India's AI Pre-Summit 2026 Charts Path for Inclusive, People-Centric Technology

The AI Pre-Summit 2026 in New Delhi reinforced India's commitment to developing inclusive and people-centric artificial intelligence. Key discussions centered on preparing the workforce for an AI-driven future, reforming the education system to create AI builders, and leveraging AI for predictive governance. Industry and academic leaders emphasized the need for affordable solutions and trusted, India-specific datasets to ensure equitable impact. The event set the stage for further collaboration ahead of the main India AI Impact Summit 2026.

Key Points: AI Pre-Summit 2026: India's Blueprint for Inclusive AI Leadership

  • Focus on India-specific AI solutions
  • Rethinking education for an AI era
  • AI for predictive governance and risk management
  • Building affordable and accessible AI tools
3 min read

AI Impact Pre-Summit 2026 reinforced India's emerging leadership in shaping AI as a public good rooted in equity, affordability, and real-world impact

India's AI Pre-Summit 2026 concluded, focusing on AI as a public good for equity, affordability, and real-world impact in governance, education, and jobs.

"AI that works for India must learn from the people themselves. - Lalitesh Katragadda"

New Delhi, January 23

The AI4India's AI Pre - Summit 2026, held at IIT Delhi ahead of the India AI Impact Summit 2026, concluded with a consensus on the need for India-specific, inclusive, and people-centric artificial intelligence. Bringing together policymakers, academia, industry leaders, startups, and civil society, the summit reinforced India's emerging leadership in shaping AI as a public good rooted in equity, affordability, and real-world impact.

The day-long event, themed "Building Inclusive AI for India and the World: Uplift. Empower. Enrich.", witnessed vision-setting keynotes to sectoral panels and live showcases of AI in action, spanning governance, education, healthcare, agriculture, and research.

Ashutosh Dutt Sharma, CEO, IHFC-IIT Delhi, set the context for deep collaboration between research institutions, industry, and public systems, underscoring that AI must move beyond experimentation to deliver measurable societal outcomes at scale.

In the inaugural keynote, Building Inclusive AI for India, Shashi Shekhar Vempati, Co-Founder, AI4India, highlighted the urgency of addressing India's distinct challenges, linguistic diversity, unequal access to compute and data, and growing employability anxieties among youth.

"There is a lot of anxiety globally about AI taking away jobs. What we need to address is the anxiety our youth feels about employability. Preparing students and employers for an AI-driven future is not optional anymore," he said.

During Pre-Summit AI4India's report was launched titled, Future of Employability in the Age of AI, which examines how AI is reshaping jobs, skills, and institutions, while outlining pathways to build a resilient, AI-ready workforce for India.

Education reform emerged as a central theme. Prof. M Jagadesh Kumar, IIT Delhi, emphasised the need to rethink learning models for the AI era, stating that India must "redesign the education system so that we don't just create AI users, but AI builders," and that teachers must evolve into mentors of curiosity rather than content deliverers.

The role of AI in governance was highlighted by Rajit Punhani, CEO, FSSAI, who shared how regulators are leveraging AI to anticipate risks. "We have shifted from reactive enforcement to predictive management because of AI," he noted, pointing to early intervention as a powerful governance tool.

Panel discussions deepened the focus on inclusion and scale. The session Uplifting Every Indian with AI explored people-trained AI and trusted datasets, with Lalitesh Katragadda, Founder, Indihood, noting that India's diversity cannot be engineered in isolation. "AI that works for India must learn from the people themselves," he said. Aman Mittal, Joint CEO, MITRA, Government of Maharashtra, highlighted the importance of "golden data" and cited early state-level leadership in building high-quality datasets for public use.

The panel Empowering a Billion Indians with AI brought together leading academics who stressed hands-on learning, problem-solving, and India-specific datasets as critical enablers. "AI should be viewed as a skill, not just a tool," said Dr. Ramanand, Director, CPRG, while Prof. Santanu Chaudhury underlined the need for publicly accessible datasets to unlock inclusive innovation.

Industry perspectives reinforced the importance of affordability and access. Gokul Subramaniam, President, Intel India, highlighted opportunities in sectors such as agriculture and stressed frugal innovation. "From the moment we look at a problem, we must focus on affordability to make solutions truly impactful in a country like India," he said.

The Pre-Summit also featured live showcases from startups and ecosystem players demonstrating AI applications in mapping, life sciences, education, and research, offering tangible evidence of how AI is already delivering value across sectors.

The summit called for sustained collaboration to ensure that AI in India is built not just for scale, but for trust, equity, and long-term national impact--setting the stage for deeper global engagement at the India AI Impact Summit 2026.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Rajesh Q
Good intentions, but I'll believe it when I see it. We hear about "inclusive AI" at every summit, but will a farmer in Bihar or a small shop owner in Tamil Nadu actually benefit? Or will it just help big tech companies? The focus on "golden data" is crucial, hope it's not just talk.
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Aman W
Addressing youth employability anxiety is the key takeaway for me. As a recent graduate, the fear is real. If the education system can be redesigned to create AI builders, not just users, it will be a game-changer. Fingers crossed for real implementation!
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Sarah B
The emphasis on India's linguistic diversity is critical. AI trained only on English or Hindi will leave out millions. "AI that works for India must learn from the people themselves" – this philosophy, if executed well, could be a model for other diverse nations.
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Vikram M
Frugal innovation and affordability – that's the Indian way! Jugaad meets AI. If we can build solutions that are cost-effective for our scale, we can truly lead. Intel India President's comment hits the nail on the head. The live showcases give me hope it's already happening.
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Nisha Z
Predictive management in governance using AI is a brilliant application. If FSSAI can use it for food safety, imagine its use in traffic, pollution, or disaster management. This is where AI can have immediate, tangible impact on daily life. More power to such initiatives!

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