City
Epaper

Kerala bets on responsible AI to power its next growth phase

By IANS | Updated: January 24, 2026 15:40 IST

Thiruvananthapuram, Jan 24 As Artificial Intelligence moves rapidly from buzzword to backbone, Kerala is positioning itself to make ...

Open in App

Thiruvananthapuram, Jan 24 As Artificial Intelligence moves rapidly from buzzword to backbone, Kerala is positioning itself to make AI a key driver of governance reform and economic strategy.

The State’s emerging approach reflects a deliberate shift from building digital infrastructure to generating measurable public and economic outcomes from advanced technologies.

Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said, “Artificial Intelligence has the potential to transform governance and public service delivery, but it must be developed and deployed in alignment with democratic values, ethical principles, and data protection.”

Kerala enters this phase with several structural advantages. Initiatives such as K-FON, aimed at universal broadband access, the Kerala Startup Mission, and the Digital University have already created a strong base of connectivity, talent, and innovation.

The challenge now lies in translating this readiness into scalable AI applications across governance, healthcare, education, agriculture, and digital public infrastructure.

The State’s policy narrative is also closely aligned with national priorities under the India AI Mission.

With the India AI Summit 2026 approaching, Kerala is seeking to position itself as an implementation hub for AI-driven public systems, while simultaneously attracting startups, investors, and global partnerships focused on digital services and platforms.

While the State has historically been cautious about large private capital inflows, its strengths lie in skilled human capital, credible public institutions and rising demand for AI-led solutions in areas such as health technology, governance platforms and cybersecurity.

These segments offer scope for pilots that can be scaled into exportable service models.

Converting policy intent into outcomes will require agile procurement frameworks, regulatory clarity and deeper collaboration between government, academia and startups.

There is also the risk that excessive caution could slow innovation in a sector defined by speed.

Even so, Kerala’s AI strategy is beginning to stand out -- not as a race to deploy technology, but as an effort to define how AI can serve public interest while opening new economic pathways.

If successful, this approach could give the State a distinctive position in India’s evolving AI economy.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalBengal polls: ECI suspends joint BDO/ARO for dereliction of duty

NationalRaghav Chandha among many who began the walk with Kejriwal, but slowly parted ways

NationalUttarakhand: Administration readies alternative plan amid feared gas crisis ahead of Char Dham Yatra

InternationalWest Asia conflict: Five Indians injured by falling debris in Abu Dhabi

InternationalMEA Secretary (West) Sibi George's calls on Azerbaijan Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov

National Realted Stories

NationalDelhi Police cracks armed robbery, two arrested; Rs 5.51 Lakh cash and pistol recovered

NationalBengal judicial officers' harassment: Sukanta Majumdar raises doubt over AIMIM leader's arrest, blames Trinamool

National"BJP Govt should withdraw this bill immediately": CPI Keralam state secretary Binoy Viswam on FCRA Amendment Bill

NationalAmaravati to be growth engine for $2.4 trillion economy: Andhra CM​

NationalKiren Rijiju defends FCRA Amendment Bill, says 'minorities receiving greater attention'