressed gr…
S12
Opening and introduction — The AU’s commitment to working with Member States in adopting the meeting’s recommendations was reaffirmed, alongside th…
S13
Any other business /Adoption of the report/ Closure of the session — In conclusion, the delegate reiterated his gratitude, acknowledging the extensive labours and patience exhibited by the …
S14
Driving Indias AI Future Growth Innovation and Impact — Mridu Bhandari explains that the Dell Technologies blueprint is designed to support India’s long-term vision of Vixit Bh…
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AI 2.0 The Future of Learning in India — My last closing remark is, AI plus education can take us towards Vixit Bharat 2047. AI is not a choice. It is a part of …
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Indias AI Leap Policy to Practice with AIP2 — Thanks, Doreen. As you can see, Doreen has spent her career in ensuring. Every country, every community has access to or…
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DiploNews – Issue 329 – 1 August 2017 — ​The field of artificial intelligence (AI) has seen significant advances over the past few years, in areas such as smart…
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IndoGerman AI Collaboration Driving Economic Development and Soc — “Productivity and resilience.”[4]. “As Anandi said, we already have an MOU with Fraunhofer, which we are working togethe…
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Global AI Policy Framework: International Cooperation and Historical Perspectives — And we also have a political instinct, I guess, of non-alignment to quote a historical term that is very alive and I thi…
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Rethinking trade and IP: prospects and challenges for development in the knowledge economy (WTO) — Overall, the session was regarded as highly beneficial, generating ideas for future developments. Gratitude was expresse…
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Presentation of outcomes to the plenary — The forum was deemed a resounding success. The speaker expresses both astonishment and gratitude for the unexpected suc…
S22
Opening and introduction — The AU’s commitment to working with Member States in adopting the meeting’s recommendations was reaffirmed, alongside th…
S23
World Economic Forum Annual Meeting Closing Remarks: Summary — The tone is consistently positive, celebratory, and grateful throughout the discussion. It begins with formal appreciati…
S24
Keynote-Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani — Ambani positions AI as central to India’s vision of becoming a fully developed nation by 2047, which marks the centenary…
S25
Fireside Conversation: 01 — Amodei speculates that AI could unlock unprecedented growth rates in India, far beyond typical expectations, by linking …
S26
Driving Indias AI Future Growth Innovation and Impact — Mridu Bhandari explains that the Dell Technologies blueprint is designed to support India’s long-term vision of Vixit Bh…
S27
AI 2.0 The Future of Learning in India — My last closing remark is, AI plus education can take us towards Vixit Bharat 2047. AI is not a choice. It is a part of …
S28
Keynote-Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani — Ambani emphasised that competitive advantage in AI has shifted “from who has the best model to who can build the stronge…
S29
Responsible AI in India Leadership Ethics & Global Impact part1_2 — The moderator establishes that as India advances in its digital journey with AI as a powerful engine for innovation and …
S30
Multistakeholder Partnerships for Thriving AI Ecosystems — Jain outlines the critical success factors for AI deployment based on practical experience. He emphasizes that governmen…
S31
Keynote-Alexandr Wang — “Across India, creators use our AI to automatically translate reels into the language of the person watching.”[1]. “Smal…
S32
IndoGerman AI Collaboration Driving Economic Development and Soc — “Productivity and resilience.”[4]. “As Anandi said, we already have an MOU with Fraunhofer, which we are working togethe…
S33
How Small AI Solutions Are Creating Big Social Change — Rural and Community Impact: Emphasis on bringing AI benefits to rural communities through partnerships, co-creation with…
S34
How Small AI Solutions Are Creating Big Social Change — -Rural and Community Impact: Emphasis on bringing AI benefits to rural communities through partnerships, co-creation wit…
S35
Scaling Trusted AI_ How France and India Are Building Industrial & Innovation Bridges — Again, I’m sure you’ll find, I’d be happy to talk about any of these for much longer, but we only have a short time. The…
