Scindia asks telcos to reimagine connectivity not as commodity but as constitutional commitment

Update: 2025-05-27 17:56 GMT

New Delhi: Telecom service providers must rethink providing connectivity not as a commodity but as a constitutional commitment, Union minister Jyotiraditya Scindia said on Tuesday.

While speaking at an event organised by internet service providers body ISPAI and government-backed Nixi, the minister said five days ago India has moved from being the 5th largest economy in the world to become the 4th largest, and he takes pride in representing telecom which is growing at compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 14 to 16 per cent as well as with the CAGR of 12-13 per cent in northeast.

“You are the engineers of equity. You are the builders of bridges. And you are the keepers of the digital flame of India. Reimagine connectivity not necessarily as a commodity but a constitutional commitment,” the minister said.

He asked telecom operators and internet service providers (ISP) to follow six foundational pillars for connectivity, which are affordability, availability, accessibility, quality, safety and focus on emerging technologies such as AI and IoT.

The minister said that in India, where 1 GB of data used to cost Rs 287, at present costs only about Rs 9.

“At 11 cents, India is the cheapest data provider in the world today. The average global cost is $2.59,” Scindia said. He said that if data is liquid gold or black oil, then India is the home of that liquid gold and black oil.

“There is no reason why India should not be the data capital of the world. The prime minister has very clearly said that if this is India’s century, and it truly is India’s century, India has grown in one decade from the 11th largest economy in the world to the 5th largest economy in the world,” the minister said. 

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