Reliance Industries made its biggest bet on artificial intelligence at its 49th Annual General Meeting held on June 19, 2026. Chairman Mukesh Ambani declared that AI is becoming a multi-trillion-dollar business globally and outlined a detailed roadmap for how the conglomerate plans to lead this segment in India.

“The infrastructure for it is being built at breakneck speed, and it will be fully operationalised over the next couple of years,” Ambani told shareholders at the AGM. The statement set the tone for a series of announcements that positioned Reliance not as a company chasing the AI hype, but as one building the physical and digital backbone to make AI work at scale across India.
Reliance Intelligence: Building India’s Sovereign AI Backbone
The centerpiece of the announcement was Reliance Intelligence, the company’s dedicated AI initiative. Akash Ambani, Managing Director of Jio Platforms, revealed that the company is constructing a sovereign AI backbone in Jamnagar, Gujarat. The first phase of this infrastructure, comprising 120 megawatts of compute capacity, is expected to be commissioned by the end of 2026.
Reliance is deploying advanced Nvidia GB300 GPUs as part of its initial infrastructure build-out. This positions the company among the early adopters of Nvidia’s latest GPU architecture in India, giving it a significant head start in the race for AI compute capacity.
“What we are building is AI for India, AI by India, and AI that will one day serve the world,” Akash Ambani said during his presentation at the AGM. The statement underscores Reliance’s ambition to not just consume AI technology developed elsewhere, but to create AI solutions tailored for Indian languages, Indian problems, and Indian markets.
Making AI Affordable for Every Indian
Akash Ambani drew a direct parallel between Reliance’s past success with telecom and its future plans for AI. “Just as Jio made data extremely affordable for every Indian, Reliance Intelligence will disrupt AI economics by making it dramatically more affordable for every Indian by the end of this decade,” he said.
This affordability strategy is built on three pillars: sovereign compute infrastructure that reduces dependence on imported GPU capacity, software optimizations specifically designed for Indian language processing, and distribution through Jio’s massive network that already reaches hundreds of millions of users across the country.
The biggest hurdle for AI adoption in India today remains the scarcity and high cost of compute. By building its own infrastructure rather than relying on cloud providers, Reliance aims to bring down the cost of running AI models by a significant margin. The Jamnagar facility is expected to grow well beyond the initial 120 MW capacity over the coming years.
JioTeleFrame and AI-Powered Consumer Products
Reliance unveiled a suite of AI-led products and platforms at the AGM. The most notable among these was JioTeleFrame, described as a hub for the home where AI agents manage home automation, entertainment, and daily tasks. The device represents Reliance’s first major consumer AI hardware play.
The company also announced a network-integrated voice assistant that offers real-time transcription of calls, generating action points, reminders, and follow-up tasks automatically. The voice assistant is designed to work across Indian languages and will leverage Jio’s network, which currently carries around 20 billion minutes of voice traffic, making it one of the largest voice carriers in the world.
Akash Ambani emphasized that India should not be a mere consumer of AI created elsewhere. “It should be a creator, adopter, and global leader in AI,” he said, reinforcing the message that Reliance is building capabilities from the ground up rather than licensing foreign technology.
AI for Enterprise: Sector-Specific Platforms
Beyond consumer products, Reliance announced a range of sector-specific AI platforms. These include:
- JioBharatIQ – An AI platform designed for small and medium businesses across India
- AI Vyapar – An AI-powered commerce solution for merchants and traders
- JioHealthIQ – AI tools for healthcare delivery and diagnostics
- JioLearnIQ – AI-driven personalized education platforms
- JioKrishiIQ – AI solutions for agriculture, including crop monitoring and yield optimization
Each of these platforms is designed to bring AI capabilities to sectors that have historically been underserved by technology companies. The focus on agriculture and small businesses reflects Reliance’s understanding that the biggest impact of AI in India will come from solving problems at the bottom of the economic pyramid, not just serving large enterprises in metro cities.
