Fadnavis at WEF 2026: Maharashtra to Build India's First Innovation City Near Mumbai

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis engaged with global industry leaders at the World Economic Forum 2026, including Henkel's Carsten Knobel and NVIDIA representatives, to discuss investment and expansion in the state. He announced the finalization of plans for India's first innovation city near Mumbai, backed by an $11 billion commitment from Tata Sons. The project, which aims to create a global plug-and-play innovation hub, was pitched to over 400 international investors in Davos. The state also highlighted its focus on sovereign AI, digital infrastructure, and clean energy, including new MoUs for Small Modular Reactors.

Key Points: Maharashtra CM Fadnavis at WEF 2026, Plans Innovation City

  • India's first innovation city near Mumbai
  • $11 billion Tata Sons commitment
  • Talks with NVIDIA & Henkel CEOs
  • Focus on AI, semiconductors, energy
  • MoUs for Small Modular Reactors
4 min read

CM Fadnavis engages with global industry leaders at WEF 2026, highlights Maharashtra as innovation hub

CM Devendra Fadnavis meets global CEOs at Davos, announces India's first innovation city near Mumbai with $11B Tata investment, AI focus.

"Our goal is to make Mumbai a hub where anyone in the world can easily access a plug-and-play innovation system. - Devendra Fadnavis"

Davos, January 23

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis held high-level interactions with global industry leaders on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum 2026 on Thursday, underscoring the state's growing prominence as a hub for innovation, sustainability, and advanced technology.

He met Carsten Knobel, Henkel's Global CEO, and representatives from NVIDIA to discuss the multinational companies' expansion plans in India, with a special focus on Maharashtra

The discussions with Carsten Knobel covered Henkel's sustainability initiatives, including the development of green, environmentally responsible products, as well as future investment opportunities in innovation, research, and development. CM Fadnavis welcomed Henkel's interest and reiterated the state government's support for creating world-class products under Maharashtra's innovation-driven ecosystem.

In another key engagement, CM Fadnavis met representatives of NVIDIA to discuss the company's growing footprint in India. The talks focused on partner-led data centre GPU deployments, support for sovereign AI initiatives, the development of Indian-language large language models (LLMs), and the proposed establishment of an NVIDIA office in Pune's Yerwada business district.

The Chief Minister highlighted Maharashtra's readiness to support investments in advanced AI, semiconductors, and digital infrastructure.

Earlier, speaking to ANI on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Fadnavis highlighted on Wednesday that the idea was proposed under the AI and the Innovation Ecosystem theme of the 2025 WEF conference before more than 400 investors, and this year the location has been finalised with the project set to begin in six to eight months.

"The city will bring global innovation ecosystems to Mumbai, India. Our goal is to make Mumbai a hub where anyone in the world can easily access a plug-and-play innovation system. Tata Sons has committed $11 billion to develop the Innovation City, including a data centre. Following this announcement, international investors are now expressing serious interest in investing in this city. We are set to build India's first innovation city near Mumbai," CM Fadnavis told ANI.

"We have just identified the location and sketched one of its details, which we can now refer to as the contour. The plan is to take the next six to eight months before we begin," he added.

According to the CM, Tata Sons has committed around USD 10 billion in investment, including infrastructure including a data centre.

"I discussed this idea with the chairman of TATA Sons and sought his support. I am delighted that, nearly a year later, we have officially announced this innovation city in Davos before 400-450 international investors," he said.

Apart from the city, the CM also discussed focusing on energy transition, particularly the International Solar Alliance. Ministers from Zimbabwe and our Union ministers participated in the discussion, engaging in extensive discussions on energy transition.

Notably, Maharashtra has also signed MoUs with Indian and Russian companies to build Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) for nuclear energy use in smaller clusters in the state, made possible by the passage of the SHANTI bill in Parliament.

The plan for the city comes as Union Minister of Electronics Ashwini Vaishnaw detailed India's comprehensive strategy to dominate the global artificial intelligence landscape, emphasising a shift from big-tech-controlled resources to a public-private partnership model.

During the ongoing global summit, the Minister pointed out that the world, especially the AI industry, is recognising that India is working methodically across all five layers.

"The whole world today, and especially the AI-related industry, is appreciating the fact that India is working methodically on all five layers," he commented.

He described the five distinct elements that form the backbone of India's artificial intelligence mission. During the ongoing global summit, the Minister pointed out that the world, especially the AI industry, is recognising that India is working methodically across all five layers.

Breaking down the technical framework, the Minister said, "If we look at what AI is, AI has five elements. The first element is the application layer, that is, how we use it. The second is the model layer, the models that are created. The third is the chip layer, the semiconductor layer. The fourth is the infrastructure layer, the data centres. The fifth layer is energy."

The Minister also highlighted a strategic shift in the economics of the Fifth Industrial Revolution, suggesting that the massive ROI of the future will come from cost-effective, scalable solutions rather than just "brute-force" computing. He debunked the myth that all AI progress requires expensive hardware, noting that "nearly 95 per cent of AI work can be done using the 20-50 billion parameter models."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone working in tech in Pune, the news about NVIDIA setting up an office in Yerwada is very exciting. It will create high-quality jobs and boost the local ecosystem. Hope the government ensures the benefits reach local engineers and startups, not just MNCs.
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Priya S
Good to see discussions on sustainability with Henkel. But I hope this "innovation city" has a solid plan for managing its environmental impact. We need green growth, not just growth. The SMRs for nuclear energy sound promising for cleaner power.
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Rohit P
All these big announcements at Davos are great, but what about the ground reality? We hear about MoUs and investments every year. The real test is execution. Will this innovation city actually get built in 6-8 months? Hope it doesn't remain just a "contour" on paper.
K
Karthik V
The minister's point about 95% of AI work not needing super expensive hardware is a game-changer for Indian startups. We can innovate cost-effectively. Building the five layers methodically is the right approach. Jai Hind!
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Michael C
Impressive to see the scale of ambition. An $11 billion commitment from Tata is no small thing. If Maharashtra can pull this off, it will attract talent and capital from across the world. The plug-and-play ecosystem for innovators is exactly what's needed.
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