IndiaAI Mission drives innovation under 7-Sutra framework

India has released AI Governance Guidelines anchored in seven Sutras to achieve the vision of “AI for All.” The framework aims to balance innovation with safeguards, driving inclusive growth and supporting the national aspiration of Viksit Bharat 2047

Published Date – 15 February 2026, 05:15 PM





New Delhi: India’s AI Governance Guidelines are anchored in seven Sutras to ensure that AI serves as an enabler for inclusive development, economic growth, and global competitiveness, while addressing risks to individuals and society through proportionate, evidence-based measures, according to an official explainer issued on Sunday.

Through this structured and forward-looking framework, India aims to realise the vision of “AI for All,” ensuring that the transformative potential of artificial intelligence contributes meaningfully to the national aspiration of Viksit Bharat by 2047, with benefits reaching every citizen in a safe, inclusive and sustainable manner, the statement said.


The seven guiding Sutras are: Trust is the Foundation, People First, Innovation over Restraint, Fairness and Equity, Accountability, Understandable by Design, and Safety, Resilience and Sustainability.

By focusing on “AI for All”, India seeks to combine sovereign capability with open innovation, leveraging public digital infrastructure, indigenous model development, and affordable compute to drive productivity and inclusive growth. This approach aligns AI development with the broader aspiration of Viksit Bharat 2047, positioning AI as a catalyst for economic transformation, social empowerment, and strategic autonomy, the statement said.

India’s achievements reflect this deployment-first philosophy. Under the IndiaAI Mission, over 38,000 GPUs have been onboarded through a subsidised national compute facility. AIKosh now hosts more than 9,500 datasets and 273 sectoral models, strengthening indigenous model development. The National Supercomputing Mission has operationalised over 40 petaflop systems, including AIRAWAT and PARAM Siddhi-AI. On the capacity front, IndiaAI and FutureSkills initiatives are supporting 500 PhDs, 5,000 postgraduates, and 8,000 undergraduates, while 570 AI Data Labs and 27 IndiaAI labs across states are expanding grassroots innovation. With nearly 90 per cent of startups integrating AI in some form, India is embedding AI deeply into its innovation ecosystem, the statement said.

The India AI Governance Guidelines, releasing at the AI Impact Summit 2026, arrive at a critical juncture to consolidate these gains. The framework adopts a principle-based, techno-legal approach. By establishing new institutions such as the AI Governance Group, the Technology and Policy Expert Committee, and the AI Safety Institute, India is institutionalising a whole-of-government model that balances innovation with safeguards. The guidelines strengthen India’s ambition to lead not only in AI adoption and capability, but also in responsible, inclusive, and trusted AI governance globally, the statement further said.

The key principles of the AI Governance framework have been carefully designed to ensure cross-sectoral applicability and technology neutrality, enabling relevance across diverse use cases and stages of technological evolution. Together, these principles provide a flexible and future-ready foundation for responsible AI development and deployment, the statement added.

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