Bharat Innovates 2026: From a Bengaluru Lab to Nice. Meet the Startup Bringing AI-Powered Diagnostics to Underserved India

by Incbusiness Team

Indian classrooms, labs and incubators are doing something they have not done at this scale before.The National Education Policy 2020 has pushed universities towards multidisciplinary learning and stronger research. SPARC, the Scheme for Promotion of Academic and Research Collaboration, is putting Indian researchers into joint projects with leading universities abroad, while Study in India is drawing foreign students onto Indian campuses.

The rankings tell their own story. In the QS World University Rankings 2026, 54 Indian institutions made the list, putting India fourth in the world after the US, UK and China. IIT Delhi climbed to its best ever 123rd global rank, up from 150 the year before, and now sits 36th globally for Engineering and Technology. IIT Madras moved up 47 places to 180. IISc Bengaluru and the older IITs all feature. Over the last decade, the number of Indian institutions in the QS rankings has grown by roughly 390 percent, making India the fastest-growing higher education system in the G20.

It is on this foundation that the Ministry of Education has built Bharat Innovates 2026, a flagship initiative to create structured platforms where India’s deep-tech founders can engage directly with patient, long-term capital and partners capable of supporting their global scale-up. The event will be held in Nice, France, from 14 to 16 June 2026, as part of the India-France Year of Innovation, and will showcase about 120 R&D-backed Indian deep-tech ventures to global industry leaders, investors, policymakers and technology partners. It is built around 13 frontier sectors, including Advanced Computing, Semiconductors, Next-Generation Communications, Advanced Materials and Critical Minerals, Biotechnology, Space, Defence, and Manufacturing and Industry 4.0. The aim is to strengthen the bridge between India’s innovators, institutions, investors and industry, and to open pathways for Indian deep-tech ventures into France, Europe and other global markets.

A problem at the heart of Indian healthcare

Among the startups in this cohort is 5C Network, a Bengaluru company taking on one of the country's most stubborn healthcare problems. India runs more than 300 million scans every year, yet has fewer than one radiologist for every 100,000 people. Reports get delayed, specialists are stretched thin, and patients outside the metros often wait days for a diagnosis. In Tier II and Tier III cities, expensive imaging machines sit idle because there is no one to read the scans.

5C Network was built to close that gap. The name comes from the five stakeholders in every diagnosis: the patient, the physician, the diagnostician, the hospital, and AI. The company's platform connects all five, so that a scan taken in a small town can be read by a specialist anywhere in the country.

At the centre of the platform is Bionic, an AI co-pilot trained on what the company says is the world's largest annotated medical imaging dataset. Bionic reads images and patient history, catches errors and missed findings, drafts structured reports, and flags urgent cases. Every scan is still signed off by a certified radiologist; the AI makes the process faster and more accurate, but does not replace the doctor.

The company now works with over 2,000 hospitals across 300 cities and towns, from large urban centres to underserved districts like Lingasugur in Karnataka, where CT scanners once sat unused and now run emergency scans daily. It has processed more than 15 million images, expedited over 75,000 emergency cases, and cut patient wait times by more than three million hours. It powers diagnostics for five of India's top 10 hospitals, and is growing at 70 to 80 percent a year.

Built on India's higher education backbone

That reach did not come out of nowhere. It came out of two campuses and an incubator.

Kalyan Sivasailam, Founder and CEO, is a graduate of the National Institute of Technology, Karnataka, in Surathkal. The NITs and IITs form the backbone of India’s engineering talent pipeline, and Sivasailam was later named to Forbes 30 Under 30 in Asia and India. Before founding the company, he worked at firms including Tata Communications, where he came to believe that most healthcare AI tools looked impressive in demos but struggled in real clinical settings.

Syed S Ahmed, Co-founder and Director, holds a master’s degree in electronics from the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru, one of the country’s most research-intensive institutions. For Ahmed, the problem was personal. After waiting nearly 48 hours for an MRI report at a leading Bengaluru hospital, he began wondering how patients in smaller towns could ever get timely care if even a metro was this slow. Sivasailam had interned with him during his student days, and that conversation eventually became 5C Network.

The company was incubated and seed-funded by the IIM Calcutta Innovation Park, the non-profit incubator under IIM Calcutta, which has mentored over 2,000 startups since 2014. 5C Network was also part of GE Healthcare's Edison startup accelerator, and is supported by E-Governance Services India Ltd and the Government of Karnataka. It has been recognised by Startup Karnataka's Top Tech 25.

An NIT engineer, an IISc researcher, an IIM-anchored incubator and a company now serving small-town India: this is the kind of story the Ministry of Education's spotlight is meant to lift. Research-led ventures, built by founders trained on Indian campuses, ready to be taken to the world.

Original Article
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