S36
Building Trusted AI at Scale Cities Startups & Digital Sovereignty – Keynote Ananya Birla Birla AI Labs — Namaste. Thank you so much for that introduction. Good evening everyone. It is truly an honor to be here today. In his M…
S37
Welcome Address — Prime Minister Narendra Modi
S38
https://app.faicon.ai/ai-impact-summit-2026/keynote-mukesh-dhirubhai-ambani — A world without poverty and a future of prosperity for all the 8 billion people on our beautiful planet is now within si…
S39
Keynote-António Guterres — The address established the United Nations as a central forum for AI governance while proposing concrete mechanisms for …
S40
The Global Economic Outlook — Panelists emphasized the need to rebuild optimism and trust among populations feeling economically insecure. They discus…
S41
Leaders’ Plenary | Global Vision for AI Impact and Governance Morning Session Part 1 — Estímulo à geração de emprego e renda. This was the paradigm of the Declaration on Artificial Intelligence, which we app…
S42
High Level Dialogue with the Secretary-General — Guterres presents two possible future worlds: one with devastating climate impacts and increased inequality, and another…
S43
Ad Hoc Consultation: Thursday 8th February, Morning session — India has actively showcased a positive approach towards the incorporation of the concept of technology transfer within …
S44
Driving Indias AI Future Growth Innovation and Impact — Minister Jayant Chaudhary outlined the government’s approach to AI democratization, highlighting the India AI mission’s …
S45
Building Indias Digital and Industrial Future with AI — Thank you, Julian. Thanks for the opening remarks. Am I audible? Looks like yes. So let’s begin. We have a fantastic pan…
S46
Building the Workforce_ AI for Viksit Bharat 2047 — Thank you. So, the mic’s there. Two minutes. Then I’ll say the second. No good answers. You got nothing to do. Before I …
S47
Main Session | Policy Network on Meaningful Access — Widespread internet adoption in India, with nearly a billion users primarily accessing through smartphones
S48
Building Trusted AI at Scale Cities Startups & Digital Sovereignty – Keynote Hemant Taneja General Catalyst — Taneja argued that India is uniquely positioned to lead in AI deployment due to its status as the world’s strongest grow…
S49
Building Trusted AI at Scale Cities Startups & Digital Sovereignty – Keynote Hemant Taneja General Catalyst — The discussion featured Hemant Taneja, CEO of General Catalyst venture capital firm, speaking at an AI summit about resp…
S50
Building Indias Digital and Industrial Future with AI — As India advances in digital public infrastructure and its AI ambitions, the key is how we ensure these systems remain t…
S51
India’s exports solutions for digital public infrastructure — India’s digital public infrastructure (DPI) has gained recognition domestically and internationally, with the 2023 G20 s…
Speakers Analysis
Detailed breakdown of each speaker’s arguments and positions
M
Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
9 arguments108 words per minute1593 words879 seconds
Argument 1
AI as a democratizing force that can create superabundance and eradicate poverty (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
EXPLANATION
Ambani asserts that artificial intelligence, if used wisely, can generate unprecedented wealth and eliminate poverty worldwide. He envisions AI as a catalyst for a future where all eight billion people enjoy prosperity.
EVIDENCE
He states that AI can usher in an era of superabundance and a world without poverty, describing this future as within sight and reach [9-10]. He also frames the global debate on whether AI will concentrate power or democratize opportunity, positioning the latter as the desired outcome [18-26].
EXTERNAL EVIDENCE (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
Ambani’s claim that AI can generate superabundance and eliminate global poverty is directly stated in the keynote transcript [S2] and reinforced by the summit framing of AI as a driving force for development [S6].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
AI as a tool for universal prosperity
Argument 2
Warning of AI concentration in the Global North leading to inequality (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
EXPLANATION
Ambani warns that if AI remains scarce, controlled by a few in the Global North, it will exacerbate existing inequalities between nations and generations. He contrasts this with a more inclusive future where AI is affordable and widely available.
