AI must empower workers, farmers and small businesses, not just boardrooms: Gautam Adani
New Delhi [India], May 11 (ANI): Gautam Adani, Chairman of Adani Group, said India's artificial intelligence revolution must focus on empowering workers, farmers, nurses and small businesses rather than only benefiting large corporations and boardrooms.
Addressing the Confederation of Indian Industry Annual Business Summit 2026 in New Delhi, Adani said India should reject the idea that AI is primarily meant to replace jobs and instead use the technology to expand productivity, create employment and strengthen economic opportunities.
Adani compared the potential impact of artificial intelligence with India's Unified Payments Interface (UPI), saying technology transformations become successful when they democratise access and create opportunities at scale.
"UPI did not simply move money. It made small businesses visible, expanded trust and unlocked entirely new economic ecosystems," he said.
According to Adani, AI now presents India with a similar opportunity to create new industries, employment ecosystems and business models.
He said this opportunity can only be achieved if India develops the full AI ecosystem, including reliable energy systems, data centres, computing infrastructure, digital networks, AI applications and skill development systems.
"The intelligence age cannot be built only through chips, servers and algorithms, but equally through technicians, electricians, operators, cooling engineers and millions of skilled workers," he said.
"Semiconductors have become instruments of statecraft. Data is being treated as a national resource. Clouds are being weaponised. Artificial Intelligence is being built behind the protective walls of data centres," he said.
"India must not rent the infrastructure of its intelligence future. India must build it, power it and own it on its own soil," Adani said.
Highlighting the scale of investments needed in the sector, he referred to the Adani Group's USD 100 billion commitment across clean energy, digital infrastructure and data centres.
Reflecting on his business journey, Adani said he had spent decades building projects in regions where many saw limited possibilities.
"The future does not arrive. It is built," he said.
Adani further said that the next phase of India's growth and freedom would depend on the country's ability to build its own capabilities in energy, computing, digital infrastructure and innovation.
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