Technology Drives India-France Strategic Convergence

Why in News
- PM Modi and President Macron met on the sidelines of the G-7 Summit in Evian, France. They jointly inaugurated “Bharat Innovates” in Nice, thus, bringing together Indian startups and venture capital funds.
- Both leaders had earlier jointly inaugurated the India-France Year of Innovation 2026 during Macron’s February 2026 India visit.
- Further, the discussions also took place on expanding G-7 into a D10, a grouping of 10 major democracies.
Role of Technology in Partnership
- France’s Strengths:
- France offers state-of-the-art technology in aerospace, AI, robotics, biotech and green tech.
- It serves as a European hub for the digital economy with significant sustainable development capabilities.
- India’s Strengths:
- India brings frugal innovation, digital public infrastructure, biotech and a vibrant startup ecosystem.
- India’s scale, software talent and engineering capabilities complement France’s deep technology strengths perfectly.
- Together:
- The partnership has been elevated to a Special Global Strategic Partnership with technology now at its exciting core.
- “Bharat Innovates” and VivaTech aim to enable substantive private sector collaborative arrangements between both nations.
Areas of Cooperation
- New Focus Areas: Cyberspace, AI, healthcare, sustainable development, creative economy, education and research.
- Defence Co-production: Co-designing and co-production of defence platforms must be expedited as a strategic priority.
- Nuclear Technology: Progress in Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) is an important emerging area of cooperation.
- Space: Cooperation in joint satellite development and human spaceflight programmes is being actively pursued.
Expanding Cooperation in Africa
- The potential for Franco-Indian cooperation in Africa has not been fully exploited and needs urgent attention.
- The postponement of the India-Africa Forum Summit (May 2026) due to the Ebola crisis makes this even more critical.
- India and France can jointly contribute to Africa’s development, stability and governance through complementary capabilities.
Way Forward
- Both nations must translate tech summit outcomes into substantive commercial and research partnerships without delay.
- Co-production in defence, space and SMRs must move from intent to implementation at the earliest.
- Franco-Indian cooperation in Africa must be institutionalised as a shared strategic priority for both nations.
- India must proactively engage with the D10 debate to shape any emerging democratic grouping’s architecture.
- India and France must continue championing multilateralism, strategic autonomy and Global South interests on all global platforms.

