
As the sun rises over New Delhi this Sunday, the capital stands on the precipice of a defining moment in technological history. Tomorrow, the Bharat Mandapam will open its doors to the AI Impact Summit 2026, an event that marks a decisive shift in the center of gravity for artificial intelligence governance and innovation. For the first time, the Global South is playing host to a gathering of this magnitude, signaling India's emergence not just as a consumer of technology, but as a pivotal architect of its future.
At Creati.ai, we are closely monitoring the developments of this landmark summit, which promises to move beyond the theoretical debates of previous years and into the realm of actionable infrastructure and sovereign capability. With a roster of attendees that reads like a "who's who" of global geopolitics and Silicon Valley power, the next five days are set to redraw the map of the digital world.
The scale of the AI Impact Summit 2026 is unprecedented for the region. From February 16 to 20, New Delhi will host an intersection of political will and technological prowess. The confirmed guest list includes heads of state who view AI as central to their national strategies, alongside the CEOs responsible for building the very engines of this revolution.
French President Emmanuel Macron is returning to India, underscoring the deepening strategic technology partnership between Paris and New Delhi. His presence highlights a shared commitment to "Innovation with Integrity," a core theme of the summit. Joining him is Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, leading a massive business delegation eager to integrate AI into South America's largest economy. The inclusion of UN Secretary-General António Guterres further elevates the summit's status, emphasizing the urgent need for multilateral frameworks in AI safety and equity.
The corporate sector's representation is equally formidable. The US-India Strategic Partnership Forum (USISPF) has organized the largest-ever American industry delegation to such an event. Led by Adobe Chairman and CEO Shantanu Narayen and FedEx President Raj Subramaniam, the delegation includes over 120 senior executives. Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith is also in attendance, signaling the tech giant's continued massive bets on India's digital infrastructure.
One of the most anticipated aspects of the summit is the unveiling of concrete outcomes from the "IndiaAI Mission." Unlike previous international gatherings that focused heavily on regulation, this summit is expected to showcase indigenous innovation. India is set to unveil 12 indigenous foundation models developed by homegrown startups and research consortia.
These models represent a significant step toward "Sovereign AI"—the idea that nations must control their own digital intelligence infrastructure rather than relying solely on imported models. Among the highlights are BharatGen, a text-to-speech and generative model from IIT Bombay tailored for India's linguistic diversity, and new multilingual reasoning engines from Sarvam AI.
These innovations are not merely academic exercises; they are designed to democratize access to intelligence. By training models on vast datasets covering India's 22 official languages, the initiative aims to bridge the digital divide, bringing the benefits of AI to sectors like agriculture, healthcare, and governance where English-centric models often fall short.
While the diplomatic dialogues take place in New Delhi, a massive infrastructure project in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh is capturing the imagination of investors. Nara Lokesh, the state's Information Technology Minister, has outlined a vision for a "Data City" in Visakhapatnam (Vizag) that aims to rival the world's largest digital hubs.
The scale of this ambition is staggering. The project envisages a 100-kilometer radius ecosystem dedicated to data centers and AI computing, targeting a capacity of six gigawatts (GW). To put this in perspective, this capacity rivals the entire data center output of some developed nations.
Infrastructure Initiatives in Andhra Pradesh
| Project Name | Key Stakeholders | Investment Scale | Strategic Goal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vizag AI Data City | Govt of Andhra Pradesh | Land at 1 cent/acre | Create a 100km digital ecosystem |
| Google AI Hub | $15 Billion | Largest AI hub outside the US | |
| Data Center JV | Reliance, Brookfield, Digital Realty | $11 Billion | High-density computing infrastructure |
| Green Power Link | State Energy Dept | Surplus water utilization | Sustainable cooling for 6GW capacity |
Lokesh’s strategy involves aggressive incentives, offering land at nominal rates to attract the entire value chain—from server manufacturers to cooling system specialists. The state has already secured investment agreements totaling $175 billion, a testament to the global appetite for diversified AI infrastructure outside of China and the US.
