Brands
Discover
Events
Newsletter
More

Follow Us

twitterfacebookinstagramyoutube
Youtstory

Brands

Resources

Stories

General

In-Depth

Announcement

Reports

News

Funding

Startup Sectors

Women in tech

Sportstech

Agritech

E-Commerce

Education

Lifestyle

Entertainment

Art & Culture

Travel & Leisure

Curtain Raiser

Wine and Food

YSTV

ADVERTISEMENT
Advertise with us

Karnataka rechristens IT-BT department as the Department of Innovation and Technology

Karnataka rechristens IT-BT department as the Department of Innovation and Technology

Friday March 02, 2018 , 4 min Read

The government also launched the eMargadarsi cognitive bot for the government-run yuvayuga.com portal, which is powered by IBM Watson.

Karnataka launched its Innovate Karnataka programme with Nino, a robot built by Bengaluru-based Sirena Technologies, which greeted the audience at a press conference by announcing Karnataka's global dominance as a technology State.

The government launched the Department of Innovation and Technology, replacing the department of IT and BT, to focus on skilling in technologies, foster innovations, sign global partnerships, and help entrepeneurs get investments.

Priyank Kharge, Minister of IT, Karnataka, added that government's priorities should be frozen and should not change with a change in government. For that reason, it set up a Karnataka Innovation Authority to find ideas that can cut across the verticals and horizontals of the industry and be implemented by the government. The government is also setting up an Intellectual Property Cell and International Cell.

“Technologies are outpacing policy. The current policies are not conducive to startups; we are creating innovation framework for Blockchain and Crypto and several industries. We will ensure startups continue to work till the time the government creates frameworks and rules,” says Priyank Kharge.

Karnataka IT and BT Minister Priyank Kharge

Innovate Karnataka

Through the Innovate programme, the government wants to ensure that graduates are more employable. According to the government of Karnataka, only seven percent of graduates are employable; hence, it is preparing to create a strong skill base. The other reason behind this is the stiff competition Karnataka is facing from other states.

Invest Maharastra, Sunrise Andhra and Invest Jharkhand are the state-level competitors to Karnataka’s IT policymakers. Besides, the state also has to compete with Estonia, which is a leader in Blockchain.

“Karnataka has to think global and give stakeholders what they want, such as making our talent employable. We also have to make the state the entrepreneurship capital of the world,” says Kharge. He says the biggest challenge is skilling engineers while they are still in colleges as everyone tries to reskill only after graduation. “We have to correct this and we are already giving Rs 40 lakh to mentor people in biotechnology and IT,” he says.

The Minister also announced “Prerana”, a reskilling programme for women who have taken a maternity break and want to come back to work. Karnataka has centres for excellence in IOT, AI and data sciences. It is also investing in agri tech startups.

Further, the government is working on Elevate 500 to foster and nurture good solutions to scale up 1,000 entrepreneurs and help them make their businesses mainstream. Previously, the government had launched Elevate 100 and mentored several startups. “Today being a software engineer is not enough. Today, engineers can become entrepreneurs and compete globally,” says Priyank.

Karnataka has always been a forerunner in technology. In the past, it was the first state to start an innovation programme in 1998. The department of IT and BT was set up in 2001.

“We are leaders in IT Services. India's 44 percent of $167 billion, in IT-enabled services, come from Karnataka. India is the fourth best R&D centre in the world. We have 400 large R&D centres in India. We are also the second fastest growing startup ecosystem,” says Kharge.

The Government of Karnataka also showcased a new logo for the Innovate Karnataka programme which will be under the newly christened Department of Innovation and Technology.

Following are some of the programmes launched under the new name:

  • Rajiv Gandhi entrepreneurship scheme
  • Incubation centres in Kalburgi at the cost of Rs 5 crore
  • Semi conductor fabless
  • Partnership with C-Camp for agritech startups
  • A network of data for patents and products
  • Reskilling women on maternity leave
  • Centre of excellence for AI and Data Sciences in partnership with Nasscom
  • Centre for excellence for animation, visual effects, gaming and comics
  • Centre for Machine Learning and Robotics at IIIT-B.
  • Mysore-based Electronics Systems Design and Manufacturing, in partnership with Govt of India and Govt of Karnataka