Modi's AI Vision: Delhi Declaration Sets Global South's Tech Agenda

Prime Minister Narendra Modi highlighted the outcomes of the AI Impact Summit 2026, drawing on India's civilizational values to frame its approach to AI governance. The summit resulted in the Delhi Declaration, a major governance blueprint from the Global South emphasizing sovereignty over data, inclusion, and accountability. Key achievements include massive investment commitments, the development of sovereign AI models, and population-scale solutions like BharatGen. Union Minister Hardeep Singh Puri detailed the PM's MANAV vision, which prioritizes ethical guardrails and challenges the data extractivism often faced by developing nations.

Key Points: Modi Highlights AI Summit Success & Delhi Declaration

  • Delhi Declaration rewrites AI governance
  • Focus on data sovereignty & inclusion
  • BharatGen supports 22 Indian languages
  • Global compute bank proposed
2 min read

PM Modi highlights success of AI Impact Summit 2026​

PM Modi cites India's AI leadership, data sovereignty, and the Delhi Declaration from the AI Impact Summit 2026 as a blueprint for Global South.

"giving AI an open sky while keeping command in human hands - PM Modi"

New Delhi, Feb 24

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday highlighted that, at the AI Impact Summit held in Delhi, India drew inspiration from its own civilisational impulse in putting forward its organising ideas: sovereignty over data, inclusion by design, and accountability by default.​

PM Modi was referring to an article on X, written by Union Minister Hardeep Singh Puri on the achievements at the AI Impact Summit 2026, which was attended by over 20 heads of state, more than 500 AI leaders from over 100 countries, and was the largest conference of its kind ever held in the Global South.​

The minister wrote that under Prime Minister Modi's leadership, the first Global South nation to host the global AI summit series did not merely convene a conversation, but laid out the terms on which it intends to compete: A Delhi Declaration that rewrites the rules of AI governance, digital infrastructure processing nearly half the world's real-time payments, investment commitments in the hundreds of billions, sovereign models built from scratch, and entry into the supply chain security architecture of the AI age.​

Puri highlighted the PM's MANAV vision: Ethical guardrails, accountable governance, sovereignty over data so that the raw material of intelligence is not extracted the way commodities once were, broad access so that benefits reach a farmer in Madhya Pradesh as surely as an engineer in Bengaluru, and legal validity so that every deployed system is subjected to democratic scrutiny.​

The minister further stated that PM Modi's formulation about giving AI an open sky while keeping command in human hands draws a line that many advanced economies have been reluctant to draw. ​

Those principles now carry multilateral weight through the Delhi Declaration, adopted at the summit and already being called the first major AI governance blueprint from the Global South; taking a development-oriented view, anchored in a techno-legal approach that favours flexible guardrails over rigid compliance. It organises global collaboration around three pillars: People, planet, and progress. ​

Population-scale solutions like BharatGen, which supports 22 Indian languages, acknowledge that most of the world does not operate in English. ​

A proposed global compute bank, modelled on India's subsidised GPU access at Rs 65 per hour, lowers entry barriers everywhere. The insistence on data sovereignty challenges AI extractivism: The pattern in which developing nations' data is harvested to train models they must then pay to use, Puri added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The global compute bank idea with subsidised GPU access is brilliant. If it works, it can truly democratise AI development. Rs 65 per hour is a very affordable rate. Hope the execution matches the vision.
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Aman W
While the summit's achievements sound impressive on paper, I hope this translates to real, on-ground benefits. We often see grand announcements but the implementation for the common farmer or small business owner is slow. The 'inclusion by design' principle needs to be more than a slogan.
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Sarah B
As someone working in tech, the emphasis on challenging "AI extractivism" is vital. For too long, data from countries like India has been used to build models we have to pay to access. The Delhi Declaration could set a new precedent for fairer global tech governance.
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Karthik V
Hosting over 20 heads of state and 500 AI leaders is no small feat. It shows India's growing soft power in the tech domain. The MANAV vision, especially keeping command in human hands, is a sensible approach we must protect at all costs. Jai Hind!
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Nisha Z
The focus on people, planet, and progress is good. But alongside global declarations, we need strong local data protection laws and digital literacy campaigns. An AI model is only as good as the people who can use it meaningfully.

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