
The Indian government is set to acquire a 1–2% stake in Bengaluru-based AI startup Sarvam through compulsorily convertible debentures as part of support being extended under the IndiaAI Mission, marking a new approach toward government-backed AI ecosystem development in India.
According to reports, the proposed stake acquisition is linked to subsidised GPU infrastructure support being provided to selected companies building indigenous artificial intelligence models and platforms. The arrangement is not being structured as a direct cash investment by the government but instead as a value-linked participation mechanism tied to infrastructure assistance.
Sarvam is currently closing a funding round of approximately $300 million at a reported valuation of $1.5 billion. Reports indicate that around $234 million has already been raised in the round, led by HCLTech.
The development highlights India’s increasing focus on strengthening domestic AI capabilities, sovereign AI infrastructure, and homegrown large language model development as global competition in artificial intelligence intensifies.
Under the IndiaAI Mission, the government is reportedly covering up to 40% of GPU-related infrastructure costs for selected companies developing foundational AI models and advanced AI technologies within India. High-performance GPUs are considered critical infrastructure for training and deploying large-scale AI systems, but rising global demand and infrastructure costs have become significant barriers for emerging AI companies.
A government official quoted in reports stated that support provided under the IndiaAI Mission should result in “some form of value capture,” even if it is not structured as a direct financial investment, indicating a broader policy shift toward strategic participation in AI ecosystem development.
The proposed structure could establish a new model for public-private collaboration in India’s AI sector, where infrastructure support, compute subsidies, and strategic investments are tied to long-term ecosystem value creation and domestic technology development.
The move comes as governments worldwide increasingly invest in AI infrastructure, semiconductor ecosystems, sovereign compute capacity, and domestic AI research to reduce dependence on foreign technology platforms and strengthen national digital competitiveness.
Sarvam has emerged as one of India’s prominent AI startups focused on developing indigenous AI models and language technologies tailored for Indian use cases, multilingual applications, and enterprise adoption scenarios.




