The AI Impact Summit in India brought together world leaders, United Nations officials and leading technology executives in New Delhi on Thursday to discuss the rapid expansion of artificial intelligence and its global consequences.
The fourth annual global gathering on advanced computing focused on urgent calls for regulation, concerns over job losses, rising energy demands and warnings about the concentration of power in the hands of a few companies and countries.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi used the summit to promote his country’s ambition to become a major AI hub, while international leaders stressed the need for oversight and equitable access.
Calls for Global AI Regulation Intensify
Several speakers stressed that artificial intelligence requires coordinated international oversight similar to other high risk technologies.
OpenAI chief Sam Altman said the world “urgently” needs regulation and suggested the creation of a body comparable to the International Atomic Energy Agency to coordinate global AI governance.
“We obviously need safeguards, urgently, like we have for other powerful technologies,” Altman said, warning that highly capable open source biomodels could potentially assist in the creation of dangerous pathogens if left unchecked.
United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned that AI cannot be left to “the whims of a few billionaires” or a small group of countries. He called for the creation of a 3 billion dollar Global Fund on AI to expand access and build capacity in developing nations.
“The future of AI cannot be decided by a handful of countries,” Guterres said, cautioning that without investment many states risk being excluded from the AI era.
French President Emmanuel Macron highlighted the European Union’s Artificial Intelligence Act, adopted in 2024, which allows regulators to ban systems considered to pose “unacceptable risks”, such as real time facial recognition in public spaces.
Macron said Europe would continue to “shape the rules of the game” with partners including India, while insisting that regulation and innovation can coexist.
Job Loss Fears and Economic Disruption
One of the most sensitive issues at the AI Impact Summit in India was the potential impact on employment, particularly in countries with large service sectors.
India employs millions in call centres and technology support services, sectors seen as vulnerable to automation through generative AI tools.
Dario Amodei, head of US based AI firm Anthropic, has previously warned that artificial intelligence could eliminate up to half of entry level white collar jobs. Computer scientist Stuart Russell told AFP that AI systems are increasingly designed to imitate human capabilities, making workforce replacement a likely application.
At the same time, Indian business leaders argued that AI will also generate new opportunities. Mukesh Ambani, chairman of Reliance Group, said AI would create “new high skilled work opportunities” rather than simply eliminate jobs.
Altman noted that India has 100 million weekly ChatGPT users, more than a third of whom are students, underscoring the country’s growing engagement with AI technologies.
Key employment concerns raised at the summit include:
• Automation of customer service and administrative roles
• Disruption of entry level white collar positions
• Need for large scale reskilling and digital education
• Risk of widening income inequality
Energy Demand, Infrastructure and Environmental Concerns
The rapid expansion of AI is driving massive infrastructure investment worldwide.
Technology companies are investing hundreds of billions of dollars in data centres equipped with advanced microchips. OpenAI and India’s Tata Consultancy Services announced plans to expand hyperscale AI data centre capacity in India. Google said it would lay subsea cables linked to a 15 billion dollar AI infrastructure investment.
According to the International Energy Agency, data centres consumed about 1.5 percent of global electricity in 2024. That figure is projected to double by 2030 due to AI growth.
Environmental concerns discussed at the summit include:
• Rising electricity consumption
• Increased carbon emissions if powered by fossil fuels
• Heavy water use for cooling servers
• Pressure on local communities during peak demand
Guterres stressed that expanding data centres must rely on clean energy rather than shifting environmental costs onto vulnerable communities.
Safety, Abuse and Emerging Risks
Beyond economics and energy, speakers addressed risks linked to misuse of AI systems.
Recent lawsuits in the United States have alleged that chatbot interactions contributed to self harm cases. OpenAI says it has strengthened safety safeguards.
AI generated sexualised deepfakes and sophisticated phishing scams were also cited as growing threats. Researchers warn that without oversight, AI could amplify online abuse and misinformation.
Anthropic recently cautioned that advanced models could be steered toward supporting harmful activities in limited ways, including chemical weapons related research.
Some AI researchers have raised broader concerns about the pursuit of Artificial General Intelligence, a stage where machine capabilities match or exceed human abilities. These warnings compare the transformative potential of AI to that of nuclear technology, calling for precaution and global coordination.
Conclusion:
As the AI Impact Summit in India concludes, leaders are expected to issue a joint statement outlining principles for future governance. The discussions reflected both optimism about AI’s benefits and concern about its social, economic and environmental consequences.
For developing countries including Iraq, the debate over access, regulation and workforce adaptation will be closely watched as artificial intelligence reshapes global power structures and labour markets.






