Estonia's President Joins Global Leaders at India AI Summit in New Delhi

Estonian President Alar Karis has arrived in New Delhi to participate in the India AI Impact Summit 2026, aimed at strengthening global cooperation in artificial intelligence. The visit is expected to bolster bilateral relations, particularly in digital governance, cybersecurity, and innovation. The summit has attracted 20 world leaders, including heads of state from Brazil, France, and Spain, to discuss responsible AI, digital infrastructure, and climate-conscious technology. Structured around the pillars of People, Planet, and Progress, the event focuses on delivering concrete outcomes like shared compute infrastructure and ethical AI frameworks.

Key Points: Estonia President in Delhi for India AI Impact Summit 2026

  • Strengthening India-Estonia digital ties
  • Fostering global AI governance dialogue
  • Focus on sustainable & sovereign AI
  • Delivering tangible AI outcomes
3 min read

Estonian President Alar Karis arrives in New Delhi for India AI Impact Summit

Estonian President Alar Karis arrives for the India AI Impact Summit, joining 20 world leaders to discuss AI governance, innovation, and digital ties.

"The Summit is envisioned as a pivotal global platform to shape a future-oriented agenda for inclusive, responsible, and impactful AI. - Ministry Briefing"

New Delhi, February 17

Estonian President Alar Karis arrived in the capital on Tuesday to participate in the India AI Impact Summit, which aims to strengthen global cooperation in artificial intelligence and emerging technologies.

Karis was received at the airport by the Union MoS for Youth Affairs and Sports, Raksha Khadse, along with senior officials from the Ministry of External Affairs.

The visit is expected to further strengthen bilateral ties between India and Estonia, particularly in digital governance, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and innovation.

On February 13, the Ministry of External Affairs announced that 20 world leaders would participate in the India AI Impact Summit 2026, including the Estonian President's arrival.

According to the MEA brief, India's contact with Estonia dates back several centuries.

India recognised the Republic of Estonia in September 1991, a month after it declared its independence from the Soviet Union. Diplomatic relations were established in December 1991. Bilateral relations are cordial and friendly.

At the invitation of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, several Heads of State and Government are scheduled to attend the Summit.

The leaders include the Prime Minister of Bhutan, Tshering Tobgay; Vice President of Bolivia, Edmundo Lara Montano; President of Brazil, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva; Prime Minister of Croatia, Andrej Plenkovic; President of Estonia, Alar Karis; Prime Minister of Finland, Petteri Orpo; President of France, Emmanuel Macron; Prime Minister of Greece, Kyriakos Mitsotakis; Vice President of Guyana, Bharrat Jagdeo; and Prime Minister of Kazakhstan, Olzhas Bektenov.

The other 10 leaders to participate are Hereditary Prince of the Principality of Liechtenstein, Prince Alois; Prime Minister of Mauritius, Navin Ramgoolam; President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vucic; President of Slovakia, Peter Pellegrini; President of Spain, Pedro Sanchez; President of Sri Lanka, Anura Kumara Disanayaka; Vice President of Seychelles, Sebastien Pillay; President of Switzerland, Guy Parmelin; Prime Minister of Netherlands, Dick Schoof and Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi from UAE, Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

The India-AI Impact Summit 2026 aims to foster dialogue on responsible AI governance, innovation ecosystems, digital public infrastructure, climate-conscious technology and equitable access to emerging technologies.

The Summit is envisioned as a pivotal global platform to shape a future-oriented agenda for inclusive, responsible, and impactful AI, and it aims to move beyond high-level discussions to deliver tangible outcomes that support economic growth, social development, and the sustainable use of AI.

The Summit is structured around three core pillars -- People, Planet, and Progress -- with discussions focusing on employment and skilling, sustainable and energy-efficient AI, and economic and social development.

Seven thematic working groups, co-chaired by representatives from the Global North and Global South, are presenting concrete deliverables, including proposals for AI Commons, trusted AI tools, shared compute infrastructure and sector-specific compendiums of AI use cases.

Participants also gain insights into how AI is impacting various professions and industries, the new skills required in the evolving job market, opportunities for startups to engage with investors and partners, and the role of AI in supporting farmers, small businesses and service providers.

Sessions are addressing AI safety, governance, ethical use, data protection and India's approach to sovereign AI, including the development of indigenous foundation models for strategic sectors.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
Impressive lineup of global leaders. The focus on "People, Planet, and Progress" is crucial. AI development must be sustainable and equitable. Looking forward to seeing the outcomes from the working groups, especially on shared compute infrastructure for the Global South.
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Priya S
So many leaders attending! It shows India's growing stature as a tech hub. The part about AI for farmers and small businesses is most important for us. We need tech that solves real problems in villages, not just fancy city projects.
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Rohit P
Good move, but hope the discussions on "sovereign AI" and indigenous models translate into actual policy and funding. We have brilliant minds in IITs and startups. The government needs to back them with more than just summits. Let's see some action.
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Kavya N
The inclusion of Sri Lanka and Bhutan is a nice touch for regional cooperation. AI for climate-conscious tech is a global need. Hope India takes the lead in developing affordable green AI solutions that other developing nations can adopt. 🌏
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Michael C
As someone in the tech industry, the skilling part is key. The job market is changing fast. Summits are good for diplomacy, but I hope they also launch massive, accessible re-skilling programs for our huge young population. That's the real impact.

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