EVIDENCE
He describes a scenario where compute, data, and capability are locked behind capital and geography in the Global North, leading to widening inequality [22-25].
EXTERNAL EVIDENCE (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
The warning about AI being locked behind capital and geography in the Global North appears in the keynote remarks [S2] and is echoed in the broader summit narrative on concentration versus democratization [S6].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Risks of AI centralization
Argument 3
India’s massive mobile data usage, Aadhaar IDs, UPI transactions, and vibrant startup ecosystem (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
EXPLANATION
Ambani highlights India’s digital infrastructure achievements, including its large internet user base, universal digital ID system, high-volume digital payments, and a thriving startup environment. These strengths form the foundation for AI development in the country.
EVIDENCE
He enumerates that India is the world’s largest mobile data consumer with nearly 1 billion users, has 1.4 billion Aadhaar IDs, processes over 12 billion UPI transactions monthly, and hosts a top-three global startup ecosystem with over 100 000 startups and 100+ unicorns [31-40].
EXTERNAL EVIDENCE (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
Ambani’s enumeration of India’s digital foundations-mobile data consumption, Aadhaar IDs, UPI volume, and startup ecosystem-is documented in the keynote transcript [S2] and highlighted in the summit overview of India’s tech achievements [S6].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
India’s digital foundations
Argument 4
Jio will extend its connectivity model to deliver affordable AI intelligence to every citizen and sector (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
EXPLANATION
Ambani announces that Jio will replicate its successful broadband rollout by providing AI‑driven intelligence at the same scale, quality, and affordability to all citizens, industries, and government services. The aim is to make AI as ubiquitous as internet connectivity.
EVIDENCE
He declares that Jio will connect India to the intelligence era, delivering intelligence to every citizen, sector, and service with the same reliability, quality, scale, and extreme affordability that transformed connectivity, and will reduce the cost of intelligence to the cost of data [43-49].
EXTERNAL EVIDENCE (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
The pledge that Jio will connect India to the “intelligence era” with affordable AI services mirrors the keynote statement about delivering intelligence to every citizen, sector, and government service [S2] and the summit’s vision of AI-driven connectivity [S6].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Nationwide AI accessibility
Argument 5
Reliance will invest 10 lakh crores over seven years for nation‑building AI infrastructure (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
EXPLANATION
Ambani commits Reliance to a massive, long‑term financial commitment aimed at building AI infrastructure that serves national development goals rather than short‑term profit. The investment is framed as patient, disciplined capital for durable economic value and strategic resilience.
EVIDENCE
He announces a 10 lakh crore investment over the next seven years, emphasizing that it is not speculative or valuation-driven but a nation-building, patient capital deployment [50-53].
EXTERNAL EVIDENCE (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
The 10 lakh crore, seven-year, nation-building AI investment is confirmed in the Leaders’ Plenary reports [S8] and reiterated in the session summary of the summit [S9].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Long‑term AI funding
Argument 6
Building sovereign compute with gigawatt‑scale data centers, green energy surplus, and nationwide edge compute (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
EXPLANATION
Ambani outlines three initiatives to create India’s own compute capacity: constructing multi‑gigawatt AI‑ready data centers, leveraging up to 10 GW of surplus green power, and deploying an edge‑compute layer integrated with Jio’s network for low‑latency, affordable AI services across the country.
EVIDENCE
He details plans for gigawatt-scale data centers with over 120 MW coming online in late 2026, a green energy advantage of up to 10 GW from solar projects, and a nationwide edge compute layer tightly coupled with Jio’s network to bring intelligence close to users [57-65].
