Key Points

Bengaluru ranks 26th in the global AI City Index, leading Indian cities in AI research and development. Singapore secured the top spot, driven by strong public-private partnerships in AI applications. Indian cities like Mumbai and Delhi are leveraging AI for traffic management and public safety. The report highlights rapid growth in AI adoption across Asian cities, with Beijing set to introduce AI education in schools.

Key Points: Bengaluru Ranks 26th in Global AI Index as Singapore Tops List

  • Bengaluru leads Indian cities in AI innovation and foreign investments
  • Mumbai and Delhi use AI for traffic and public security
  • Singapore tops rankings due to public-private AI collaboration
  • Beijing introduces AI education for school students by 2025
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Bengaluru ranks 26th in global AI City Index, Singapore secures top spot

Bengaluru leads Indian cities in AI development, ranking 26th worldwide, while Singapore takes the top spot in the global AI City Index.

"Bengaluru has established itself as a global AI R&D and data centre hub. – Counterpoint Research"

New Delhi, Aug 4

Bengaluru has been ranked at 26th position in the global artificial intelligence (AI) city index and is India's top AI R&D and data centre hub, according to a report.

New Delhi, Aug 4 (IANS) Bengaluru has been ranked at 26th position in the global artificial intelligence (AI) city index and is India's top AI R&D and data centre hub, according to a report. Market research firm Counterpoint Research's '2025 AI City Index' revealed that several Indian cities are rising quickly in the rankings. Bengaluru, Riyadh, Hangzhou, and São Paulo are among the fastest-growing AI cities in the world, it said.

Bengaluru has established itself as a global AI R&D and data centre hub and was first in the rankings of Indian cities, followed by Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai and Kolkata.

While Bengaluru has many startups attracting foreign investment, the report said that Mumbai and Delhi are using AI creatively in traffic management and public security, and will rise in future rankings.

The local administration is discovering creative methods to use AI for traffic management, public safety, and other purposes, but Indian cities would benefit from a stronger roadmap and regulatory environment, it said.

In global rankings, Singapore has been ranked the world’s top AI city, followed by Seoul, Beijing, Dubai, and San Francisco as the top five.

A vibrant startup ecosystem and a strong collaborative alliance between the public and private sectors in healthcare, transportation and telecommunication fuelled Singapore's rise. Seoul also excelled in implementing AI in verticals such as healthcare and education. Beijing announced formal AI education training for all primary and secondary school students starting in 2025.

Due to investments especially in supercomputing, the gap between North America and China will certainly narrow from next year onwards, the report said.

Microsoft was the most active vendor as it extended its AI data centre presence, conducted AI training, and opened AI innovation hubs. Google and Amazon followed suit expanding their footprints along the same lines, according to the report.

–IANS

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As someone working in AI field in Bengaluru, I can say our talent pool is world-class. But yes, we need better policies and more industry-academia collaboration like Singapore has done.
R
Rohit P
The traffic management AI projects in Mumbai are impressive! If we can solve our basic infrastructure problems using AI, that would be real progress. Jugaad won't take us far.
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Sarah B
Interesting to see how China is pushing AI education from school level. India should implement similar programs - our young population could be our biggest advantage in AI race.
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Vikram M
While rankings are good, we must focus on solving Indian problems with AI - from agriculture to healthcare. Global recognition will follow automatically.
K
Kavya N
The report mentions regulatory environment - this is so true! Our policies need to keep pace with technology. Too much red tape is holding back innovation.

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