India and Germany Reaffirm Cooperation in Telecommunications and Digital Transformation Following Signing of Joint Declaration of Intent

Ř  Both sides Expressed Commitment to Future‑Ready Telecom and Digital Infrastructure and Global Standards

India–Germany Telecom & Digital Cooperation

Key Highlights

·         Joint Declaration of Intent (JDI) signed on 10 Jan 2026 at the India–Germany Summit.

·         Framework: non-binding, forward-looking, enabling structured collaboration in telecom and digital governance.

Commitments

·         Future-ready telecom & digital infrastructure with emphasis on global standards.

·         Shared values: openness, trust, innovation, resilience in digital ecosystems.

·         Move from intent to structured, results-oriented implementation.

India’s Position

·         1.23 billion telecom subscribers; nearly 1 billion internet users.

·         5G coverage in ~99.9% districts; data tariffs ~USD 0.10/GB.

·         Strong Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): UPI processing ~250 billion transactions annually, adopted globally.

·         Affordable connectivity as a foundation for collaboration.

Germany’s Position

·         Interest in advanced telecom systems, digital governance, secure networks.

·         Demonstrated quantum communication over 35 km link for 11 days.

·         Keen on 6G engagement with India.

Next Steps

·         Early convening of first high-level JDI meeting.

·         Draft initial two-year work plan with timelines, stakeholders, and review mechanisms.

Priority Areas

·         5G/5G-Advanced, early 6G standardization.

·         Network modernization, trusted architectures, supply chain resilience.

·         Secure & sovereign 6G networks, AI at the edge, industry-grade slicing, scalable deployment.

·         Coordinated engagement in ITU for interoperable global standards.

Institutional Collaboration

·         Strong industry–academia model emphasized.

·         Ongoing cooperation: C-DOT & Fraunhofer HHI in advanced telecom R&D, quantum communications, AI, next-gen networks.

·         Opportunities in indigenous tech, open-source innovation, Open RAN ecosystems.

Strategic Cooperation Domains

·         6G, Open RAN, 5G use cases.

·         Quantum communication, AI in telecom, cybersecurity.

·         Exchange of best practices, capacity building, industry linkages.

Diplomatic Support

·         India sought Germany’s backing for:

o    Ms. M. Revathi’s candidature for ITU Radiocommunication Bureau Director.

o    India’s re-election to ITU Council (2027–2030).

o    Hosting ITU Plenipotentiary Conference in 2030.

Conclusion

·         Both sides reaffirmed commitment to trusted networks, resilient supply chains, and future-ready digital infrastructure under the JDI framework.

 

[ABS News Service/19.02.2026]

A bilateral meeting was held on 18 February 2026 at Sanchar Bhawan, New Delhi, between Jyotiraditya M. Scindia, Union Minister of Communications and Development of the North Eastern Region, India, and Mr. Karsten Wildberger, Federal Minister for Digital Transformation and Government Modernization, Federal Republic of Germany, to advance cooperation in telecommunications and digital transformation under the broader Indo-German Strategic Partnership. The discussions reflected mutual respect and appreciation for each other’s technological achievements, with both ministers agreeing that the present times offer significant opportunity for deeper collaboration in telecom and emerging technologies.

The meeting assumes significance since it followed the signing of the Joint Declaration of Intent (JDI) on 10 January 2026 during the India–Germany Summit, which establishes a forward-looking and non-binding framework for structured collaboration in telecommunications and digital governance under the broader Indo-German Strategic Partnership.

Both sides welcomed the JDI as an important milestone reflecting shared values of openness, trust, innovation, and resilience in digital ecosystems. The JDI provides a flexible platform for the exchange of best practices, policy dialogue, scientific and technical cooperation, and the formulation of joint work plans to translate shared intent into actionable initiatives.

Hon’ble Minister Scindia stressed that the partnership should move beyond broad statements of intent toward structured and results-oriented implementation. He shared India’s digital transformation journey, highlighting that India today has over 1.23 billion telecom subscribers and nearly a billion internet users. 5G coverage extends to approximately 99.9% of the districts, supported by data tariffs averaging around USD 0.10 per GB, making connectivity widely accessible and affordable. He underscored that India has laid a robust digital carriageway that offers significant avenues for international collaboration. He highlighted the availability of affordable voice and data tariffs, which are among the lowest globally, and underscored India’s success in building Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI). In particular, he referred to the transformative impact of Unified Payments Interface (UPI), which has scaled globally as a model for interoperable digital payments; Unified Payments Interface (UPI), a fully indigenous stack processing approximately 250 billion transactions annually; and its being adopted by multiple partner countries.

The German minister expressed appreciation for India’s technological achievements and conveyed Germany’s interest in structured and forward-looking collaboration in advanced telecom systems, digital governance, and secure networks. He shared Germany’s experience in quantum encryption and secure information transport, including a demonstration of quantum communication over a 35 km link for 11 consecutive days. The German minister underlined the importance of being actively engaged with India to harness the full potential of 6G technologies.

The two sides discussed early convening of the first high-level meeting under the JDI framework to finalize an initial two-year work plan, identify priority focus areas, and launch flagship collaborative initiatives, with emphasis on clearly defined timelines, identification of stakeholders for each priority area, and periodic virtual review meetings to ensure outcome-driven implementation.

India and Germany reaffirmed their commitment to strengthening cooperation across emerging domains, including 5G/5G- Advanced, early engagement on 6G standardization, network modernization, trusted telecom architectures, and supply chain resilience, including collaboration on secure and sovereign 6G networks, AI at the edge, industry-grade network slicing, and scalable deployment models. The German side expressed keen interest in fully harnessing the potential of 6G through closer engagement with India. Both sides emphasized the importance of coordinated engagement in international fora, including the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), to promote interoperable and secure global telecom standards.

Institutional collaboration between research and innovation entities was noted as a strong pillar of the partnership, with recognition of Germany’s strong industry–academia model and the need for deeper structured engagement between research institutions and industry stakeholders. The ongoing cooperation between the Centre for Development of Telematics (C-DOT) and the Fraunhofer Heinrich-Hertz Institute (HHI), including collaboration in advanced telecom R&D, quantum communications, artificial intelligence, and next-generation network technologies, was acknowledged as a model, alongside opportunities for engagement in indigenous technology development, open-source innovation networks, and Open RAN ecosystems.

Both sides recognized that 6G, Open RAN, 5G Use Case, Quantum Communication, AI in telecom, and Cyber Security are important areas of cooperation to collaborate through industry and academia by exchanging best practices, building capacity, and industry linkages.

The Indian side sought Germany’s support for India’s candidature of Ms. M. Revathi for Director, Radiocommunication Bureau at the ITU, for India’s re-election to the ITU Council for the term 2027–2030, and for India’s proposal to host the ITU Plenipotentiary Conference in 2030.

India and Germany reaffirmed their shared commitment to building trusted networks, resilient supply chains, and future-ready digital infrastructure through sustained engagement under the Joint Declaration of Intent framework.