The agenda for the week is structured around three "sutras" or guiding principles: People, Planet, and Progress. These are further divided into seven thematic "chakras," covering areas such as sustainable AI, trusted governance, and skilling the workforce of tomorrow.
People: The focus here is on mitigating the displacement risks of automation while maximizing human augmentation. Discussions will center on upskilling millions of workers in the Global South to ensure they are participants in the AI economy, not just subjects of it.
Planet: With the computational demands of Large Language Models (LLMs) skyrocketing, energy consumption has become a critical bottleneck. The summit will feature sessions on "Green AI," exploring how renewable energy—like the hydro-cooling solutions proposed in Vizag—can power the next generation of data centers.
Progress: This track will explore the economic multipliers of AI. Tech leaders like Vishal Sikka of Vianai Systems have termed this the "best AI conference" in years because of its focus on application over theory. The goal is to move from "chatbots" to "reasoning engines" that can solve complex industrial and scientific problems.
The summit provides a platform for diverse perspectives, particularly from nations often sidelined in Western-centric tech narratives.
Michael Kratsios, White House adviser and Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, stated upon his arrival, "America is setting the gold standard for AI innovation, and we want to share it with our global partners." His presence indicates Washington's desire to keep India firmly within its technological sphere of influence, especially as a counterweight to other global powers.
Conversely, leaders from the Global South are emphasizing "Technological Sovereignty." Slovakian President Peter Pellegrini and delegations from countries like Bolivia and Mauritius are expected to advocate for open-source technologies and equitable access to compute resources, preventing a scenario where AI exacerbates global inequality.
A central tension at the summit will be the disparity in computing power. While companies like Microsoft and Google are investing billions in local infrastructure—Microsoft alone pledged $17.5 billion recently—there remains a significant gap in access to high-end GPUs for local researchers and startups.
To address this, the summit is expected to announce the formation of "AI Commons," a shared resource initiative that would allow member nations of the Global South to access pooled computing resources for public good projects. This initiative aligns with Prime Minister Modi’s vision that "no one holds the key to our collective future other than us humans," reinforcing the tool-like nature of AI that must remain accessible to all.
The commercial implications of this week’s events cannot be overstated. India’s AI market is projected to surge past $17 billion by 2027, but the indirect economic impact could be exponentially larger.
Key Industry Delegations
| Country/Region | Head of Delegation | Focus Area | Key Companies |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | Michael Kratsios / Shantanu Narayen | Infrastructure & Strategic Partnership | Microsoft, Adobe, FedEx, NVIDIA |
| France | President Emmanuel Macron | R&D Collaboration | Capgemini, Atos, Mistral AI |
| UAE | Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled | Sovereign AI & Investment | G42, MGX |
| Finland | PM Petteri Orpo | Ethical AI & Telecommunications | Nokia, Supercell |
John Chambers, Chairman of USISPF, noted that the collaboration between the US and India in AI is symbiotic. "AI stands for America and India," he remarked, suggesting a future where American hardware and Indian software prowess combine to dominate the global market.
However, challenges remain. Critics point out that despite the investments, India and the wider Global South still lag in original IP creation. The heavy reliance on Western hardware (primarily NVIDIA chips) and Western foundation models (like GPT-4) is a dependency that the "IndiaAI Mission" seeks to reduce, but cannot eliminate overnight.
As the delegates gather at the Bharat Mandapam, the air is thick with anticipation. The AI Impact Summit 2026 is more than a trade show or a diplomatic junket; it is a recognition that the future of technology can no longer be dictated by a handful of zip codes in California.
For Creati.ai, the key takeaway is the shift toward application and infrastructure. The announcements expected this week—from the Vizag Data City to the indigenous language models—represent the "hard build" phase of the AI revolution. We are moving past the hype cycle into the deployment cycle, where electricity, real estate, and sovereign datasets matter as much as algorithms.
We will continue to bring you live updates from New Delhi as the sessions unfold, specifically tracking the technical unveilings of the BharatGen models and the investment details of the new data infrastructure projects. The world is watching, and for the next five days, New Delhi is the capital of the future.