Sunak: India & UK are AI superpowers with shared innovation vision

Former UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak declared both India and the United Kingdom as global "AI superpowers" at an event hosted by India's High Commission in London. He cited the Stanford AI Index, noting India's recent overtaking of the UK in the rankings while humorously referencing cricket rivalry. Sunak emphasized a shared governance philosophy that is pro-innovation and pragmatic, contrasting it with EU and US approaches. He also called for deeper collaboration between the two nations' AI Security Institutes under the new UK-India Technology Security Initiative.

Key Points: Rishi Sunak calls India and UK global AI superpowers

  • India overtakes UK in Stanford AI Index
  • Shared philosophy favors innovation over heavy regulation
  • Call for AI Security Institute collaboration
  • UK-India Technology Security Initiative launched
  • Highlighted as 21st-century security cooperation model
3 min read

"India and UK are global AI superpowers," says former UK PM Rishi Sunak

Former UK PM Rishi Sunak highlights India-UK as AI superpowers, citing Stanford Index and shared pro-innovation governance approach at London event.

"India and UK are global AI superpowers," says former UK PM Rishi Sunak
"Both India and the UK share a common outlook on AI... we embrace a principles-first, pragmatic, pro-innovation attitude. - Rishi Sunak"

London, March 25

Former British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said on Tuesday that both India and the United Kingdom have emerged as global "AI superpowers", highlighting growing technological cooperation between the two countries.

Speaking about the global AI landscape, at an AI-focused event hosted by the High Commission of India in London, Sunak cited the widely referenced Stanford AI Index, noting that the two countries rank among the world's leading AI powers. While acknowledging that India has recently overtaken the UK in the rankings, he added a light-hearted remark about sporting rivalry in the ICC Test rankings.

He said," According to the globally respected Stanford AI Index, both India and the UK are ranked as AI superpowers. Although India has recently overtaken the UK in the rankings, I reminded Prime Minister Modi at the summit that England remains ahead in the ICC Test rankings."

He stressed that both countries share a similar philosophy toward artificial intelligence governance, favouring innovation-friendly policies over heavy regulation. Sunak said, " Both India and the UK share a common outlook on AI: neither of us favours the EU's top-down regulatory approach or the ad-hoc nature of the US response. Instead, we embrace a principles-first, pragmatic, pro-innovation attitude. I believe we can unite countries around this sensible approach, even in a polarised world."

The former UK PM also highlighted the importance of cooperation in ensuring the safe development of emerging technologies. He noted that India established its own AI Security Institute last year and called for stronger collaboration with the UK's counterpart.

"Last year, India established its own AI Security Institute, and we must work together to foster greater cooperation between these institutes. Just as our intelligence-sharing keeps us safe from shared terrorist threats, joint efforts between our AI security institutes can protect us from the risks of emerging technologies," Sunak said.

He added that the UK-India Technology Security Initiative would help facilitate deeper collaboration between the two countries, describing it as a "powerful" example of 21st-century security cooperation focused on emerging technologies.

He said," The UK-India Technology Security Initiative will help facilitate this collaboration--a powerful example of security cooperation between our nations in the 21st century."

Meanwhile, India's High Commissioner to the UK, Vikram Doraiswami, 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 in London, 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.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good to see recognition of India's AI capabilities on a global stage. But I hope this partnership focuses on solving real Indian problems - agriculture, healthcare, education - and not just chasing rankings or commercial gains. The AI Security Institute collaboration is crucial though.
R
Rohit P
Haha, had to bring cricket into it! 🏏 On a serious note, overtaking the UK in the AI rankings is a big deal. Our engineers and data scientists are second to none. This partnership should ensure the benefits of AI reach every corner of India, not just metro cities.
S
Sarah B
As someone working in tech, this is promising news. The "principles-first, pragmatic" approach Sunak mentions is exactly what's needed. The US and EU models have their flaws. A strong India-UK axis could set a sensible global standard for AI governance.
V
Vikram M
While the collaboration is good, we must be cautious. "Security cooperation" sounds great, but we need transparency. The initiative should not become a backdoor for foreign influence over our critical digital infrastructure. Jai Hind.
K
Karthik V
The potential is enormous. India's scale for data and implementation, combined with UK's advanced research, can create solutions for the world. Hope our institutes like IITs and IISc get deeply involved in this partnership. The focus must remain on innovation.

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