UNDP Hails India's Global Tech Leadership in AI and Digital Infrastructure

The United Nations Development Programme's Chief Digital Officer, Robert Opp, has emphasized India's crucial role as a global leader in technology and artificial intelligence. He highlighted India's digital public infrastructure as a model for solving large-scale challenges that many other countries face. Opp noted a significant international demand for learning from India's experience in building and strengthening digital and AI ecosystems. He also discussed UNDP's work in helping countries adopt AI safely and inclusively, alongside global UN efforts to advance AI governance.

Key Points: India's AI Leadership & Digital Infrastructure Role: UNDP

  • Global AI leadership
  • Digital public infrastructure model
  • Solving population-scale challenges
  • International experience sharing
  • AI governance discussions
3 min read

India has very important role as leader in technology with digital public infrastructure: UNDP's CDO

UNDP CDO Robert Opp says India is a global tech leader, solving population-scale challenges with digital public infrastructure and AI solutions.

"India has a very important role as being a leader in technology, a leader in addressing or using technology at a population scale with digital public infrastructure. - Robert Opp"

By Kaushal Verma, New Delhi, February 18

India plays a major global role in artificial intelligence, especially through digital public infrastructure and sharing large-scale technology solutions with other countries, Robert Opp, Chief Digital Officer of the United Nations Development Programme.

"India has a very important role as being a leader in technology, a leader in addressing or using technology at a population scale with digital public infrastructure," Opp told ANI on the sidelines of the AI Impact Summit on Wednesday.

"Many countries are facing challenges that India has either already solved or is in the process of solving, and there is a huge demand for examples and experience-sharing," he added.

Opp said India hosting the AI Impact Summit sends "a great signal to the world that innovation happens everywhere," adding that several countries look to India as a source of experience as they build or strengthen their own digital and AI ecosystems.

UNDP, the development arm of the United Nations, works in 170 countries and territories worldwide, supporting governments in addressing development challenges. Opp said the agency views digital technologies, such as AI, as "an important accelerator" in efforts to help close the poverty gap and tackle social and economic challenges.

"What we do is look at what countries are facing in terms of their challenges and how they would like to adopt artificial intelligence or other technologies to address those challenges," he said.

That process includes assessing bottlenecks within national ecosystems. "Do countries have the legislation or regulatory environments in place to facilitate AI adoption? Is there institutional capacity within government to support and enable AI? Is the innovation ecosystem there? Are there talented and skilled individuals able to build new kinds of AI solutions?" Opp said.

He also highlighted the importance of infrastructure. "Is there computing power availability? Are there data centres in place that are accessible and affordable for innovators to use?" he said.

UNDP partners with countries to ensure that the "ingredients are in place to use technology safely and inclusively," including policies to protect privacy and safeguards to ensure that everyone in society benefits, "even those who are not connected with smartphones or cell phones," alongside investments in talent and skills development.

At the global level, Opp said the United Nations is advancing discussions on AI governance. The U.N. Secretary-General has convened an annual policy dialogue on AI and introduced the Global Digital Compact, which member states agreed to.

An international scientific panel has also been created to help determine what kind of global governance is needed to ensure technology is safe and inclusive, with member states ultimately deciding on any regulatory framework.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Robert G
As someone working in international development, I've seen firsthand the interest in India's DPI model. The scale at which solutions like CoWIN were deployed is genuinely impressive and offers valuable lessons.
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Aman W
While the recognition is good, we must not get complacent. The digital divide in rural areas is still a big issue. Yes, we have the infrastructure, but is it truly inclusive? We need to ensure benefits reach the last person in the queue.
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Shreya B
Absolutely! From paying a street vendor via UPI to filing taxes online, the ease has been phenomenal. Proud moment for all Indian techies and policymakers who made this possible. 🙌
K
Karthik V
The point about assessing bottlenecks is crucial. We have the talent and the solutions, but sometimes red tape and legacy systems slow things down. Hope this global spotlight accelerates positive change domestically too.
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Nisha Z
It's great that the UNDP official mentioned safeguards for those not connected. My didi in the village still uses a basic phone. Any global model must account for them. India's experience with this demographic is key.

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