The AI Impact Summit 2026 was held from February 16 to 20, 2026 in New Delhi. The summit had participants from around 100 countries, 15+ heads of state and 100+ global CEOs. It also ensured that India was placed between Silicon Valley’s innovation and the developmental needs of the Global South.
It marked a fundamental shift in the world of tech arena. Along with the discussion on the conventional boundaries of regulations, the summit also discussed how AI should be developed and used so that it benefits everyone in a fair way.
The New Delhi declaration: seven pillars of progress
The highlight of the summit was the New Delhi Declaration on AI Impact, which was adopted by a coalition of countries, including the US, China, the EU, and the UK. The declarations of the summit were endorsed by 92 countries and acknowledge the work undertaken by seven specific working groups during the Summit.
It is based on the philosophy of "Sarvajan Hitaya, Sarvajan Sukhaya" or "for the welfare and happiness of all." Rather than adopting strict laws, the declaration has adopted a voluntary model based on the following seven "Chakras":
The declaration also included several concrete platforms, which promised to translate rhetoric into results. The Charter for the Democratic Diffusion of AI was introduced to ensure that the basic models remain accessible to local innovators. The Global AI Impact Commons was also introduced to help scale up successful examples around the globe.
In a major geopolitical shift, India announced its formal entry into the US-led Pax Silica alliance. This alliance seeks to strengthen semiconductor chains to guarantee the availability of the hardware needed for the AI revolution.
The event provided a high-octane platform for the country's technological advancements. The real showstopper, however, was Sarvam AI, which announced the development of 30-billion-parameter and 105-billion-parameter Large Language Models (LLMs) with an efficient “mixture of experts” architecture. This was complemented by the launch of BharatGen Param2, a model that supports 22 Indian languages, effectively breaking the linguistic barriers of Western-centric AI systems. The event also included:
Despite criticism that cited the lack of global enforcers and minor logistical issues, it is undeniable that the summit was a huge success, especially when it came to investments. With over 700 proposals and major commitments from tech titans like Google, it is now clear that the world is ready for an "AI Commons" approach, similar to the successful Digital Public Infrastructure (UPI) model used by India. The 2026 Summit prioritised inclusivity over exclusivity, ensuring that AI was not only intelligent but also equitable.

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