India Showcases "Enormous Capabilities" in AI, Eyes UK Collaboration

India's High Commissioner to the UK, Vikram Doraiswami, stated that India is emerging as a major force in artificial intelligence with significant potential for collaboration with the United Kingdom. He emphasized that the dialogue has moved beyond viewing AI solely as a security concern to leveraging it as a mechanism for generating growth and inclusion across societies. Doraiswami highlighted the untapped opportunity for the two countries to move beyond parallel efforts and link their tech sectors together horizontally. He pointed to the upcoming London Tech Week in June as a key benchmark for translating discussions into tangible, practical cooperation.

Key Points: India Emerges as Major AI Force, Seeks UK Tech Partnership

  • India's major AI capabilities
  • UK-India collaboration potential
  • Focus on growth & inclusion
  • Moving beyond AI security concerns
  • London Tech Week as key milestone
3 min read

"India bringing enormous capabilities to display in AI": Indian High Commissioner to UK Doraiswami

Indian High Commissioner Vikram Doraiswami highlights India's growing AI role and the significant potential for practical UK-India collaboration in the technology.

"India is bringing to display enormous capabilities in AI - Vikram Doraiswami"

London, March 25

India's High Commissioner to the UK, Vikram Doraiswami, on Tuesday said that India is emerging as a major force in artificial intelligence and has significant potential to collaborate with the United Kingdom in advancing the technology.

Speaking at an AI-focused event hosted by the High Commission of India here, he highlighted India's growing role in the global AI ecosystem. Doraiswami said recent developments demonstrate the scale of capabilities India is building in the sector.

"Some of the work that was showcased in the UK to start with--now nearly three years ago--and some of the work that was showcased a few weeks ago in India suggests to us that there is considerable opportunity for us to be able to bring together the enormous capabilities that the UK has already deployed on AI and the enormous capabilities that India is bringing to display in AI," he said.

The High Commissioner noted that discussions around artificial intelligence have evolved significantly since the AI Summit series was initiated under the former British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak at Bletchley Park in 2023.

"We have moved forward since then, beyond the idea of looking at AI as a concern and just worrying about what the security aspects of the AI piece might be, to figuring out how do you actually get and leverage AI as a mechanism for generating growth and inclusion, and ensuring that societies are both horizontally and vertically able to use AI," Doraiswami said.

He stressed that artificial intelligence should generate benefits across societies, adding that the technology must deliver "a growth dividend for all of our countries; that AI delivers a people's dividend; and that AI delivers a--sort of--an inclusion dividend across nations and across geographies".

Doraiswami also highlighted the untapped potential for India-UK cooperation in the technology sector, noting that the two countries have often pursued parallel efforts rather than working together.

"For the longest time, however, in a lot of tech sectors, we have tended to run in parallel. We do stuff in India, you do stuff in the UK, and we all look at one or two other markets with whom we can align and offer our services. Just as we are looking for AI and technology to be a driver of growth horizontally across our countries, and inclusion horizontally across our countries, why not also try to link our countries together horizontally? There is an enormous opportunity for this," he said.

Welcoming the presence of former British Prime Minister Sunak at the event, Doraiswami said discussions could help shape practical cooperation between the two countries in the AI sector.

He said, "I'm particularly pleased that we have with us the former Prime Minister of the UK, Rishi Sunak, and this extraordinary panel to be able to talk to us about what they saw coming out of the AI summit and to have a conversation with us about what we might do together leveraging the opportunities that have arisen between our two sectors."

Looking ahead, he pointed to London Tech Week in June as an important milestone for advancing collaboration.

He said, "The Tech Week coming up in London in June is a good benchmark for what we might actually do, and I really want us to be able to look at today's event as a scene setter for actual practical cooperation to come out by the time of the London Tech Week. In other words, building forward, we must actually have tangible takeaways from these events."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good to see our diplomats pushing for tech collaboration. But I hope this translates into real opportunities for our startups and SMEs, not just big IT firms. We need policies that ensure the "people's dividend" actually reaches people.
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Rohit P
Finally moving beyond just being the back office! India has the brains and the data. Combining UK's research with our execution scale can be a game-changer. Let's hope for tangible outcomes from London Tech Week, not just more talk.
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Sarah B
As someone working in tech here in the UK, the potential is huge. Indian engineers and researchers are already leading in many global firms. A structured partnership can formalize this flow of talent and ideas. Win-win!
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Karthik V
The point about running in parallel is so true. We have brilliant minds in IITs and IISc, and the UK has great universities. Instead of competing for the same US market, collaborating can help us build a strong alternative tech ecosystem.
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Michael C
A respectful critique: While the ambition is commendable, we must ensure this doesn't become another avenue for brain drain. The cooperation should focus on creating high-value jobs and R&D centers *in* India, not just facilitating more moves to London.
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Nisha Z

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