Tag: AIforGood

  • AI-Driven CSR: India’s tech leap for social good as Impact Summit begins

    AI-Driven CSR: India’s tech leap for social good as Impact Summit begins

    By Eldee

    As the India AI Impact Summit 2026 kicks off in the capital from February 16, AI-Driven CSR is emerging as a game-changing force in India’s social development landscape. Artificial intelligence is powering a profound revolution, turning corporate giving into smarter, more scalable and high-impact interventions that deliver real, measurable change.

    In FY 2023-24, CSR spending reached new heights with a record Rs 34,000 crore poured into over 59,000 projects — a strong 12 percent surge year-on-year, per Ministry of Corporate Affairs data. Education commands 38 percent of spending, followed by healthcare, environment and livelihoods.

    Many leading firms decisively exceed the 2 percent mandate, channeling resources through foundations for strategic, transformative alignment with national priorities.

    Reforms have added serious muscle: mandatory third-party impact assessments, the transparent National CSR Data Portal, and the Social Stock Exchange unlocking fresh NGO funding channels. The era of checkbox compliance is giving way to outcome-focused, high-impact philanthropy.

    • AI is the decisive accelerator here. Forward-looking Indian companies are harnessing it to amplify efficiency and reach:
    • Infosys Foundation deploys AI for personalised rural learning, predicting outcomes to target interventions with precision.
    • TCS powers remote healthcare chatbots and disaster analytics.
    • Hindustan Unilever uses image recognition to revolutionize waste segregation and recycling.
    • Reliance Foundation combines AI with blockchain for traceable e-waste management.
    • Intel India drives “AI for All” skilling to boost nationwide employability.

    These initiatives echo global trailblazers — Microsoft AI for Earth tackling climate challenges, Google crisis mapping, IBM sustainability models — but are uniquely anchored in India’s mandatory CSR framework and BRSR reporting.

    Pioneering NGOs like Marpu Foundation showcase the transformative potential: AI-driven real-time dashboards for fund tracking, beneficiary verification, automated need-matching and volunteer coordination. Predictive models forecast dropouts and pollution trends, enabling proactive, high-impact spending. The outcome is amplified accountability, minimized leakages and human effort supercharged — never replaced.

    Challenges persist: funds still concentrate in industrial zones, AI adoption remains uneven among tech-savvy giants, and data privacy, bias and digital divides demand urgent safeguards.

    The India AI Impact Summit 2026 arrives at the perfect moment to pioneer solutions. With global visionaries and policymakers converging under the banner of People, Planet and Progress, the summit must champion inclusive AI-Driven CSR policies: incentives for mandatory spending integration, robust public-private-NGO partnerships for localised models, expanded ethical skilling at scale, and firm benchmarks for responsible deployment.

    India’s IndiaAI Mission already provides a solid foundation — indigenous models, compute infrastructure, capacity building. By positioning AI as essential infrastructure for CSR, not an optional luxury, India can lead the world in proving technology can accelerate equitable progress and fast-track the Sustainable Development Goals.

    This summit is more than optics — it’s about defining commitments that convert bold promise into tangible change for millions. In this pivotal moment, India stands poised to demonstrate that innovation and inclusion are not trade-offs — they are powerful allies. The opportunity is immense. The time to seize it is now.

  • India’s Green Giants: Wipro, Tech Mahindra Lead Global Sustainability Charge

    India’s Green Giants: Wipro, Tech Mahindra Lead Global Sustainability Charge

    By Eldee

    When TIME Magazine and Statista rolled out their 2025 World’s Most Sustainable Companies list in June, two Indian IT powerhouses stole the spotlight. Bengaluru’s Wipro (53rd, score: 75.83) and Pune’s Tech Mahindra (57th, 75.13) didn’t just make the global top 100—they were India’s sole representatives there.

    But the story’s bigger: eight other Indian firms, from Mahindra (201st, 66.77) in automotive to Dr. Reddy’s (417th, 59.36) in pharma, also cracked the 500-strong list, signaling India’s rising clout in the global green race.

    As climate alarms blare—from Delhi’s choking smog to Kerala’s relentless floods—this isn’t just a feather in India’s cap; it’s a rallying cry for Corporate India to power our 2047 Viksit Bharat vision of a developed, sustainable nation.

    For years, India’s IT sector was written off as the world’s code mill, churning out software for Western giants. Wipro and Tech Mahindra are torching that stereotype. Wipro’s Lab45 AI platform slashed water use by 40% for US farmers in 2023 with smart irrigation—vital tech for a nation where 600 million battle water scarcity. “Sustainability drives our innovation,” CEO Thierry Delaporte told TIME.

    In 2025, Wipro’s FullStride Cloud tie-up with Pure Storage is supercharging clients’ green transitions, dovetailing with Budget 2025’s push for AI-driven clean tech. Tech Mahindra’s EcoForge platform, meanwhile, helped telecom majors like Vodafone cut emissions by 35% by linking data centres to renewables, while their 1-million-mangrove drive in Maharashtra shields coasts from erosion. “We’re redefining tech for a sustainable future,” CEO Mohit Joshi said, a vision reinforced by their 2025 Terra Carta Seal. These aren’t just firms; they’re India’s green vanguards.

    The list’s ten Indian stars—Mahindra, Airtel (223rd, 65.87), HCLTech (233rd, 65.51), WNS (290th, 63.37), Hindustan Zinc (313th, 62.49), Syngene International (364th, 61.08), Infosys (374th, 60.84), TCS (383rd, 60.65), Godrej Properties (413th, 59.54), and Dr. Reddy’s—show India’s green push spans sectors.

    Mahindra’s electric vehicles, Airtel’s renewable-powered towers, and Dr. Reddy’s eco-conscious drugs prove we’re not just followers but pacesetters. India’s 99th rank on the 2025 SDG Index—our first top-100 finish—rides on 42% renewable energy (we’re the world’s third-largest producer) and a tech market zooming to $60 billion, per Nasscom, with 126,000 new AI and ESG jobs in 2025. But the road’s bumpy: data centres guzzle power, supply chains stay opaque, and EY warns we’ve met just 25% of green investment needs. With net-zero by 2070 in focus and Budget 2025 boosting solar and battery storage, Corporate India must shift gears fast.

    While Schneider Electric (France, 93.85), Telefónica (Spain, 87.68), Brambles (Australia, 86.14), Temenos (Switzerland, 85.95), and Moncler (Italy, 85.87) top the list with European flair, India’s ten-strong contingent, led by Wipro and Tech Mahindra, shows we can hold our own.

    Global trade hiccups like tariffs may sting, but they underline India’s edge: affordable, scalable green tech that the Global South hungers for.

    For 1.4 billion Indians, sustainability isn’t a buzzword—it’s do-or-die. Wipro and Tech Mahindra have cracked the code; now Mahindra’s EVs, TCS’s low-carbon IT, and others must follow. The world’s watching, and India’s ready to lead—not just on rankings, but in scripting a greener future.