India, Germany to deepen cooperation in AI, quantum tech: Minister

IANS April 13, 2025 152 views

India and Germany are strengthening their technological partnership across multiple innovative domains, focusing on emerging technologies like AI and quantum computing. The collaboration aims to drive sustainable development and economic growth through scientific interventions. Union Minister Jitendra Singh highlighted the robust 2+2 collaboration model that connects universities and industries from both nations. This strategic alliance promises to create robust innovation ecosystems and address global technological challenges.

"We seek economic and sustainable solutions through scientific and technological interventions" - Jitendra Singh
New Delhi, April 13: India and Germany have agreed to expand their partnership in emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), quantum technologies, and green hydrogen, with a focus on innovation-driven growth and sustainable development, Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Science and Technology Jitendra Singh said on Sunday.

Key Points

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India and Germany to collaborate on AI and quantum technologies

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Expanding partnership in clean energy and biotechnology

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Modi's mission-mode approach driving scientific innovation

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Over 50,000 Indian students studying in German universities

Dr Singh highlighted the strong and long-standing partnership between India and Germany in the field of science, technology and innovation (STI).

"The two countries can collaborate more closely in key areas like clean energy, biotechnology, cyber-physical systems, electric mobility, and green hydrogen," he said after meeting with Bavaria's visiting Minister-President Markus Soder in the national capital.

Dr Singh said India is moving ahead with mission-mode programmes under Prime Minister Narendra Modi's leadership, where the goal is to find economic and sustainable solutions through science and technology. He called Germany a natural and reliable partner in this journey.

"India has embarked on mission-mode programmes under the visionary leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. We seek economic and sustainable solutions through scientific and technological interventions, and Germany is a natural partner in this endeavour," he said.

Praising the Indo-German 2+2 collaboration model, which connects universities and industries from both nations, he said it is a futuristic approach that helps develop innovation ecosystems.

"The model is helping both countries work together on global challenges and turn ideas into real-world solutions," the Union Minister added.

India's growing strength in the biotechnology sector was also discussed. Dr Singh pointed out that India has more than 3,000 biotech startups and is the world's largest vaccine producer.

"The recent BIOe3 policy, which aims to boost innovation and generate jobs by focusing on energy, economy, and employment through biotechnology," he mentioned.

"India is currently the third-largest country in terms of startups and unicorns, offering great potential for global technology partnerships," he added.

Highlighting India's academic connection with Germany, Dr Singh said that over 50,000 Indian students are currently studying in German universities, mostly in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields.

This number has tripled in the last seven years. He expressed hope that more German students will also come to India to explore its knowledge systems, including Oriental Studies and Indian culture.

Reader Comments

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Priya K.
This is such exciting news! India's tech sector is booming and partnerships like these will take us to the next level. The focus on green hydrogen is especially promising for our climate goals 🌱
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Rahul S.
While I appreciate the collaboration, I hope we're not just importing technology but also developing our own IP. Germany has strong R&D - we should aim for equal partnership, not dependency.
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Ananya M.
50,000 Indian students in Germany! That's incredible 🤯 The knowledge exchange happening here will benefit both nations for decades to come. STEM education is truly the future.
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Vikram P.
The 2+2 model connecting universities with industries is brilliant. Academia-industry collaboration has been weak in India - this could be the game-changer we need for innovation.
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Sunita R.
I'm glad they're talking about German students coming to India too! Our traditional knowledge systems in medicine and sustainability have so much to offer. It shouldn't be a one-way exchange.
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Karan D.
Quantum tech and AI - two fields where India can leapfrog if we play our cards right. But we need to invest more in fundamental research, not just applications. Hope this partnership addresses that.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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