
Google and Accel have announced a landmark alliance to accelerate India’s emerging AI innovation landscape, launching a joint investment initiative under the Google AI Futures Fund. Through Accel’s Atoms program, the two organizations will co-invest up to $2 million in every selected startup. Sharing the vision behind this initiative, Prayank Swaroop stated that the ambition is to support founders building “AI products for billions of Indians and global markets.” This collaboration marks one of the strongest early-stage support engines India’s AI ecosystem has yet seen.
A key advantage of the program lies in the extensive enablement layer provided to founders. Selected startups will gain access to $350,000 in compute credits, early adoption opportunities with Gemini and DeepMind models, and mentorship directly from leaders across Google Labs and Accel. Beyond financial and product support, the founders will also participate in global immersion experiences across London and the Bay Area, deepening their insight into innovation ecosystems and scaling strategies.
Jon Silber highlighted why India became the first geography for this initiative, saying that the nation’s founders “are going to play a leading role in the next generation of AI led global technology.” The timing aligns with India’s widening AI opportunity — a massive mobile-first consumer base, technology adoption rising at scale, and the entry of global labs such as OpenAI and Anthropic into the market.
In terms of scope, Swaroop shared that the investment focus will span creative and entertainment technologies, enterprise SaaS, and even foundational model development, enabling diversity in AI-led innovation. Importantly, Silber emphasized that, while Google is a strategic partner, “there will be no requirement to exclusively use Google models,” ensuring a flexible and open innovation path for founders.
Accel’s Atoms platform already supports more than 40 startups, and this new partnership represents a deeper commitment to nurturing India’s AI ambitions into global outcomes. Silber captured the larger mission clearly by stating that “the objective is to see the next wave of innovation in the AI space coming out of India.”
With global interest mounting and India positioning itself as a future AI powerhouse, this collaboration may serve as a defining catalyst for the country’s next generation of breakthrough AI companies.




