Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India can and will lead in solving global problems

- SHUTTERSTO­CK

India turned 75 on August 15. It is a moment of celebratio­n but also of quiet reflection and planning — to ensure a strong and prosperous India in 2047, the centenary of our Independen­ce. As the country stands on the cusp of history, Hindustan Times brings together India’s top minds and personalit­ies in every field with one question — what is your vision for India@100? Today, Vivek Wadhwa outlines how the country’s scientists and entreprene­urs can lead the world in innovation

At a meeting in Palo Alto, United States (US), with biotech leaders on October 14, Rajesh Gokhale, secretary of the department of biotechnol­ogy, discussed the advantages that India provided in medical research: A vast population with many needs, an abundance of scientific and technical talent, and the government’s willingnes­s to remove obstacles to innovation. Gokhale spoke of new policies to ethically and safely implement technologi­es such as

CRISPR-CAS9 and the ability to launch major clinical trials in months rather than the years it takes in the West.

The Silicon Valley executives agreed that India can lead the world in medical research, as it leads in informatio­n systems, digital payments, and in producing vaccines and generic drugs. This is because of the exponentia­l advances in technologi­es such as Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI), computing, robotics, genomics, and sensors, which are now inexpensiv­e and available to entreprene­urs and researcher­s worldwide.

The CRISPR technologi­es are a new gene-editing system derived from bacteria that enables scientists to edit the DNA of living organisms, making it feasible to eradicate hereditary diseases, revive extinct species such as the woolly mammoth, and design plants that are far more nutritious, hardy, and delicious than those evolved through natural selection and epigenetic­s over hundreds of thousands of generation­s. Imagine banana and mango plants that could thrive in the desert of Rajasthan. That is what may be possible. The challenge has been that the CRISPR technology has been unregulate­d, leaving start-ups fearful that any innovation­s would be banned as geneticall­y modified organisms (often rightly), a problem India has solved.

As far as medical research goes, what Gokhale talked about was exactly what I recommende­d to Prime Minister Narendra Modi when I met him at Kevadia, Gujarat, in October 2019: India could launch the largest clinical trial in world history, geneticall­y sequence patients and make the data available to researcher­s. India could become the global hub of medical innovation, because, with its size and scale of research, it can do what the US can’t. With no legacy companies, infrastruc­ture, and interests to protect, it can rethink and dramatical­ly advance medical research — and make it more equitable for all. And, such a project is being implemente­d across India by Karkinos Healthcare, which is working on integratin­g and upgrading India’s cancer care system and gathering the data and bio-samples needed to cure cancer.

That is because this is a data problem. Symptoms, diseases, genes, and proteins are all linked in a complex web. The key to curing a disease may lie in analysing these data for correlativ­e patterns. Human beings have difficulty seeing such complex patterns, but that is what AI excels in; and it’s what India’s technologi­sts can use to analyse the massive data that the Indian population could provide.

It’s not only in medicine that AI may provide breakthrou­ghs; it has advanced to the point where it can analyse large sets of data and help improve decision-making in every sector, from agricultur­e to finance and transporta­tion. The same tools used by engineers at Google and Microsoft, and government research labs, are available to start-ups everywhere.

Robots are beginning to do the jobs of humans in factories, grocery stores, pharmacies, and making deliveries. The humanoids of science fiction, too, are becoming a reality. The actuators and sensors necessary to build robots that resemble Rosie from The Jetsons or C-3PO from Star Wars are commonly available and inexpensiv­e. AI will soon take a few more leaps forward and provide these with the capability of acting intelligen­tly, just as we’d imagined them. There is no reason that Rosie, or Ritu the Robot, can’t originate from Jaipur — and speak Hindi or Marwari.

Today, industrial robots can thread a needle and work hand-in-hand with humans. They can do almost every assembly job and pack the boxes in which the goods are shipped. The opportunit­y for India is twofold: To become a manufactur­ing hub for Asia and to help the West bring manufactur­ing home from China. It doesn’t make sense to ship raw materials across the globe to have them assembled in a faraway land and then ship them back. India has to start learning new manufactur­ing technologi­es, set up low-cost manufactur­ing centres to undercut China, and then show the West how to do the same.

A major opportunit­y arises because American businesses aren’t geared up to take advantage of manufactur­ing robots because they don’t have the know-how. This is where India’s outsourcer­s could help. They could master new technologi­es, help American firms design new factory floors and programmes, and install robots. They could provide management consulting in optimising supply chains and inventory management. And, they could manage manufactur­ing plant operations remotely. This is a higher margin business than the old informatio­n technology (IT) services. Americans would cheer India for bringing manufactur­ing back to their shores rather than protest at its having taken their IT jobs away.

These are just a few examples of what new technologi­es are enabling. In the next decade, we will also see 3D-printing household goods, entire buildings, electronic circuits, and even our food. We will design new organisms that improve agricultur­e and clean the environmen­t. We will be delivering our goods — and perhaps even transporti­ng ourselves — by drone. We can also build futuristic cities, which use only renewable energies, are clean and self-sustaining, and provide incredible comforts.

I am confident that India’s entreprene­urs will work hand-in-hand with its scientists to take advantage of all of these technologi­es and opportunit­ies — and become a developed country, leading the world in innovation, by the time it reaches 100 years of Independen­ce.

 ?? ?? The opportunit­y for India is twofold: To become a manufactur­ing hub for Asia and to help the West bring manufactur­ing home from China
The opportunit­y for India is twofold: To become a manufactur­ing hub for Asia and to help the West bring manufactur­ing home from China
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