Modi Meets Qualcomm CEO, AI & 6G Future in Focus at India Summit

Prime Minister Narendra Modi met with Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon on the sidelines of the India AI Impact Summit 2026. Amon highlighted that AI will fundamentally change mobile devices and that Qualcomm is developing chips for a vast range of applications. He emphasized India's incredible opportunity as a global manufacturing hub and discussed the AI-centric future of 6G networks. The summit, focused on multilateral collaboration, also saw Qualcomm's leadership meet with Vice President C. P. Radhakrishnan.

Key Points: PM Modi Meets Qualcomm CEO at India AI Summit 2026

  • AI to transform mobile devices
  • Qualcomm's chip innovation from wearables to data centers
  • 6G networks to be AI-native
  • India's growing role in global tech manufacturing
  • Summit focuses on People, Planet, Progress
3 min read

PM Modi meets Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon on sidelines of India AI Impact Summit

PM Modi meets Qualcomm's Cristiano Amon. Discussions center on AI, semiconductors, 6G, and India's role as a global manufacturing hub.

"India is becoming a global manufacturing hub. - Cristiano Amon"

New Delhi, February 20

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday held a bilateral meeting with Cristiano Amon, President and CEO of Qualcomm, in the national capital on the sidelines of the India AI Impact Summit 2026.

The Prime Minister met the Tech CEO at the Hyderabad House. The meeting follows the Qualcomm CEO's remarks at the summit.

Cristiano Amon, during his address, said that Artificial Intelligence (AI) will fundamentally change how we think about the mobile device and highlighted that the work done by Qualcomm in this direction will create the hardware and software that will help enable this future across all devices.

"We look at our smartphones as an inseparable device. In the future, revolution is going to increase robotics in the industrial area, which will lead to a change in the way we see our mobile devices today," he said.

"We're one of the few companies working on chips from sub 2 milliwatts to a smart earbud that you're going to wear and also 2000 watts for a chip on the data centre," he added.

He also said that the Indian market has an incredible opportunity, noting that "India is becoming a global manufacturing hub."

On the telecom networks, he said the telecom sector is approaching its "next big transformation", with 6G expected to move beyond incremental connectivity improvements to enable AI-native networks and large-scale sensing capabilities.

He also emphasised that AI will be central to 6G networks.

Earlier on Wednesday, Vice President CP Radhakrishnan met with the President and CEO of Qualcomm on the sidelines of the India AI Impact Summit 2026 in the national capital.

In a post on X, the Vice-President's office said that the Qualcomm President and CEO Cristiano Amon, accompanied by members of the company's senior management team, called on the Vice-President at Uprashtrapati Bhavan.

According to the post, discussions during the meeting with Qualcomm centred on advancements in artificial intelligence and semiconductors, and on their increasing relevance to India's digital ecosystem.

"President and CEO of Qualcomm, Mr. Cristiano Amon, along with members of the company's senior management team, called on the Vice-President of India, Shri C. P. Radhakrishnan, at Uprashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi today on the sidelines of India AI Impact Summit 2026. The meeting included discussions on advancements in AI, semiconductors and their growing relevance for India's digital ecosystem," the post read.

The India AI Impact Summit 2026 brings together nations and international institutions, reflecting India's focus on multilateral collaboration and the use of AI to address global challenges and unlock new opportunities for shared growth.

India is hosting the AI Impact Summit 2026 from February 16 to 20. It is anchored in three foundational pillars, or 'Sutras': People, Planet and Progress.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good to see global tech leaders recognizing India's potential. But I hope these summits translate into real opportunities for our engineers and startups, not just big corporations. We need the ecosystem to grow from the ground up.
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Rohit P
AI in 6G sounds exciting, but what about making 4G reliable and affordable first? In my village, the network is still patchy. Let's solve today's problems while planning for tomorrow's tech.
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Sarah B
As someone working in tech, the emphasis on "AI-native" is key. It's not just about faster internet; it's about building intelligence into the network itself. If India can lead here, it changes everything for digital services.
V
Vikram M
Qualcomm's chips are in most of our phones. If they start designing and maybe even manufacturing more in India, it will be a huge boost for 'Make in India'. Hope the government offers the right incentives to make it happen.
K
Kavya N
The three 'Sutras' - People, Planet, Progress - are important. AI development must be responsible and benefit everyone, not just urban elites. We need to use it for agriculture, healthcare, and education in rural areas too.

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

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