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India News Updated May 14, 2026

India to Chair Common Criteria Development Board (CCDB) from 2026 to 2028, Says MeitY

India has been nominated as the Chair of the Common Criteria Development Board from April 2026 to April 2028, a prestigious role in international IT security standards. The leadership position was confirmed during the CCRA meeting held in Tokyo, Japan, from April 14-16, 2026. India has been an active CCRA member since 2013, serving through MeitY and STQC Directorate. The two-year term will allow India to influence global IT security certification standards and methodologies.

India to chair Common Criteria Development Board (CCDB) from 2026 to 2028, says MeitY

New Delhi, May 14

India has been nominated as the Chair of the Common Criteria Development Board from April 2026 to April 2028, a prestigious responsibility reflecting the nation's growing role in international IT security standards development.

According to the Ministry of Electronics & IT, the leadership position was confirmed during the 1st Quarter Meeting of the Common Criteria Recognition Arrangement (CCRA), held from April 14 to April 16 2026, in Tokyo, Japan.

The Common Criteria Recognition Arrangement (CCRA) is the foundational international treaty that enables the mutual recognition of IT security certificates across borders.

Beyond the high-level policy committees, the CCRA operates through specific working groups and administrative protocols designed to maintain the integrity of the Common Criteria Portal, which serves as the "single source of truth" for certified secure IT products worldwide, a release added.

The CCDB serves as the technical core of the CCRA, managing the international work program for the Common Criteria (CC) and the Common Methodology for Information Technology Security Evaluation (CEM). While other CCRA groups handle policy matters, the CCDB focuses on the technical standards and evaluation criteria that secure global IT products.

India has been an active member of the CCRA since September 16, 2013, as a Certificate Authorising Nation. The country serves through the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MEITY) and STQC Directorate, which acts as the official Certification Body for IT security evaluations in India.

As per CCRA norms, certificates issued by member countries for products evaluated under the Common Criteria are mutually recognised without the need for re-certification, facilitating seamless international trade in secure IT products.

The CCRA comprises 20 certificate-authorising nations and 18 certificate-consuming nations. These countries collectively ensure the integrity of the Common Criteria Portal, which serves as the authoritative global repository for certified secure IT products.

India's assumption of the CCDB Chair demonstrates the nation's technical competence and commitment to advancing global IT security standards. This leadership role positions India at the forefront of defining international security evaluation methodologies and ensures that emerging technologies, particularly those relevant to India, are adequately addressed in the global standards framework.

The two-year term provides an opportunity for India to influence critical decisions shaping the future of IT security certification worldwide.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

While this is impressive, I hope the government also focuses on making our own Indian IT products more secure. We have companies that need this kind of certification.

Vikram M

Being nominated to chair such a global technical board is no small feat. It means our evaluation labs and standards bodies are trusted internationally. The STQC Directorate has really come a long way since 2013. 🎉

Sarah B

As someone working in IT security abroad, this is excellent news. India has brilliant engineers and strong technical talent. The timing is perfect with all the focus on digital sovereignty and data protection globally.

Rohit P

I just hope this doesn't become another bureaucratic posting. Need to ensure actual technical work happens and not just paper-pushing. The real test will be if we can make the Common Criteria more relevant for emerging tech like AI and quantum computing.

Kavya N

This is a big deal for our country's standing in the tech world. It means our IT exports will have an easier time gaining international trust. Well done to MeitY and the team behind this achievement! 👏

Michael C

Good to see India taking a leadership role in cyber standards. The reciprocal recognition of certificates will definitely boost trade. As a foreign national working with Indian IT, this is a win-win for everyone.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

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