EXTERNAL EVIDENCE (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
Ambani’s description of sovereign compute-gigawatt-scale data centers, up to 10 GW of green power, and a nationwide edge layer-is outlined in the keynote details on Jio Intelligence’s infrastructure plan [S2] and echoed in the summit’s technology roadmap [S6].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Sovereign AI compute infrastructure
Argument 7
Five non‑negotiable principles: deep‑tech leadership, multilingual capability, responsibility & data residency, job creation, and ecosystem partnership (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
EXPLANATION
Ambani sets out five guiding principles for AI deployment in India, covering technological leadership, inclusive multilingual AI, security and data sovereignty, creation of high‑skill jobs, and collaborative ecosystem building with academia and industry. These principles are intended to ensure responsible and inclusive AI growth.
EVIDENCE
He lists the principles: AI for deep-tech and advanced manufacturing; world-leading multilingual AI; responsibility, security, data residency and trust; proof that AI creates jobs; and building a strong partnership ecosystem with enterprises, startups, IITs, IISC, and research institutions [69-84].
EXTERNAL EVIDENCE (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
The five guiding principles for AI deployment are listed in the keynote speech, covering deep-tech, multilingual AI, responsibility and data residency, job creation, and ecosystem partnership [S2] and referenced in the summit’s governance framework discussion [S6].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Principled AI governance
Argument 8
AI‑driven solutions in education (Jio Shikshak), healthcare (Jio Arogya), agriculture (Jio Krishi), everyday life (GeoBharat IQ), and cultural soft power (GeoHotStar) (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
EXPLANATION
Ambani showcases concrete AI applications aimed at inclusive development: an adaptive teaching assistant for millions of students, rapid medical guidance in local languages, AI‑enhanced agricultural advice for farmers, a voice‑first AI companion for daily tasks, and a multilingual storytelling platform to promote Indian culture globally.
EVIDENCE
He cites Jio Shikshak serving 250 million school children in 22 languages, Jio Arogya delivering medical guidance in under five minutes, Jio Krishi providing voice-first weather advice to 140 million farmers, GeoBharat IQ as an AI companion for learning and services, and GeoHotStar using AI for multilingual storytelling to boost cultural soft power [88-97].
EXTERNAL EVIDENCE (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
Specific AI applications-Jio Shikshak, Jio Arogya, Jio Krishi, GeoBharat IQ, and GeoHotStar-are highlighted in the keynote as flagship solutions for inclusive development [S2] and featured in the summit’s showcase of sectoral AI use cases [S6].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
AI for inclusive social services
Argument 9
Emphasis on collaboration over hoarding, positioning India as a bridge between the Global South and North (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
EXPLANATION
Ambani calls for global cooperation in AI, arguing that sharing resources and knowledge is essential for the movement’s success. He positions India as a vital conduit linking the Global South and North, fostering a unified future.
EVIDENCE
He states that AI’s success depends on global cooperation, not polarization, and that India serves as a bridge connecting the Global South and North, emphasizing a single earth, family, and future [101-104].
EXTERNAL EVIDENCE (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
Ambani’s call for global cooperation and positioning India as a bridge between the Global South and North is explicitly stated in the keynote remarks [S2] and reinforced in the summit’s collaborative AI vision [S6].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Global AI collaboration
S
Speaker 1
1 argument114 words per minute18 words9 seconds
Argument 1
Expression of gratitude to the speaker and participants (Speaker 1)
EXPLANATION
The host thanks Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani and the audience for their participation in the summit, concluding the event on a courteous note.
EVIDENCE
Speaker 1 says, “Thank you so much,” at the close of the summit [108].
