Intergovernmental

Turning AI ambition into action: How the OECD is engaging at India’s AI Impact Summit

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The India AI Impact Summit 2026 convenes at a moment of accelerated AI deployment. Governments and industry leaders are moving beyond experimentation toward integrating advanced AI systems across strategic sectors, consumer services and public administration. At the same time, major technology firms are advancing increasingly autonomous, task-oriented AI “agents”, thereby enriching the policy conversation and focusing it more on the technology’s real-world operationalisation.

In this context, the Summit reflects a broader global trend toward large-scale implementation. This shift aligns with ongoing OECD work on monitoring AI incidents and hazards, supporting the operationalisation of the OECD AI Principles, and measuring AI diffusion and understanding patterns of adoption.

The OECD and its Global Partnership on AI (GPAI) are engaged across the Summit’s agenda, working with India and other partners to translate years of analysis, data and policy frameworks into tools that policymakers can use in practice to have real impact.

>>> Visit OECD.AI’s India Summit agenda<<<

The OECD at the India AI Impact Summit

Across the summit, the OECD will support this pragmatic approach with a series of events and deliverables. Details for the specific times and locations can be found on our main event webpage:

  • Advancing AI transparency in practice
    🗓️ 17 February, 11:30 – 12:25 (IST) West Wing Room 4, Bharat Mandapam Convention Centre
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    Co-hosted by the OECD, Japan’s Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, Infosys and Microsoft, this discussion will explore how to align national and regional policy frameworks with shared expectations for transparency, safety, and accountability. Anchored in the Hiroshima AI reporting framework for advanced AI systems, the discussion will explore how common reporting practices, risk disclosures, and transparency mechanisms can support both national policy objectives and cross-border trust.  Participants will discuss how voluntary frameworks, such as international reporting templates, assurance mechanisms, public–private collaboration on testing and evaluation, can complement national policies by enabling faster learning cycles, supporting innovation, and fostering convergence where it matters most for safety and rights.
  • Democratising trust: Open source tooling for safe, secure and trustworthy AI
    🗓️ 17 February, 13:30 – 14:25 (IST) Room 9, Bharat Mandapam Convention Centre
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    Co-hosted by the OECD, the India AI Impact Summit, Mozilla Foundation, ROOST, the UK AI Security Institute, and Mistral AI, this panel will explore the practical landscape of open-source tooling for trustworthy AI. Our experts will: Take stock of the current open-source tooling ecosystem and highlight key gaps and challenges. Showcase open-source tools that enable both technical and non-technical stakeholders to monitor and assess AI safety, security, and trustworthiness. Examine how open-source approaches can help build capacity in underrepresented regions and communities. Present the OECD.AI Catalogue of Tools and Metrics for Trustworthy AI and launch an open call for submissions of open-source tools, inviting AI practitioners worldwide to contribute.
  • AI for inclusive and resilient food systems
    🗓️ 20 February 2026, 14.30 – 15.30 (IST) Room 18, Bharat Mandapam Convention Centre
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    The Government of the Netherlands and the OECD will co-host a flagship event on AI for inclusive and resilient food systems, with the participation of H.E. Mr. Harry Verweij, Ambassador at Large and Special Envoy AI for the Kingdom of the Netherlands and H.E. Mr. Nezar Patria, Vice Minister of Communications and Digital Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia, among other distinguished speakers.
    This session leverages the work of the India AI Impact Summit Working Group on Economic Growth and Social Good, co-chaired by the Netherlands and Indonesia. It explores how AI can support the transition to more transparent, responsible, and inclusive agricultural production and distribution within food systems. Discussions will draw on national initiatives and concrete use cases to highlight practical, scalable approaches to improving data sharing, interoperability, risk management, and access to high-quality agricultural data.
  • GPAI Ministerial Council Meeting
    EVENT CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC
    🗓️ 20 February, 10:00 – 12:30 (IST) Summit Room, Bharat Mandapam Convention Centre
    The India AI Impact Summit will host the GPAI Council Meeting at Ministerial Level, bringing together ministers and senior representatives from GPAI members, partners and stakeholders.The ministerial meeting will provide a forum to advance GPAI’s mission to promote human-centric, safe, secure, and trustworthy AI, grounded in the OECD Recommendation on AI. Discussions will focus on shaping GPAI’s strategic direction and strengthening international collaboration amid rapid technological change.

People, planet and progress: India’s AI moment

Indian authorities and organisers frame the Summit around three pillars: People, Planet and Progress. The emphasis is on ensuring that accelerated adoption translates into inclusive growth, environmental sustainability and tangible public value.

A central theme is delivery. Discussions are expected to focus on how governments can move from strategy documents to implementation through institutional capacity building, interoperable data systems, procurement reform and accountability mechanisms. These priorities resonate with OECD work, highlighting the importance of governance frameworks that enable innovation while safeguarding rights and public trust.

Some potential outcomes from the India AI Summit

Against this backdrop of rapid adoption, infrastructure development and evolving governance challenges, the OECD’s contribution focuses on evidence, measurement and international co-operation. Through data, policy tools and a multi-stakeholder convening role, the OECD supports countries in translating ambition into accountable and inclusive AI deployment.

The success of the India AI Impact Summit could help governments to clarify answers to practical questions: how to deploy AI responsibly in public services, how to develop AI skills at scale, how to manage risks and incidents, and how to ensure AI contributes to sustainable development rather than undermining it.

Most importantly, it should help rebalance the global AI conversation. By placing everyday impact and responsibility at the forefront, the Summit recognises that the future of AI will be shaped not only in research labs and boardrooms, but also in classrooms, clinics, farms, and public administrations around the world.

Join us in Delhi

The OECD looks forward to working with India and international partners to make the India AI Impact Summit a milestone for global AI governance. We invite readers to visit the OECD.AI India AI Impact Summit agenda page to track all of our activities and engage with the discussions as they unfold.

Turning principles into practice is not easy. But it is essential. And in New Delhi this February, we have a real opportunity to move the global AI agenda forward together.



Disclaimer: The opinions expressed and arguments employed herein are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official views of the OECD, the GPAI or their member countries. The Organisation cannot be held responsible for possible violations of copyright resulting from the posting of any written material on this website/blog.