Try GOLD - Free
The 2026 Impact Summit Could Become the Bretton Woods of AI
Mint New Delhi
|July 31, 2025
The New Delhi conclave would mark a historic moment if India lays down how AI should serve us
Earlier this year, I visited Bletchley Park, the beautifully preserved lodge in England where during World War II, Alan Turing and his fellow codebreakers decoded not just ciphers, but the very nature of machine logic. Many believe that it was this decoding of German cryptic messages that won the war for the Allies. Almost 75 years later, in the chill of an English autumn in 2023, world leaders, scientists and tech CEOs gathered there to defuse another looming conflict. That AI Safety Summit, steeped in moral urgency, raised an important alarm: Artificial intelligence (AI) may be the most powerful technology humanity has created and we have no consensus on how to govern it.
Six months later, the conversation moved to Paris for the AI Action Summit. The mood had shifted. Less philosophy, more policy. Countries debated surveillance versus safety, openness versus sovereignty. The EU showcased its regulatory strides; others offered national strategies. The US and UK demurred from the evolving consensus.
From ethics to execution, the message was clear: the world was waking up, but still speaking in different tongues.
Now, the baton passes to India. In February 2026, New Delhi will host the AI Impact Summit, the third major global checkpoint in the ongoing effort to define AI's future. Hopefully, this is more than just another gathering of talking heads, but a rare opportunity for India to lead the conversation past alarm and action into actual impact.
This story is from the July 31, 2025 edition of Mint New Delhi.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi
War on spam call menace stalls on who takes blame
Blocking an unknown number or reporting a suspicious text message may feel like a small win against the spam menace.
3 mins
September 24, 2025

Mint New Delhi
Pricey variants after GST cuts? Govt keeps watch for mischief
The Centre is going all out to stop companies from sidestepping the cuts in goods and services tax rates.
3 mins
September 24, 2025

Mint New Delhi
Will GST rate cuts revive key FMCG growth metric?
GST rate cuts have made household items from soaps and shampoos to snacks cheaper. Along with festive buying and an above-normal monsoon, packaged consumer goods companies anticipate lower prices to boost volume growth, especially in rural areas. Mint explains:
2 mins
September 24, 2025

Mint New Delhi
How Nvidia is backstopping America's AI boom
Nvidia’s move to invest $100 billion into Open AI to help finance a historic data center build-out has helped reset market expectations about the startup’s shaky finances. It's a familiar play by the chip giant.
3 mins
September 24, 2025

Mint New Delhi
Forced exit at Tata Sons bares split at Tata Trusts
Vijay Singh’s ouster from Tata Sons follows some trustees feeling lack of transparency
4 mins
September 24, 2025
Mint New Delhi
DO TAX CUTS REALLY BOOST THE ECONOMY?
Tax cuts are to fiscal policy what rate cuts are to monetary policy-both are tools to stimulate economic growth. This has been a bumper year for tax cuts: in February the Union Budget raised the exemption limit for income tax, and in August GST rates were cut across a swathe of goods and services.
3 mins
September 24, 2025
Mint New Delhi
Bear mark over IT signals more pain for investors
MUMBAI Investors in Indian IT companies saw their combined wealth plunge by over ₹trillion over the last two days. The pain may not be over yet.
2 mins
September 24, 2025

Mint New Delhi
Motorbike firms prep for quieter, electric future
Makers of electric motorcycles worldwide are touting stealth and instant power to convert those who swear by the rumble of a V-twin or the thump of a single-cylinder internal combustion engine.
3 mins
September 24, 2025

Mint New Delhi
IT's middle order takes US hit; big cos hold ground
Shares of smaller IT companies reeled on Monday despite their reassurances about the H-1B visa impact, while their large-cap peers that remain tight-lipped closed with smaller losses, signalling market belief that the latter may navigate the crisis better.
3 mins
September 23, 2025

Mint New Delhi
Startups, VCs rush to digitize India's mutual fund sellers
Startups are rushing to build technology for India's swelling army of mutual fund distributors (MFDs), a segment that is rising alongside the nation's roaring asset management industry.
2 mins
September 23, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size