What is Pax Silica?
Speaking at the India AI Impact Summit 2026 in New Delhi, Google CEO Sundar Pichai backed India’s entry into “something called Pax Silica.” It sounds technical and a touch hyperbolic.
What Is Pax Silica?
Think of ‘Pax Silica’ in terms of the new “Pax Americana,” but one that isn’t based on oil or steel or military power but silicon chips.
The semiconductors are what make the modern world run. AI systems, smartphones, EVs, defense tech, medical devices — you name it — they all rely on advanced chips. Pax Silica is a US-led group of trusted allies (which include Japan, Australia and South Korea and now India) that comes together to:
Protect chip supply chains
Guaranteed access to scarce minerals such as lithium and rare earth elements
Reduce reliance on a single source of dominant supply (in particular, China)
In miniature: it is about ensuring the digital world does not shut down for geopolitical reasons.
🇮🇳 Why This Is Huge for India
For India to join Pax Silica is akin to stepping into the control room of the global tech future.
Here’s why it matters:
Secure Access to AI Power
Cutting-edge AI chips are in short supply and politically sensitive. But that’s not a bad thing: As part of the alliance, India can enjoy more predictable access to state-of-the-art semiconductors (the sort used in AI research, defense systems, EVs and supercomputing).
The Vizag AI Hub
Google isn’t just talking. It sent in a $15 billion commitment, including the creation of one of the largest AI data center hubs in Visakhapatnam (Vizag). A gigawatt-scale data center is no small thing — it’s a signal of years’ worth of infrastructure investment.
That means:
- Jobs
- Cloud capacity inside India
- More local AI development
- New Digital Highways
Google also pulled back the curtain on the “India-America Connect”—new subsea internet cables that would connect India directly to Singapore, Australia and the U.S.
You can think of these cables as digital highways at ultra-high speeds. Faster, Safer data can flow to and from India and more integrated into the global AI ecosystem in India.
What Sundar Pichai Really Meant
Pichai called this an age of “hyper-progress.” But his message was not only about speed — it was about trust.
His core idea was simple:
A.I. can change lives — from helping farmers predict monsoons to early disease detection — but not if the infrastructure on which it depends is vulnerable and unreliable.
He also underscored skills as well as servers. It hopes to use Google’s “AI Skill House” to train 10 million Indians how to be reasonably productive with AI tools.
- That reframes the story from infrastructure to liberation.
- The Bigger Picture
- This isn’t just about chips.
- With its entry into the Pax Silica, India transitions from a:
- A large consumer market
to - An AI-infrastructure and manufacturing-enabler partner
It makes India a stabilizing element in the global tech supply chain — one part digital factory, another data hub.
The Bottom Line
Pax Silica is a new kind of global power structure — founded on silicon, AI and supply chains instead of oil fields.
And with this step, India isn’t on the outside watching the AI revolution unfold.
It’s helping build it.
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