Key Points

India and the United Kingdom have launched a landmark Connectivity and Innovation Centre to drive digital technology advancement. The collaborative initiative will focus on transforming telecommunications through AI, non-terrestrial networks, and cybersecurity solutions. Both countries have committed £24 million over four years to support this strategic partnership. The centre aims to create new commercial opportunities and shape the future of secure, innovative communications.

Key Points: India UK Launch Digital Innovation Centre for 6G Future

  • India and UK commit £24 million to advanced connectivity research
  • Centre focuses on AI, satellite networks, and telecom cybersecurity
  • Targeting 6G technological development over next four years
  • Aims to create commercial opportunities through innovation
2 min read

India, UK announce 'Connectivity and Innovation Centre' for digital inclusion

India and UK unveil groundbreaking Connectivity Centre to advance digital technologies, AI, and telecommunications through collaborative research

"Connectivity and telecommunication technologies critically underpin our economies and societies - Official Government Statement"

New Delhi, Oct 10

In a landmark strategic partnership to advance digital inclusion and shape the future of secure and innovative communications, India and the UK on Friday launched the 'India-UK Connectivity and Innovation Centre'.

The centre aims to bring together complementary strengths in the UK and Indian innovation in advanced connectivity - linking cutting-edge research at universities, with lab testing and field trials, through to market deployment.

The move will create new commercial opportunities by enabling industry partners to innovate, test and scale products with a pathway to market adoption, the government said in a statement.

According to the government, the next four years will be a critical period when the technological and commercial parameters for 6G will take shape.

During the period, the Centre will drive advancements in three key areas: Transforming telecom with AI - using advanced AI tools to optimise networks, improve efficiency, and unlock new services, non-terrestrial networks (NTNs); developing satellite and airborne systems to deliver reliable, high-speed connectivity to rural and remote areas. and Telecoms Cybersecurity; and strengthening network security and developing open and interoperable solutions.

"Connectivity and telecommunication technologies critically underpin our economies and societies. Developing them together on a single platform is expected to bring economic and security benefits to both countries," according to the official statement.

India and the UK have committed a combined initial 24 million pounds over four years to advance this initiative.

This funding will support applied research among established UK and Indian research centres, industry-academic partnerships, joint testbeds, and targeted collaboration in global technical standards development.

This initiative, delivered as part of the UK-India technology security initiative jointly by UKRI and DoT, stands as a flagship example of the UK-India Research and Innovation Corridor in action and reflects the shared ambition set out in the India-UK Prime Ministers' 2035 Vision, according to the statement.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great initiative! The focus on 6G and AI in telecom will put India at the forefront of next-gen technology. Hope this creates more job opportunities for our engineers and researchers.
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Arjun K
While I appreciate the collaboration, I hope the cybersecurity aspect gets proper attention. With increasing digital dependence, we need robust protection against cyber threats. The funding seems adequate but implementation will be key.
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Sarah B
As someone working in tech innovation, this partnership could be game-changing. The combination of UK research excellence and India's implementation scale is perfect. Looking forward to seeing startups benefit from this ecosystem.
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Vikram M
₹24 million pounds sounds good, but let's ensure the benefits reach actual users and not just remain in research papers. We've seen many such initiatives before - execution matters more than announcements.
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Michael C
The focus on non-terrestrial networks for rural connectivity is brilliant! This could bridge the digital divide that affects millions in India's remote areas. Hope this partnership delivers on its promise.

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