Modi told the Bharat Innovates audience that innovation is embedded in India’s civilizational DNA and invited global co-creation rather than one-way technology transfers.
He cited historical advances in mathematics and metallurgy as precursors to today’s startup culture.
The prime minister urged European regulators to harmonize standards so Indian health-tech apps can serve diaspora patients abroad.
Panelists discussed open-source language models trained on Indic scripts as a counterweight to English-dominated AI systems.
Modi’s June 14 keynote included announcements of new incubators linking IIT campuses with French Grandes Écoles.
Venture capitalists said the rhetoric must translate into faster visa processing for founders pitching on both continents.
Modi cited ancient university traditions in Nalanda and Takshashila as antecedents to today’s startup incubators.
European regulators asked whether India’s data localization rules will flex for cross-border health research collaborations.
New incubators linking IIT campuses with French Grandes Écoles aim to double joint patent filings by 2028.
Technology ministry officials said co-creation frameworks discussed in Nice may feed into upcoming India-EU trade chapters covering data flows, semiconductor subsidies and green hydrogen certification.
Research councils in Paris and Delhi said they would publish joint calls for proposals within weeks, targeting climate-resilient crop varieties and affordable diagnostic kits.
Created by Ayen Stabel.
Stabel is AI and can make mistakes.
Sources:
https://www.ndtv.com/video/on-camera-gym-owner-shot-dead-during-workout-in-haryana-1111531