Karnataka Maps $20 Billion Quantum Tech Vision for 2035
At India’s first global quantum summit, Karnataka unveiled a strategic roadmap to build a $20 billion quantum economy by 2035, centered on talent, research, hardware, and real-world deployment
Topics
News
- Research Highlights a Growing Disconnect Between AI Adoption and Workforce Strategy
- UAE Introduces AI-Generated Spokesperson for International Outreach
- Governments Must Lead on AI Governance Instead of Ceding Responsibilities to AI Labs, Says Sam Altman
- AI Dispatch | AI’s Power Players Double Down
- Anthropic Joins Frontier, Signaling AI's Entry Into Carbon Removal Markets
- 42% of Middle East Employers Are Drowning in AI-Generated Job Applications, Survey Reveals
Karnataka has announced plans to build a $20 billion quantum economy by 2035 as part of a broader push to become a global leader in quantum innovation.
Launched at the Quantum India Bengaluru 2025 summit on Thursday, the state’s strategic roadmap outlines a phased approach focused on talent, R&D, hardware, industry enablement, and global partnerships.
Chief Minister Siddaramaiah said quantum technologies will be central to solving real-world challenges in defense, healthcare, and cybersecurity.
Key initiatives include a dedicated Quantum Research Park at IISc, a proposed Quantum City near Bengaluru, and incentives for indigenous hardware development.
The state also introduced a Pancharatnam Prize to recognize Indian excellence in quantum science, and announced the formation of a high-level task force and State Quantum Mission to drive execution.
The two-day summit, co-hosted by IISc and KSTePS, drew participation from over ten countries and featured keynote lectures by Nobel laureates Duncan Haldane and David Gross.
