India, a nation generating a staggering 20% of the world's data, finds itself at a critical juncture in the global AI race. Despite this massive data advantage, the country currently lacks a frontier artificial intelligence model of its own, relying instead on technologies developed by international giants like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic. This reliance raises significant questions about national autonomy and the future of AI development within India.
The AI Sovereignty Conundrum
The concept of AI sovereignty is central to the discussion. Srikanth Velamakanni, co-founder of Fractal Analytics and Chairperson of Nasscom, defines AI sovereignty not as complete self-sufficiency, but as a smart way of interdependency, ensuring that a nation's AI systems can operate without being subject to external control or shutdown at a moment's notice. This means identifying and owning critical components of the AI value chain, from energy and compute to data, models, and applications.
