Reliance Hunts AI Talent at Summit to Build for Bharat's Future

Reliance is actively scouting for top-tier AI engineering talent at the India AI Summit 2026 to build frontier models for Bharat. Chief Economic Advisor V Anantha Nageswaran emphasized that AI presents a pivotal moment for India's economy, requiring urgent structural reforms in education and skilling to harness its demographic dividend. He stressed that achieving prosperity through AI demands a national "Team India" effort and strong political will. Meanwhile, Amitabh Kant dismissed fears of AI-driven job losses, asserting that new technologies historically create new categories of employment.

Key Points: Reliance Scouting Frontier AI Talent at India AI Summit 2026

  • Reliance recruiting frontier AI engineers
  • CEA warns AI is critical economic juncture
  • Demographic dividend called a "promise and warning"
  • AI to create new jobs, not mass unemployment
3 min read

Reliance scouts for frontier AI engineering talent at AI Summit to build for Bharat

Reliance recruits AI engineers at India AI Summit 2026 as CEA V Anantha Nageswaran and Amitabh Kant discuss AI's role in India's economic future.

"Let's build for Bharat, at a scale only we know! - Gaurav Aggarwal"

New Delhi, February 17

Reliance is scouting for engineering talent at the India AI Summit 2026 as the company looks to expand its workforce dedicated to building frontier artificial intelligence models. The recruitment effort focuses on high-performing developers capable of handling large-scale platforms and system optimisation.

Gaurav Aggarwal, Chief AI Scientist at Reliance Jio, shared the invitation for technical talent via his X platform. "To the cracked engineers at the summit: if you're building at the frontier of AI models, optimization, or platforms, we need you," Aggarwal said. "Reach out and I'll fast-track an intro to our recruitment team. Let's build for Bharath, at a scale only we know!"

In a separate post on X, Aggarwal noted his attendance at the summit throughout the week alongside his colleagues. "Unsurprisingly, I am at the AI Summit this entire week with folks from my team and colleagues. Come visit us - we are all excited to share a glimpse of what all is cooking in our kitchen!" he says. He emphasizes a collaborative spirit, stating, "Divided by companies, United by Mission - Let's build AI for Bharat."

The drive for talent coincides with discussions at the India AI Impact Summit 2026. During a session on 'Employability in the AI Age: Preparing for the Jobs of Tomorrow,' Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) V Anantha Nageswaran joined virtually to highlight that artificial intelligence presents a critical juncture for the economic trajectory.

"With foresight, institutional discipline, and relentless execution, India can become the first large society to demonstrate true human abundance. Artificial intelligence can either reinforce this vision or undermine it -- the outcome will not be accidental," Nageswaran said. He noted that the transformation "will not happen by drift" and demands political will and strong state capacity. He emphasises that it requires a national commitment to aligning technological adoption with mass employability through a "Team India effort."

Contextualising this shift, the CEA describes India's demographic dividend as both a "promise and a warning," calling for urgent structural reforms. "Every year of delay compounds the pressure and narrows our options. While millions of jobs are created annually, only a small proportion of our young workforce is absorbed into productive employment due to gaps in skills and training. This is not a cyclical challenge -- it is a structural vulnerability," Nageswaran stated.

He urged a shift in focus toward large-scale skilling and educational overhaul. "The first step begins with reforming our education, and with teaching and imparting foundational skills. That is where the path to co-creating prosperity with AI and employability in the age of AI begins," he said.

Speaking to ANI on the sidelines of the summit, Amitabh Kant, Former G20 Sherpa of India, said that the country's demographic strength positions it uniquely. "India has tremendous energy, great vibrancy, huge, huge number of young people. This very powerful technology will fundamentally change the way we live and the way we will grow and evolve," Kant said.

Kant emphasised that talent, skill development and computing power will be central to India's AI journey.

Addressing concerns about job losses due to automation, Kant dismissed fears of large-scale unemployment. "No technology ever leads to lost jobs. It creates new jobs, but of a different kind," he said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Exciting news, but the CEA's warning about our demographic dividend is spot on. We have the numbers, but do we have the quality education and skills? Reforming our education system is the real frontier we need to conquer first. Otherwise, this talent hunt will only benefit a tiny elite.
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Rohit P
"Divided by companies, United by Mission" - love that line from Gaurav Aggarwal. This collaborative spirit is what will make India an AI powerhouse. Hope other big tech firms follow suit and pool resources for national projects.
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Sarah B
As someone working in tech, the focus on "cracked engineers" and system optimization is key. Building for India's scale is a unique challenge. Hope they offer competitive packages to retain this top talent and not lose them to Silicon Valley.
K
Karthik V
Respectfully, I disagree with Amitabh Kant sir. Saying "no technology ever leads to lost jobs" feels disconnected from ground reality. AI *will* displace many routine jobs. The focus must be on massive reskilling, not just optimism. The CEA's call for urgency is more accurate.
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Meera T
Building for Bharat means the AI models must understand our languages, contexts, and diversity. It can't just be a copy of Western AI. Glad to see a major Indian company taking the lead. Fingers crossed for open-source contributions too! 🤞

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