India and France have reaffirmed their growing strategic partnership in science, technology and space cooperation during high-level bilateral talks between Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh and France’s Minister for Higher Education, Research and Space, Prof. Philippe Baptiste.
The meeting, held via video conference, focused on expanding collaboration across frontier technology sectors, including Artificial Intelligence, advanced materials, digital sciences, space exploration, ocean research and human spaceflight.
Both sides described the partnership as one of the most enduring and dynamic scientific collaborations globally, reflecting deepening strategic convergence between India and France in advanced research and high-technology domains.
The discussions come as the two countries prepare for the Indo-French Year of Innovation 2026, which officials say will serve as a major platform to accelerate bilateral cooperation in innovation, research and emerging technologies.
During the interaction, Dr. Jitendra Singh emphasized that science and space cooperation has evolved into a central pillar of the broader India-France strategic relationship.
He noted that collaboration between the two countries has contributed not only to technological advancement but also to stronger institutional ties and people-to-people engagement.
“The declaration of 2026 as the Indo-French Year of Innovation offers a significant opportunity to scale up collaboration in emerging areas,” the Minister stated.
Officials indicated that both countries are now seeking to expand cooperation beyond traditional scientific exchanges toward deeper industry-led partnerships and innovation ecosystems.
A key focus of the discussions was the growing collaboration between India’s Department of Science and Technology (DST) and leading French scientific organisations.
Dr. Jitendra Singh highlighted several recent initiatives, including:
collaboration in advanced materials research
partnerships in digital sciences
joint research programmes
technology innovation initiatives
a new bilateral call on Applied Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence launched this year
The AI and applied mathematics collaboration is expected to support joint research in areas such as:
machine learning
computational modelling
scientific computing
predictive systems
advanced data analytics
Experts say India and France are increasingly recognising the strategic importance of AI and deep-tech collaboration amid intensifying global competition in advanced technologies.
Space cooperation emerged as one of the most prominent themes during the meeting, reflecting the long-standing partnership between the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and the French space agency CNES.
Dr. Jitendra Singh highlighted the historic collaboration between the two agencies, including major joint satellite missions such as:
Megha-Tropiques
SARAL
He also referred to ongoing cooperation on the TRISHNA mission, a joint Indo-French Earth observation satellite programme aimed at monitoring climate and environmental changes.
Additional areas of collaboration discussed included:
NavIC ground station development in France
satellite technology cooperation
Earth observation systems
launch system collaboration
space exploration initiatives
The Minister also acknowledged France’s support for India’s Gaganyaan human spaceflight mission.
Dr. Jitendra Singh noted that India’s space sector has undergone rapid expansion following recent reforms opening the sector to private participation.
According to the Minister:
India now hosts nearly 400 space startups
the country’s space economy is projected to grow substantially in coming years
private-sector participation is increasing rapidly
new opportunities are emerging for international industry partnerships
India’s reforms have enabled private companies to enter sectors including:
satellite manufacturing
launch services
downstream space applications
space-based communications
Earth observation technologies
Officials said this creates significant scope for deeper industry-level collaboration between Indian and French companies operating in the space ecosystem.
Prof. Philippe Baptiste described India as a “key and trusted partner” in research and space collaboration.
Recalling his earlier engagements with ISRO, the French Minister highlighted the strong historical foundation of Indo-French scientific cooperation and expressed interest in expanding partnerships in:
Earth observation
launch systems
space exploration
ocean sciences
human spaceflight
He stated that France views India as an increasingly important global space and technology partner, particularly in the context of evolving international scientific cooperation.
One of the notable proposals during the meeting involved expanding collaboration in ocean-related data sharing and marine research.
Prof. Baptiste proposed stronger engagement under the “Space for Ocean Alliance,” aimed at leveraging satellite technologies and scientific cooperation for ocean monitoring and climate research.
He suggested closer collaboration between CNES and Indian institutions working in marine sciences and ocean observation systems.
Responding to the proposal, Dr. Jitendra Singh highlighted India’s strengths in ocean research, particularly through:
the Deep Ocean Mission
India’s extensive coastline
marine biodiversity research
oceanographic data systems
climate resilience initiatives
Experts say Indo-French collaboration in ocean science could become increasingly important amid growing global concerns over climate change, marine sustainability and coastal resilience.
Human spaceflight cooperation also featured prominently during the discussions.
Prof. Baptiste conveyed France’s readiness to expand collaboration in:
astronaut training
microgravity experiments
long-term human spaceflight research
scientific payload cooperation
The proposals align with India’s growing ambitions in crewed space missions following progress on the Gaganyaan programme.
Analysts note that France possesses significant expertise in human spaceflight systems and could become an important partner in India’s future space exploration plans.
The French Minister also invited India to actively participate in the International Space Summit scheduled to be held in Paris in September 2026.
Prof. Baptiste suggested aligning the Paris summit with India’s Bengaluru space event to create a coordinated global platform for international space discussions.
Such coordination could help strengthen global collaboration on:
space governance
commercial space opportunities
climate observation systems
deep-space exploration
international scientific partnerships
Both sides also acknowledged the important role of the Indo-French Centre for the Promotion of Advanced Research (CEFIPRA) in sustaining long-term scientific collaboration.
CEFIPRA has played a major role in:
joint research funding
academic exchanges
scientific partnerships
innovation cooperation
institutional research networks
Officials described the institution as one of the strongest foundations supporting bilateral science diplomacy between the two countries.
The discussions reflect the broader evolution of the India-France strategic partnership into advanced technology, innovation and scientific cooperation.
In recent years, bilateral cooperation has increasingly expanded into:
digital technologies
clean energy
defence technologies
cybersecurity
AI governance
climate research
advanced manufacturing
Observers say India and France are positioning themselves as long-term strategic partners in shaping emerging technology ecosystems and global scientific governance frameworks.
The meeting concluded with both countries reaffirming their commitment to deepening cooperation in science, technology and space while leveraging innovation and industry participation for mutual and global benefit.
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