Nvidia and Qualcomm Join India’s Deep Tech Alliance with $850M Boost
The India Deep Tech Alliance (IDTA) has secured over ₹7,500 crore ($850 million) in fresh commitments and expanded its membership with tech giants Nvidia and Qualcomm Ventures joining the coalition. Industry sources indicate Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), and Lam Research are also likely to join in the coming weeks.
Key Takeaways
- IDTA secures ₹7,500 crore ($850M) in new funding commitments
- Nvidia joins as founding member and strategic advisor
- Qualcomm Ventures enters alongside multiple VC firms
- TCS, AMD, and Lam Research expected to join soon
Alliance Expansion and Focus Areas
Launched in September at Semicon India with initial $1 billion commitments, IDTA mobilizes private capital and technical expertise for early-stage startups across semiconductors, artificial intelligence, space, robotics, biotech, energy and advanced manufacturing. The voluntary platform enables members to invest over 5-10 years while collaborating on mentorship, co-investment and research partnerships.
New venture capital entrants include Activate AI, Chiratae Ventures, InfoEdge Ventures, Kalaari Capital, Singularity Holdings VC and YourNest Venture Capital, joining existing members like Accel, Blume Ventures, and Premji Invest.
Strategic Partnerships and Technical Support
Nvidia will provide technical support, training and policy inputs to help startups build on its AI and computing platforms as a founding member and strategic advisor. Qualcomm Ventures highlighted India’s expanding deep-tech talent base as well-positioned for global AI innovation.
“We see AI-led intelligent computing as the foundation for the next wave of innovation. India’s deep tech community plays a critical role in realising the global AI opportunity, and we are excited to join the IDTA to support the ecosystem,” Quinn Li, senior vice president, Qualcomm Technologies, Inc, said.
Industry Confidence in India’s Deep Tech Potential
Sriram Viswanathan, founding managing partner at Celesta Capital, told FE that rising participation reflects growing confidence in India’s role in deep-tech value creation. He noted the alliance’s structure doesn’t require pooled capital, with contributors expected to expand as the ecosystem matures.
Sanjeev Bikhchandani, Founder of InfoEdge, emphasized: “Now is India’s AI and deep tech moment – talent, demand, and policy are getting aligned and we hope several science and engineering breakthroughs will go on to become profitable businesses.”
Sudhir Sethi of Chiratae Ventures echoed that deeptech will drive India’s next era of value creation, while Vani Kola of Kalaari Capital noted it represents India’s transition from scaling global products to building foundational technologies.
Government Alignment and Future Outlook
The alliance aligns with the government’s Research, Development and Innovation (RDI) Scheme, which has allocated ₹1 lakh crore for strategic tech research and ₹10,000 crore for the national AI mission. Industry leaders stress that sustained capital, policy support and cross-industry collaboration will be crucial for translating lab breakthroughs into globally competitive companies.



