Fri, 22 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 21, 2026 · 15:56
India News Updated May 21, 2026

India Now Matches Global Tech Pace, No Longer Waits for Success Stories: Jitendra Singh

Union Minister Jitendra Singh stated that India no longer waits for global success stories before adopting breakthrough technologies, as the nation now progresses alongside leading countries. He highlighted the National Quantum Mission's rapid progress, achieving over half its targets in less than half the planned time, including 1,000 km of quantum communication. Singh called for stronger public-private collaboration, noting reforms like opening the nuclear sector to private players and introducing a Rs 1 lakh crore RDI Fund. He emphasized that policy support and mindset change are essential for sustaining India's innovation-led growth in strategic sectors.

India no longer waits for global success stories before adopting breakthrough technology: Jitendra Singh

New Delhi, May 21

India is now progressing alongside leading nations in emerging technologies and no longer waits for breakthroughs to happen abroad before embracing innovation, Union Minister of State Jitendra Singh said on Thursday while calling for stronger public-private collaboration in strategic sectors.

"We are now almost at the same level of our progression or progress as any other nation. It's no longer that we wait for experiments to happen, success stories to happen elsewhere and then pick up the news as it was in IT or Internet. Today, we are one of the few nations who have done that," Singh said while addressing a session on future-proofing India's data centres and resilient supply chains at the Annual Leadership Summit of the American Chamber of Commerce.

The minister said India's technology ecosystem requires integration among governments, industry stakeholders and infrastructure providers to accelerate growth in areas such as green energy, digital infrastructure and subsea cable networks.

"Science and technology can be facilitated by the governments, but they won't get into expansion in the absence of the government," he said, stressing that policy support and infrastructure enablers are essential for technological advancement.

Highlighting the progress under the National Quantum Mission, Singh said the programme, launched around three years ago with an eight-year roadmap, has already achieved more than half its targets in less than half the planned time.

"For example, in communication, we laid down for ourselves a target of 2,000 kilometre quantum communication in eight years. Today, in just about three years, we have already achieved nearly 1,000 kilometres," he said.

The rapid progress demonstrates India's ability not only to move at the same pace as other nations, but also to go beyond many countries in emerging technologies.

Referring to international engagement, Singh said even countries like the United States are increasingly looking towards India for partnerships in advanced sectors. "We had a US delegation two days back. They also acknowledged that they look forward to doing business with us," he said.

The minister also called for a change in mindset, saying governments alone cannot drive growth in innovation ecosystems. "A change of mindset would also involve not looking up to government for everything," he said.

Singh noted that the Centre has introduced long-term tax incentives for foreign cloud providers and taken several "out-of-box decisions" to support innovation-led sectors.

Among the major reforms, he highlighted the opening of India's nuclear sector to private participation, describing it as something "unimaginable even about two years back".

"Not many countries in the world have opened up their nuclear sector to private players," he said.

Singh also referred to the launch of the National Research Foundation, saying it was designed after studying global models while incorporating wider participation from humanities and social sciences.

The minister further highlighted the Rs 1 lakh crore Research, Development and Innovation (RDI) Fund, saying it would support private sector participation in high-technology sectors through low-interest financing mechanisms.

"Government has come forward to fund private partners," he said, adding that India now has one of its strongest policy support frameworks for science and technology in decades.

He stressed that greater integration between public and private stakeholders would be essential for sustaining future growth and innovation in the country.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Matthew K

Interesting to see India pushing so hard on quantum and nuclear tech. As someone in the US tech industry, I can say that the shift in mindset the minister mentions is real—American companies are definitely looking to India for partnerships beyond just back-office work. But I wonder if the policy support is enough. The comment about "not looking up to government for everything" is crucial—India's private sector needs to take risks too. The tax incentives for foreign cloud providers are a step forward, but let's see if the supply chains can actually keep up with demand.

Kavya N

Ee sala cup namde! But seriously, it's great to see India stepping up. I'm a software engineer in a startup and the energy is palpable. Quantum communication, green energy, subsea cables—all these are areas where India can truly lead. But I have one respectful criticism: our policy frameworks often sound impressive on paper but get bogged down in red tape. For example, the nuclear sector opening—how many private companies will actually get licenses without endless delays? Also, let's ensure that the RDI fund reaches tier-2 cities like Indore, Lucknow, and Coimbatore, not just metros. Jai Hind! 🚀

Sarah B

This is a promising narrative, but I'd like to see more concrete outcomes beyond press releases. I work in climate tech in London, and India is often cited as a key partner in green energy supply chains—but issues like bureaucratic hurdles and inconsistent state-level policies remain. The minister's point about public-private collaboration is spot on—but India needs to also focus on skilling its workforce for these advanced sectors. A 1,000 km quantum network is impressive, but we need thousands more. Still, refreshing to see India thinking big instead of waiting for others.

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

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked