India, Japan Strengthen Ties with Quantum, Health Research Pacts

India and Japan have signed agreements to collaborate in quantum technology and health research during a high-level meeting in New Delhi. The pacts include a Memorandum of Cooperation on medical devices and a Letter of Intent on quantum science. Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh highlighted the natural synergy between India's talent and Japan's technological capabilities. Both nations aim to deepen innovation partnerships through researcher exchanges and joint projects.

Key Points: India, Japan Sign Quantum & Health Research Pacts

  • India and Japan signed pacts on quantum tech and health research
  • Cooperation includes AI, advanced computing, and medical devices
  • Both nations aim to accelerate innovation and societal impact
  • Discussions built on PM Modi's 2025 Japan visit outcomes
3 min read

India, Japan sign agreements in quantum technology, health research cooperation

India and Japan have signed agreements to collaborate in quantum technology, AI, and health research, strengthening their strategic partnership in science and innovation.

"India and Japan share a natural synergy in science and technology. While Japan brings advanced technological capabilities, India offers a vast pool of talented human resources. - Dr Jitendra Singh"

New Delhi, May 6

India and Japan on Wednesday strengthened their cooperation in emerging technologies and health research, with both countries exchanging agreements in the fields of quantum science and medical devices during a high-level bilateral meeting in New Delhi.

Japan's Minister for Science and Technology Policy and Minister of State for Space Policy, ONODA Kimi, along with a high-level delegation, met Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh to discuss collaboration in frontier technologies, including quantum science, artificial intelligence, health research and advanced computing.

The meeting saw the exchange of a Memorandum of Cooperation (MoC) in health and medical devices between the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED), the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) and the Department of Science and Technology (DST). A Letter of Intent (LoI) on cooperation in Quantum Science and Technology was also signed between Japan's Cabinet Office and DST.

The Ministry of Science and Technology said the engagement aimed at advancing the India-Japan strategic partnership in "science, technology and innovation" with a "strong focus on emerging and critical technologies."

Addressing the gathering, Dr Jitendra Singh said, "India and Japan share a natural synergy in science and technology. While Japan brings advanced technological capabilities, India offers a vast pool of talented human resources. Together, we can accelerate innovation in frontier areas and translate research into impactful societal outcomes."

He added that India's growing focus on deep-tech sectors through national missions in "Quantum Technologies, Cyber-Physical Systems, Electric Mobility, Clean Energy and Advanced Computing" is creating opportunities for "joint research, co-development and industrial partnerships."

The ministry said the discussions also built upon the outcomes of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Japan in August 2025, where both countries had agreed to expand cooperation under the India-Japan Science, Technology and Innovation Partnership.

Speaking during the interaction, ONODA Kimi appreciated India's "rapid economic growth and its strong commitment to innovation," especially the "large-scale adoption of artificial intelligence across sectors."

She also said her engagements with Indian academic institutions reflected "a strong culture of resilience among young researchers, with the ability to learn from failure and continue pursuing innovation."

According to the ministry, the Japanese side highlighted that the country's strengths in "advanced manufacturing and computational technologies, including quantum and AI," align closely with India's growing technology ecosystem.

Both sides also discussed collaboration under India's National Quantum Mission, including areas such as quantum computing, communication, sensing and secure communication networks. Japan shared insights from its quantum innovation hubs and expressed interest in linking them with Indian institutions.

The discussions further covered researcher mobility programmes, joint innovation platforms and industry internships for Indian researchers in Japan, aimed at strengthening academic and industrial partnerships between the two countries.

The ministry said both countries agreed to deepen engagement through "researcher-to-researcher collaboration, institutional partnerships and industry linkages" to further strengthen India-Japan cooperation in science, technology and innovation.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Very encouraging to see India and Japan working together on health research and medical devices. With Japan's advanced tech and India's vast patient data, we could develop affordable healthcare solutions for both countries. Hope this translates into real benefits for common people soon. ☺️
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James A
As someone who works in AI, I'm thrilled about the quantum computing collaboration. India's National Quantum Mission needs international expertise, and Japan is a perfect partner. The researcher exchange programs mentioned could also give our young scientists invaluable exposure. Well done, Ministry!
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Rohit P
Good to see this partnership. But I hope the agreements are actually implemented on ground, not just signed in meetings. We need more industry-academia linkages, not just MoUs. That said, Japan's reliability in tech is unmatched. Let's see some tangible outcomes in health and quantum fields.
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Sarah B
The part about "resilience among young researchers" struck me. Indian students and scientists do face a lot of failures but keep pushing boundaries. Pairing that Japanese grit with our adaptability could lead to breakthroughs. AI and quantum together – this is the future. 🇮🇳🤝🇯
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Kavya N
While the quantum tech news is exciting, I hope the focus on health research doesn't get sidelined. India's medical device sector needs a boost, and Japan's expertise can help reduce our import dependence. Also, researcher mobility programs should be accessible to scientists from smaller cities too, not just IITs.

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