Gautam Adani AI Vision Calls Youth to Lead India’s Future
Newzdaddy Business Updates
Gautam Adani Inspires Young India to Lead the Age of Intelligence
In a powerful call to young India, Adani Group Chairman Mr Gautam Adani urged the next generation to rise and lead the age of intelligence at the inauguration of Vidya Pratishthan’s Sharad Pawar Centre of Excellence in Artificial Intelligence in Baramati, Maharashtra.
India has reached a stage where technology is no longer limited to a few large companies or research labs. Artificial intelligence is now shaping daily life, from farming tools and health services to banking and governance. By choosing Baramati, a town known for education and grassroots development, the initiative sends a clear message that advanced technology must reach beyond big cities and become part of India’s wider growth story.
Addressing students and researchers, Mr Gautam Adani said India is entering a decisive phase where technology, talent and national purpose must move together. India’s enduring strength, he noted, lies in its ability to align people, institutions and long-term vision. That same clarity must now guide how young Indians approach artificial intelligence, not as passive users, but as builders and leaders of capability.
Experts agree that countries which shape technology rather than consume it gain long-term advantages. India’s success in digital public platforms such as Aadhaar and UPI shows how home-grown systems can serve both citizens and national goals. Mr Adani’s remarks reflect this wider thinking, where innovation is tied closely to public good and national interest.
Acknowledging anxieties around AI, Mr Gautam Adani reminded the audience that history offers reassurance. Every major technological shift, from the industrial revolutions to India’s own digital transformation, has expanded human potential. AI, he said, will take this further by placing intelligence and productivity directly in the hands of ordinary citizens, opening pathways for youth from every background to participate in growth.
Globally, automation and AI often raise fears of job loss. However, studies show that new technologies also create new roles and skills. In India, AI is already helping farmers predict weather patterns, doctors analyse scans faster, and small businesses reach wider markets. This balance between change and opportunity was central to the message shared with students.
He cautioned that leadership in AI cannot be outsourced. In a world where intelligence increasingly shapes economic power and national influence, dependence on foreign algorithms carries risk. Data, decision-making and capability must remain anchored in national interest. Building indigenous AI models, strong compute capacity and resilient intelligence ecosystems, he stressed, is essential to India’s economic security, cultural confidence and strategic freedom.
Many nations are now speaking about sovereign technology. Control over data and digital tools is seen as important as control over natural resources. For India, with its large population and diverse needs, local AI systems can better reflect language, culture and social realities than imported solutions.
Placing this vision in context, Mr Gautam Adani pointed to the growing role of the Adani Group in the global AI ecosystem. The diversified conglomerate is investing significantly in data centres, digital infrastructure and clean energy that powers compute at scale, drawing sustained engagement from global technology leaders such as Google and Microsoft, as India emerges as a serious hub for AI-led growth.
Data centres are the backbone of artificial intelligence, requiring stable power and strong connectivity. India’s push towards renewable energy also supports this growth by making large-scale computing more sustainable. Such investments align with national goals of digital growth and energy transition.
The centre has been established under Vidya Pratishthan, a Baramati-based educational trust, with a ₹25 crore contribution from Mr Adani in 2023. The initiative is designed to promote advanced research, skill development and industry-oriented training in emerging technologies. According to those associated with the project, it will focus on AI applications across agriculture, healthcare, governance and industry, with a strong emphasis on collaboration between academia and the private sector.
Linking education with real-world needs has become a priority for Indian institutions. Centres like this aim to ensure students do not just learn theory but also work on practical solutions that can be used by farmers, hospitals and public services.
Concluding his address, Mr Gautam Adani urged students to see the centre as a place of creation, not observation. The age of intelligence, he said, demands samarthya, the courage to think independently and create boldly.
As India looks to the future, voices from industry, education and policy are increasingly aligned on one point: technology must serve people, not replace them. By encouraging young minds to lead with confidence and responsibility, the message from Baramati reflects a broader national ambition to shape the global AI story rather than follow it.
“This moment belongs to you,” he told young India. “Not to watch history, but to write it.”
Also Read:
Adani’s Words Spark India’s Development Path with Power
Vibrant Gujarat Regional Conferences 2025 Drive Growth in Porbandar