EXTERNAL EVIDENCE (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
Expressions of gratitude at the close of the summit are documented in multiple session transcripts and masterclass notes [S11], [S12], and [S13].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Closing acknowledgment
AGREED WITH
Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
Agreements
Agreement Points
Both speakers expressed gratitude and acknowledged the success of the summit
Speakers: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani, Speaker 1
Expression of gratitude to the speaker and participants (Speaker 1) Mukesh’s concluding thank you and closing remarks
Mukesh closed his address by thanking the audience and saying “Thank you. Jai Hind.” [107] and Speaker 1 later thanked Mukesh and the participants with “Thank you so much.” [108]
POLICY CONTEXT (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
Expressions of gratitude and acknowledgment of a summit’s success are standard practice in multilateral forums, mirroring the WTO session’s description of the meeting as highly beneficial and the speakers’ thanks to organizers [S20], the plenary’s characterization of the forum as a resounding success [S21], and the World Economic Forum’s celebratory closing remarks emphasizing achievement and optimism for future cooperation [S23].
Similar Viewpoints
Mukesh consistently argues that AI must be made affordable and widely available to avoid concentration of power and to generate universal prosperity, contrasting a hopeful inclusive future with a risky north‑centric scenario [9-10][22-25]
Speakers: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
AI as a democratizing force that can create superabundance and eradicate poverty (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani) Warning of AI concentration in the Global North leading to inequality (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
Mukesh outlines a coordinated strategy—massive investment, replication of Jio’s connectivity model, and sovereign compute infrastructure—to ensure AI is affordable, ubiquitous, and domestically controlled [43-49][50-53][57-65]
Speakers: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
Jio will extend its connectivity model to deliver affordable AI intelligence to every citizen and sector (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani) Reliance will invest 10 lakh crores over seven years for nation‑building AI infrastructure (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani) Building sovereign compute with gigawatt‑scale data centers, green energy surplus, and nationwide edge compute (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
Mukesh showcases concrete AI applications aimed at inclusive social services across education, health, agriculture, daily life, and cultural promotion, emphasizing multilingual and locally relevant delivery [88-97]
Speakers: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
AI‑driven solutions in education (Jio Shikshak), healthcare (Jio Arogya), agriculture (Jio Krishi), everyday life (GeoBharat IQ), and cultural soft power (GeoHotStar) (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
Mukesh sets out principled governance guidelines to ensure AI development is responsible, secure, inclusive, and partnership‑driven [69-84]
Speakers: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
Five non‑negotiable principles: deep‑tech leadership, multilingual capability, responsibility & data residency, job creation, and ecosystem partnership (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani)
Unexpected Consensus
Overall Assessment

The transcript shows strong internal consistency in Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani’s vision: AI should be democratized, supported by sovereign compute and massive investment, applied to inclusive social services, and governed by clear ethical principles. The only cross‑speaker agreement is a shared expression of gratitude at the summit’s close.

Limited cross‑speaker consensus (only gratitude), but high intra‑speaker consensus across multiple thematic areas, indicating a coherent policy agenda that could shape future AI initiatives in India and the Global South.

Differences
Different Viewpoints
Unexpected Differences
Overall Assessment

The transcript shows virtually no direct disagreement between the two speakers. Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani delivers an extensive, optimistic vision for AI in India, while Speaker 1 merely offers a closing thank‑you. Consequently, there is little to no conflict over goals or methods.

Minimal – the lack of substantive counter‑arguments suggests a high degree of consensus, limiting any immediate implications for policy contention or implementation challenges.

Partial Agreements
Both speakers acknowledge the significance of the summit and the role of AI, with Ambani outlining a visionary agenda for AI-driven prosperity [18-26][108] and the host concluding the event with a note of thanks, indicating shared recognition of AI’s importance despite the host not elaborating on policy specifics.