JioStar GenAI Media Studio
In the media and entertainment space, Reliance launched JioStar GenAI Media Studio (JAMS), an end-to-end, AI-native content production pipeline. JAMS spans the full journey from ideation and storytelling to image, audio, video, and final production workflows.
The announcement comes as JioStar reported 451 million monthly active users, with its bouquet of TV channels commanding a 34.7% market share and reaching 389 million daily viewers. The integration of generative AI into content production could significantly reduce costs and turnaround times for the platform’s massive content library.
Jio IPO: Unlocking Value for Shareholders
In a move that had been anticipated for months, Mukesh Ambani announced that the board of Jio Platforms has approved the filing of its draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) with market regulator SEBI. “The Jio IPO is expected to unlock significant value for Reliance shareholders, while offering an attractive investment opportunity to new investors,” Ambani said.
Akash Ambani, Isha Ambani, and Anant Ambani are heading the Jio IPO process and will lead the next generation of value creation opportunities. The IPO is expected to be one of the largest in Indian market history, given Jio’s massive user base and its expanding AI and digital services portfolio.
Quick Commerce and Retail Growth
The retail business also featured prominently at the AGM. Director Isha Ambani reported that revenue rose to Rs 3,70,026 crore in FY26, with quick commerce emerging as a key growth driver. The company’s customer base reached 387 million, up 11% year-on-year, processing 1.93 billion transactions, up 39% on-year.
JioMart has scaled into one of India’s largest quick commerce networks, with over 3,100 stores serving more than 1,200 cities across 5,100 pin codes. The home and personal care segment grew at five times the industry rate, indicating strong traction in high-frequency purchase categories.
What This Means for India’s AI Landscape
Reliance’s AGM announcements signal a fundamental shift in India’s AI trajectory. Rather than depending on global cloud providers for AI infrastructure, India now has a domestic player investing billions of dollars in building sovereign AI compute capacity. The strategy mirrors what Jio did with telecom infrastructure, bringing costs down through massive scale and indigenous capability.
The combination of hardware infrastructure in Jamnagar, AI models built for Indian languages, consumer products like JioTeleFrame, and sector-specific platforms creates an ecosystem that could accelerate AI adoption across India in ways that purely cloud-based solutions cannot.
For India’s startup ecosystem, Reliance’s entry creates both opportunities and challenges. Startups building AI applications will benefit from cheaper, more accessible compute infrastructure. At the same time, Reliance’s sector-specific platforms could compete with startups targeting the same markets in agriculture, healthcare, education, and small business.
The next two years will be critical as the Jamnagar facility comes online and Reliance begins deploying its AI products and services at scale. If the company can replicate even a fraction of the impact it had with Jio in telecom, the implications for India’s digital economy could be transformative.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
What is Reliance Intelligence?
Reliance Intelligence is Reliance Industries’ dedicated AI initiative, building sovereign AI infrastructure in Jamnagar, Gujarat. The project includes deploying Nvidia GB300 GPUs and aims to make AI dramatically more affordable for every Indian by the end of this decade.
When will the Reliance AI infrastructure in Jamnagar be ready?
The first phase of the Jamnagar AI facility, comprising 120 megawatts of compute capacity, is expected to be commissioned by the end of 2026. The facility will continue to expand over the following years.
What is JioTeleFrame?
JioTeleFrame is an AI-powered home hub announced at the Reliance AGM 2026. It uses AI agents to manage home automation, entertainment, and daily tasks, serving as a central control point for smart home operations.
Has the Jio IPO been announced?
Yes, the Jio Platforms board approved filing a draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) with SEBI at the AGM. Akash Ambani, Isha Ambani, and Anant Ambani are leading the IPO process.
What AI platforms did Reliance announce?
Reliance announced several sector-specific AI platforms including JioBharatIQ for small businesses, AI Vyapar for commerce, JioHealthIQ for healthcare, JioLearnIQ for education, and JioKrishiIQ for agriculture.
How does Reliance AI compare to global AI companies?
Reliance is not trying to become India’s version of OpenAI. Instead, it aims to build the infrastructure, distribution, and utility layer through which AI reaches hundreds of millions of Indians, similar to what Jio did with telecom.
