US, India discuss expansion of cooperation in quantum, biotech, space and nuclear medicine
New Delhi, May 20
The United States Ambassador to India, Sergio Gor called on Union Minister Jitendra Singh on Wednesday, where both sides discussed expanding bilateral cooperation across emerging technology and innovation-driven sectors including biotechnology, quantum technologies, space, atomic energy and nuclear medicine.
According to the Ministry of Science & Technology, during the meeting, the Ambassador and the Minister reviewed opportunities for strengthening collaboration in skilling, investment, knowledge exchange and industry-led partnerships between the two countries.
The Minister said India has opened up nuclear research to the private sector for the first time, paving the way for investment and international collaboration in advanced healthcare and scientific research areas.
Jitendra Singh said the move would enable private participation in areas such as cancer care, diagnostics, oncology research and genetic medicine, according to the discussions held during the meeting.
He also highlighted India's strength in biotechnology research, stating that the country's diverse population and large genetic data pool can support global advancements in precision medicine and AI-enabled healthcare solutions.
The Minister further informed that under the National Quantum Mission, four thematic hubs have been established in the areas of quantum computing, communication, sensing and metrology, and quantum materials and devices.
He also briefed the visiting delegation on India's Research, Development and Innovation Fund, aimed at promoting private sector participation in R&D through long-term financial support at low interest rates.
The discussions were held under the framework of the US-India TRUST initiative, which focuses on cooperation in artificial intelligence, semiconductors, quantum technologies, biotechnology, energy, advanced materials, critical minerals and space technologies.
Both sides also discussed expanding cooperation in vaccine development, CAR-T therapy, AI-enabled diagnostics, regulatory harmonisation and space sector collaboration, including growing private participation in India's space ecosystem.
— ANI
Reader Comments
Wonderful to see India leveraging its diverse genetic data for precision medicine. We have such a rich demographic base that can truly benefit global healthcare if used with proper ethical guidelines. Hope this collaboration doesn't just stay on paper – implementation is key.
As an American working in biotech, I'm excited about this! India's talent pool in quantum and space is incredible. The TRUST initiative sounds promising – if we can combine US innovation with Indian manufacturing scale, we could solve some real problems in medicine and climate tech. Good move.
Honestly, I'm cautiously optimistic. We've had many MoUs before but ground-level impact is what matters. Nuclear medicine and CAR-T therapy could transform cancer treatment in India – but costs need to come down for common people. Hope private participation ensures accessibility, not just profitability.
Love the focus on AI-enabled diagnostics and space! India's space program is already amazing with ISRO, and now private players getting in will only boost it more. Quantum technology hubs are a smart investment. Let's hope this leads to real job creation for our youth. 🙏
Impressed to see India leading in these frontier areas while also focusing on regulatory harmonization. The Research, Development and Innovation Fund with low-interest financing is a smart way to de-risk private investment. Makes me optimistic about Indo-US tech partnership's future! 🌟
R