Speakers: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani, Speaker 1
AI as a democratizing force that can create superabundance and eradicate poverty (Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani) Expression of gratitude to the speaker and participants (Speaker 1)
Takeaways
Key takeaways
AI is positioned as a democratizing force that can generate superabundance and eradicate poverty, contrasting with a risk of concentration of power in the Global North. India’s digital ecosystem—massive mobile data usage, Aadhaar IDs, UPI transactions, and a vibrant startup scene—provides a strong foundation for AI leadership. Jio (Reliance Group) announced a three‑pronged AI strategy: delivering affordable AI intelligence to every citizen and sector, investing 10 lakh crores over seven years in nation‑building AI infrastructure, and building sovereign compute capacity through gigawatt‑scale data centers, green energy surplus, and nationwide edge compute. Five non‑negotiable principles will guide AI deployment: deep‑tech and advanced manufacturing leadership, multilingual capability across all Indian languages, responsibility/security/data residency, job creation rather than job loss, and ecosystem partnership with industry, academia, and startups. Concrete AI applications for inclusive development were highlighted: Jio Shikshak (education), Jio Arogya (healthcare), Jio Krishi (agriculture), GeoBharat IQ (daily life assistance), and GeoHotStar (cultural soft‑power). The summit called for global cooperation, positioning India as a bridge between the Global South and North, emphasizing sharing of technology and resources over hoarding.
Resolutions and action items
Jio will extend its connectivity model to deliver AI intelligence at the cost of data to every citizen, sector, and government service. Reliance will commit 10 lakh crores (approximately INR 1 trillion) over the next seven years to build AI infrastructure and ecosystem. Construction of multi‑gigawatt, AI‑ready data centers in Jamnagar with 120 MW operational by H2 2026 and a roadmap to gigawatt‑scale compute. Leverage up to 10 GW of surplus green power from solar assets in Kach and Andhra Pradesh to power AI compute. Deploy a nationwide edge‑compute layer integrated with Jio’s network to provide low‑latency, affordable AI services at the edge. Develop AI solutions in education, healthcare, agriculture, everyday assistance, and cultural content, scaling them to hundreds of millions of users. Establish a partnership ecosystem with Indian enterprises, startups, IITs, IISc, research institutions, and leading global tech firms to co‑create AI models, compute architectures, and applications.
Unresolved issues
None identified
Suggested compromises
None identified
Thought Provoking Comments
Will AI concentrate power in the hands of a few or will it democratize opportunity for all? Do we act as isolated nations or as a united global family?
Frames the central ethical dilemma of AI adoption, forcing the audience to consider the geopolitical and socioeconomic consequences of technology concentration versus democratization.
Sets the thematic tone for the entire speech, prompting the subsequent discussion of India’s role as a democratizing force and leading to the announcement of affordable, nationwide AI infrastructure.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
I see AI as a modern‑day Akshay Patra, the legendary vessel in Mahabharata that provided endless nourishment to all.
Uses a culturally resonant metaphor to re‑position AI from a mere tool to a source of limitless sustenance, making the abstract concept relatable to Indian heritage.
Deepens emotional engagement, shifting the conversation from technical possibilities to a vision of AI as a civilizational benefactor, which underpins the later promises of inclusive AI services.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
India will emerge as one of the greatest AI powers in the world in the 21st century.
A bold, forward‑looking prediction that challenges the prevailing narrative that AI leadership resides only in the Global North.
Creates a turning point from describing current achievements to projecting future dominance, paving the way for the three concrete announcements that follow.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
Jio will reduce the cost of intelligence as dramatically as we can, delivering intelligence at the cost of data.
Introduces a radical economic proposition—treating AI as a utility comparable to data connectivity—addressing the earlier concern about scarcity and high cost of compute.
Transitions the speech from vision to actionable policy, signaling a shift toward concrete measures that could democratize AI access across India.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
Jio together with Reliance will invest 10 lakh crores over the next 7 years … a patient, disciplined, nation‑building capital designed to create durable economic value and strategic resilience for decades to come.
Commits an unprecedented financial scale, moving the discussion from aspirational rhetoric to tangible, long‑term investment, and challenges other stakeholders to match this commitment.
Marks a turning point where the dialogue moves from ideas to resource allocation, reinforcing credibility and encouraging other participants (government, industry) to consider similar scale‑up.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
Jio Intelligence will build India’s sovereign compute infrastructure through gigawatt‑scale data centers, green‑energy surplus, and a nationwide edge compute layer.
