Home

Sectors

Gates, Wadhwani sign MoU for India Innovation Network

Wadhwani and Gates Foundation sign MoU to power India Innovation Network, funding five Centres of Excellence over five years in health, biotech, and medtech.

News • 3 min read • 20 May 2026

Wadhwani Foundation and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation have signed a landmark Memorandum of Understanding to accelerate India’s push from laboratory research to commercial deployment, backing a national-scale programme called the National Innovation Network (NIN).

The partnership targets translational research in health, nutrition, biotechnology, genomics and medical technology — sectors the Indian government has identified as national development priorities.

Under the agreement, the Gates Foundation will fund five NIN Centres of Excellence over five years, with two centres receiving support in the current year. The centres will help researchers move innovations past the laboratory stage toward real-world applications, covering prototyping, validation, pilot deployments, intellectual property management and venture creation.

The India Innovation Network builds on the Wadhwani Innovation Network (WIN), launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on April 29, 2025. Since its debut, WIN has backed more than 50 high-potential projects spanning healthtech, medtech, biotechnology and quantum technologies, establishing research hubs at IIT Bombay, IIT Delhi, IIT Kanpur, IIT Hyderabad, IIT(ISM) Dhanbad, the Indian Institute of Science and C-CAMP.

Two flagship “Super Hubs” are under development: the Wadhwani School of AI & Intelligent Systems at IIT Kanpur and the Wadhwani Health & Bio Hub at IIT Bombay.

“WIN has demonstrated that India’s innovation potential can be unlocked when researchers, institutions, industry and capital come together with a shared mission,” said Ajay Kela, Chief Executive and Board Member of Wadhwani Foundation. “Through NIN, we now have the opportunity to democratize innovation across India and help position the country as a global leader.”

Archna Vyas, Director of the Gates Foundation’s India Country Office, said the most consequential health and nutrition breakthroughs of the next decade would likely originate in Indian institutions. “Our collaboration with Wadhwani Foundation will help support the opportunity for these innovations by investing in translational pathways,” she said.

NIN aims to establish more than 250 Centres of Excellence across India within three to five years, drawing participation from government agencies, corporate partners, philanthropies and academic institutions under a shared governance framework managed by the Wadhwani Foundation.

The network’s longer-term targets include translating thousands of innovations annually from research settings to market-ready products, with projected impact across millions of jobs and livelihoods.

Share this Post on

More Stories

Related News

Categories

HomeNewsGovernanceSustainable WorldLawsSectors

Quick Links

About UsContactAdvertiseTerms & Conditions

© 2026 CSR Voice. All Rights Reserved.

Powdered by © Snowchild Studio