India-US Tech Forum Eyes $500B Trade, AI & Energy Security Focus

The Nasscom US CEO Forum met in Washington to advance the India-US technology partnership, setting a joint target of $500 billion in bilateral trade. Discussions centered on innovation, AI collaboration across the value chain, and securing energy for next-generation data centers. The forum highlighted that Indian technology companies contribute over $100 billion to US GDP and support more than half a million jobs nationwide. Leaders emphasized shifting the relationship from collaboration to co-creation, building on the vision set by both countries' leaders.

Key Points: India-US Tech Forum Targets $500B Trade, AI Collaboration

  • $500B bilateral trade target
  • AI value chain collaboration
  • Energy security as strategic priority
  • Indian tech supports 500K+ US jobs
2 min read

India-US Technology Forum sets sight on $500 billion trade target: NASSCOM

Nasscom forum discusses AI, energy security, and job creation, aiming to boost India-US bilateral trade to $500 billion through tech partnership.

"move the partnership from collaboration to co-creation - Rajesh Nambiar, Nasscom"

New Delhi, February 5

The Nasscom US CEO Forum met in Washington, DC, on February 4-5 to discuss the India-US technology and trade partnership. According to a statement released by Nasscom, the industry aims to support a joint target of USD 500 billion in bilateral trade.

This meeting followed the announcement of a trade deal between the two countries. The group convened on Capitol Hill to discuss innovation, AI, supply chains, and job creation.

India technology plays a substantial role in the growth of the US economy. These companies contribute USD 103 billion to the US GDP, as per the Nasscom release.

These firms support more than half a million jobs across 25 states in the US.

Forum members also discussed collaboration across the AI value chain. This work aligns with the Pax Silica coalition. Indian firms seek to expand roles in silicon design and advanced platforms.

Another key point discussed at the forum was energy security. According to the release, energy security emerged as a "strategic priority" at the forum with "the United States scaling AI-critical energy capacity and India integrating green and nuclear energy to support next-generation data centres."

"Indian technology companies are increasingly contributing to AI-driven energy optimisation, grid analytics, and digital infrastructure, reinforcing the resilience of the US innovation ecosystem," the release added.

The delegation also met with Members of Congress and Administration officials. These included Senator Ron Wyden and Deputy US Trade Rep Ambassador Rick Switzer.

Rajesh Nambiar, President of Nasscom, said the trade deal provides "macro predictability" as technology and talent become "central to global competitiveness." He stated the forum wants to move the partnership "from collaboration to co-creation."

Amit Chadha, CEO of L&T Technology Services, said the countries have a "generational opportunity" for a technology alliance. He noted that Indian firms are "deeply embedded in the success of US enterprises."

The forum followed a vision set by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump. It positions technology as a cornerstone of growth. The platform also included leaders from government, industry, and academia.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
While the ambition is good, I hope this co-creation means more high-value work and IP staying in India, not just service delivery. We need to move up the value chain. The focus on AI and energy security is promising though.
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Aman W
$103 billion to US GDP and half a million jobs! We often hear about outsourcing taking jobs away, but here's data showing how Indian tech companies are major job creators in America. This partnership is truly mutually beneficial.
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Sarah B
Interesting read. The integration of green and nuclear energy for next-gen data centers is a critical point. Climate tech collaboration could be a huge win for both countries. Hope the forum's discussions translate into concrete projects.
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Vikram M
"Generational opportunity" is right. With the right policies and sustained effort, this can secure India's position as a global tech leader, not just a backend office. The focus on silicon design is particularly exciting for our engineering talent.
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Kiran H
Good step, but macro predictability is key. The US visa and trade policies have been unpredictable in the past. A stable framework will help companies plan long-term investments and R&D. Jai Hind!

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