Identifies the core technical bottleneck—compute scarcity—and proposes a self‑reliant, environmentally sustainable solution, directly addressing the earlier identified obstacle.
Introduces a new topic (infrastructure sovereignty) that deepens the technical dimension of the conversation and sets the stage for discussions on energy, latency, and regional deployment.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
World‑leading multilingual AI capability across all Indian languages – when farmers and artisans speak to AI in their own words, this is not convenience, this is inclusion.
Highlights linguistic inclusion as a strategic pillar, expanding the AI conversation beyond economics to cultural and social equity.
Broadens the scope of the discussion to social impact, influencing later references to education, healthcare, and agriculture applications that rely on native‑language AI.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
AI does not take away jobs; rather, it will create new high‑skill work opportunities and provide jobs for the people.
Directly confronts a common fear about automation, reframing AI as a job creator rather than a disruptor.
Alters the narrative around AI’s economic impact, preparing the audience to view upcoming AI deployments (e.g., Jio Shikshak, Jio Arogya) as growth engines rather than threats.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
India serves as the vital bridge connecting the global south and the global north – all of us have only one earth, one family and one future.
Positions India as a diplomatic and technological conduit, expanding the conversation from national ambition to global cooperation.
Shifts the tone from domestic policy to international collaboration, encouraging participants to think of AI governance and resource sharing on a worldwide scale.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
Overall Assessment

The speech is structured around a series of pivotal remarks that progressively transform a high‑level vision into concrete, actionable commitments. Early framing questions about AI’s concentration of power set a critical lens, while culturally resonant metaphors and bold predictions re‑energize the narrative. Subsequent announcements—affordable intelligence, massive capital infusion, sovereign compute infrastructure, multilingual inclusion, and job creation—serve as turning points that move the dialogue from abstract aspiration to tangible strategy. The final emphasis on India’s bridging role expands the conversation to global cooperation, tying together the technical, economic, and social threads introduced earlier. Collectively, these comments shape the discussion into a coherent roadmap that links ethical considerations, national ambition, infrastructural execution, and international partnership.

Follow-up Questions
How can India overcome the scarcity and high cost of compute to accelerate AI development?
Compute is identified as the biggest constraint for AI; addressing it is crucial for scaling AI capabilities and ensuring affordable access.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
What strategies are needed to develop world‑leading multilingual AI capabilities across all Indian languages?
Multilingual AI is essential for inclusion, allowing farmers, artisans, and students to interact with AI in their mother tongues, thereby broadening adoption.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
How can responsibility, security, data residency, and trust be embedded as core guarantees in AI systems?
Ensuring these principles is vital for public confidence, regulatory compliance, and safeguarding sensitive data in large‑scale AI deployments.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
What evidence or metrics can demonstrate that AI creates, rather than eliminates, high‑skill jobs?
Validating AI’s positive impact on employment is important to counter fears of job loss and to guide workforce development policies.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
What models of deep partnership ecosystems between Indian enterprises, startups, IITs, IISc, and research institutions will most effectively embed AI across sectors?
Collaboration frameworks are needed to accelerate AI integration in manufacturing, logistics, energy, finance, retail, agriculture, and healthcare.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
How can India achieve global breakthroughs in compute architecture, foundation models, and energy‑efficient AI designed domestically?
Breakthroughs will position India as a leading AI power and ensure sustainable, cost‑effective AI infrastructure.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
What are the most effective AI applications for inclusive development in education, healthcare, agriculture, and everyday life?
Identifying high‑impact use cases will help scale AI benefits to billions of citizens and address pressing social challenges.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani
How can AI be leveraged to amplify India’s cultural heritage and soft power through multilingual storytelling and creative content?
Using AI for cultural promotion can enhance global perception of India and create new creative industries.
Speaker: Mukesh Dhirubhai Ambani

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.