India-Nepal explore AI collaboration to boost bilateral technological ties
Kathmandu, June 12
The Embassy of India in Kathmandu, in partnership with the Nepal-India Chamber of Commerce and Industry, hosted a seminar titled "India-Nepal Partnership in Emerging Technologies: Exploring Bilateral Opportunities for AI Collaboration".
The event gathered stakeholders from government, academia, and the startup ecosystem to discuss how both nations can leverage artificial intelligence for shared economic growth.
The session featured a keynote address by Pratyush Kumar, Co-Founder and CEO of Sarvam AI. Sarvam AI is one of the 12 organisations selected under the Innovation Centre pillar of the IndiaAI Mission to develop indigenous foundational models, with financial and compute support amounting to Rs 246.72 crore.
In his welcome remarks, NICCI President Sunil KC emphasised the importance of strengthening technology-driven economic cooperation between Nepal and India, and encouraged the Indian AI sector to explore establishing a presence in Nepal and pursuing partnerships with both the public and private sectors.
Suman Shekhar, First Secretary (Commerce) at the Embassy of India in Nepal, highlighted strong economic and commercial ties between India and Nepal, underscoring shared interests in digital capacity building, startup support, and knowledge exchange on emerging technologies.
He shared that the second cohort of the India-Nepal Startup Partnership Network (IN-SPAN) program commenced on 1 June 2026, with 25 Nepali startups undertaking an 8-week, fully-funded training and innovation program at IIT Madras Pravartak Technologies Foundation, Chennai. This builds on the success of the first cohort, in which 9 startups received incubation offers from IIT Madras Incubation Cell and IIT Madras Pravartak Foundation.
Kumar's keynote addressed the rise of AI, including large language models and their implications for countries at earlier stages of AI adoption. He shared learnings from the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi and the 7 pillars of the India AI Mission (Compute, Datasets, Innovation, Application Development, Future Skills, Startup Financing, Safe and Trusted AI).
He outlined practical considerations, including the value of speech-to-text models for reaching underserved populations, the importance of data sovereignty and the cultivation of domestic talent.
He highlighted how Nepal's startup community and academic institutions could take steps in this direction, and identified joint research initiatives and training programmes where India-Nepal collaboration could take concrete shape.
The session also provided an opportunity to highlight deepening India-Nepal cooperation in emerging technologies. Digital India Bhashini Division (DIBD), Ministry of Electronics, Information Technology, India, recently signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Kathmandu University's Centre for Digital Public Infrastructure and Artificial Intelligence (DPI-AI), Nepal, to establish a collaborative framework for advancing Language AI, multilingual digital public infrastructure, and inclusive digital ecosystems across India and Nepal.
The MoU was exchanged by Amitabh Nag, CEO, Digital India BHASHINI Division, and Professor Bal Krishna Bal, Associate Dean, Kathmandu University, in the presence of S Jaishankar, External Affairs Minister of India, and Shisir Khanal, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Nepal, during bilateral engagements in New Delhi last week.
The India AI Impact Summit 2026, held from 16-21 February 2026 at Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi, drew delegations from over 100 countries and catalysed landmark global commitments, including the Summit Declaration endorsed by 92 countries and international organisations, multiple voluntary frameworks on responsible and inclusive AI governance, and over USD 200 billion in investment pledges.
The Summit also saw the expansion of India's sovereign compute capacity by an additional 20,000 GPUs, besides the existing 38,000 GPUs.
The programme brought together representatives from business, government, academia, and startups to discuss prospects for cooperation in artificial intelligence between the two countries.
— ANI
Reader Comments
The IN-SPAN startup program at IIT Madras is a fantastic initiative! 25 Nepali startups getting 8 weeks of training is exactly what's needed to bridge the tech gap. But I hope the Indian govt also focuses on making AI accessible in regional languages across both countries—Bhashini division's role is key here.
Impressive numbers—over USD 200 billion in investment pledges from the AI Impact Summit! But I'm curious about the specifics: how are these funds being allocated? Also, the expansion to 58,000 GPUs is massive. India is clearly positioning itself as a global AI hub, and Nepal makes a smart partner given its growing tech ecosystem.
Finally, some concrete tech collaboration with Nepal beyond just infrastructure! The speech-to-text models for underserved populations is a smart priority. However, we need to ensure this isn't just a one-way knowledge flow—Nepal has strong academic minds too. Let's create genuine co-innovation, not dependency. 🤔
This is a win-win. Nepal gets access to India's massive GPU infrastructure (58,000 now!) and expertise, while India gains a partner for language models that can handle South Asian linguistic diversity. The MoU with Kathmandu University is smart—academia is where sustainable innovation starts. Hope the implementation matches the ambition.
Love that data sovereignty and domestic talent were discussed—these are non-negotiable for any country adopting AI. My only concern: 8 weeks for startup training feels too short for meaningful skill transfer. But if IIT Madras incubates them properly afterward, it could work. Also, FYI: the article says the second IN-SPAN cohort started
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