Key Points

India is making significant strides in linguistic AI through the BharatGen initiative, aiming to support all 22 scheduled languages by 2026. The project, led by IIT Bombay, focuses on creating sovereign AI models tailored to Indian contexts and societal needs. Currently supporting nine languages, BharatGen plans to expand to 15 languages by December 2025. The mission represents a strategic effort to develop ethical, inclusive, and multilingual artificial intelligence deeply rooted in Indian values.

Key Points: BharatGen AI to Cover 22 Indian Languages by 2026

  • Government-backed AI initiative targeting comprehensive language support
  • Expansion from 9 to 22 languages by June 2026
  • Developing applications for agriculture, governance, and defence
  • Pilot projects underway at Technology Innovation Hub, IIT Bombay
2 min read

BharatGen AI to support all 22 scheduled Indian languages by June 2026: Minister

India's national AI initiative BharatGen aims to support all scheduled languages, enhancing linguistic digital inclusivity across sectors.

"BharatGen is a national mission to create AI that is ethical, inclusive, multilingual - Dr. Jitendra Singh"

New Delhi, Aug 6

The government's BharatGen AI initiative will cover all 22 scheduled Indian languages by June 2026, the Parliament was informed on Wednesday.

The move is part of a roadmap to create sovereign foundational AI models tailored to Indian languages and societal contexts.

"BharatGen currently supports nine Indian languages -- Hindi, Marathi, Tamil, Malayalam, Bengali, Punjabi, Gujarati, Telugu, and Kannada," Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Science and Technology and Earth Sciences Dr. Jitendra Singh said in a written reply to a question in Lok Sabha.

"By December 2025, the coverage will expand to 15 languages, including Assamese, Maithili, Nepali, Odia, Sanskrit, Sindhi, and others," he added.

BharatGen is India's first government-supported national AI initiative, spanning text, speech, and vision-language systems.

It has developed applications for agriculture, governance, and defence, with pilot projects already conducted.

"Once fully deployed, these solutions will be made available across all states and districts," Dr. Singh mentioned.

The project is being implemented under the National Mission on Interdisciplinary Cyber-Physical Systems (NM-ICPS) of the Department of Science and Technology.

The Technology Innovation Hub (TIH) for IoT and IoE at IIT Bombay is leading the programme, overseeing model development, academic partnerships, data infrastructure, and strategic planning.

Dr. Singh said BharatGen is currently in the pilot deployment phase and has not yet been released for public or institutional use.

"However, once fully operational, it will be extended nationwide, benefiting rural and semi-urban areas as well," he added.

The government may also explore partnerships with research institutions in Karnataka to expand BharatGen's reach and applications.

Meanwhile, the LLM model was launched by the Union government in June at the BharatGen Summit.

"BharatGen is a national mission to create AI that is ethical, inclusive, multilingual, and deeply rooted in Indian values and ethos," said Singh while addressing the launch event on June 2.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good initiative but why such a long timeline? In today's fast-paced AI world, 2026 seems too far. China already has robust AI in multiple dialects. We need to move faster to stay competitive.
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Aditya G
As an AI researcher, I appreciate the focus on Indian context. Most current models are Western-centric. BharatGen could be a game-changer for local governance and agriculture applications. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
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Sarah B
Wonderful to see India embracing its linguistic diversity through technology! The inclusion of Sanskrit is particularly fascinating - perhaps we'll see AI analyzing ancient texts soon?
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Karthik V
Hope they include proper Konkani support, not just token inclusion. Many govt projects claim multilingual support but deliver poor translations. Quality matters more than quantity.
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Nisha Z
My grandmother in village will finally access digital services in her own language! This is true digital empowerment. Can't wait to see BharatGen helping farmers with local language advisories 🌾

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