Ever seen big climate pledges fade after the panel lights dim? Now imagine 110+ events across eight days, all aligned around one mandate: deployment.That is what Delhi Climate Innovation Week 2026 delivered in New Delhi.
Imagine you are a Chief Experience Officer in a large manufacturing firm.
Your sustainability team runs climate pilots.
Your operations team chases efficiency.
Then, your HR team builds green skills programs.
And, your marketing team talks ESG in campaigns.
But none of it connects.
Now imagine attending Delhi Climate Innovation Week 2026 in New Delhi. Over eight days, 110+ events align founders, investors, policymakers, corporates, and multilateral institutions around one mandate: deployment, not discussion.
That shift—from fragmented intent to orchestrated execution—offers a powerful lesson for CX and EX leaders facing siloed teams, AI gaps, and journey fragmentation.
Here is what customer experience leaders can learn from Delhi Climate Innovation Week (DCIW) 2026—and how to apply it inside their own organizations.
Delhi Climate Innovation Week (DCIW) 2026 is an eight-day, 110+ event ecosystem focused on deploying climate solutions at scale, not just debating them. It positions India as the Global South’s centre of gravity for climate innovation ahead of COP30.
Organised by Climate Collective Foundation in association with DPIIT, Ministry of Commerce and Industry, the inaugural edition convened stakeholders across clean mobility, AI, circularity, resilience, finance, gender equity, and green jobs.
Participants included:
Google
World Bank Group
International Finance Corporation
Mahindra Group
TERI
NITI Aayog
European Commission
For CX leaders, the takeaway is clear: ecosystem orchestration beats internal optimization.
AI at DCIW 2026 was positioned as an accelerator for prediction, resilience, and systemic efficiency—not a standalone tech experiment.
The AI for Climate Tech x Google for Startups session explored emissions tracking, agricultural resilience, and urban systems.
Google highlighted deployments like:
More significantly, Google launched the Google Centre for Climate Technology on the Manthan platform, in partnership with the Office of the Principal Scientific Advisor.
Ms. Kaela Montgomery, Sustainability Programme Manager at Google APAC, emphasized structured pathways from pilot to production. She stressed scale, trust, and ecosystem partnerships.
Most AI-led CX programs fail because they remain pilots.
DCIW reframed AI as:
For CX teams struggling with AI gaps:
Climate finance discussions at DCIW centered on de-risking capital through blended finance and risk-sharing models.
Speakers from Climate Policy Initiative and IFC explored how to crowd in private capital. The Climate Tech Investment Network examined how impact measurement shapes portfolio decisions.
Mr. Amitabh Kant, Former G20 Sherpa and Former CEO of NITI Aayog, made a strong case for procurement scale to drive cost competitiveness. He cited India’s solar and LED success.
Journey fragmentation often stems from risk aversion.
Teams hesitate to invest in end-to-end redesigns. They fund isolated touchpoints instead.
Blended finance principles map directly to CX:
| Climate Finance Lever | CX Equivalent |
|---|---|
| Risk-sharing | Cross-functional KPIs |
| Blended capital | Shared budget pools |
| Procurement scale | Enterprise-wide platform adoption |
Key Insight: Fragmentation persists when incentives fragment.
Unify metrics. Share budgets. Align scale.
DCIW 2026 deliberately convened innovators, policymakers, corporates, and multilateral institutions in shared rooms to accelerate execution.
Shri Manjinder Singh Sirsa emphasized institutional collaboration as the next frontier.
The Innovation for Resilience Summit united AI practitioners with disaster risk experts. The South-South Climate Forum aligned developing world priorities ahead of COP30.
This was not networking theatre. It was structured convergence.
Borrow this model.
Create a quarterly “Ecosystem Room” inside your organization:
Mandate one objective: deployment alignment.
Not presentations. Not updates.
Alignment.
Circularity at DCIW moved from regulatory discussion to deployable business models across FMCG, textiles, construction, and electronics.
The Innovation for Circularity Summit, anchored by the EU-India Resource Efficiency and Circular Economy Initiative, focused on operationalizing right-to-repair and supply chain circularity.
The European Commission’s presence underscored India’s growing influence in environmental governance.
Circular models mirror modern customer journeys.
Customers no longer move linearly:
Awareness → Purchase → Support → Exit
They loop:
Research → Buy → Repair → Upgrade → Advocate → Resell
If your journey maps remain linear, you are designing for a world that no longer exists.
Redesign journeys as loops, not funnels.
The Industry Net Zero Innovation Summit (INZIS) focused on integrating corporates into climate tech value chains and translating deep tech from lab to deployment.
Leaders from Mahindra Group, Dalberg Advisors, and Invest India explored integration challenges.
The lesson?
Deep transformation demands:
Deep CX transformation requires:
Without operational integration, experience remains branding.
Gender-responsive climate innovation at DCIW was embedded across programming, not isolated as a side track.
The Women in Climate Evening at IFC convened 50 women founders and investors. Capital access barriers were openly discussed.
This signals maturity.
Inclusive design cannot be a campaign.
It must be embedded in:
Inclusion is infrastructure, not messaging.
DCIW emphasized workforce readiness as a prerequisite for climate deployment.
The Climate Jobs Fair at TERI School connected students to employers. Resume readiness workshops equipped early-career professionals.
Google’s Centre for Climate Technology explicitly prioritized green talent.
Experience transformation scales only as fast as your workforce skills.
Common EX Pitfalls:
Skill is the bridge between strategy and scale.
Create cross-functional governance rooms focused on deployment, align budgets across teams, and define shared KPIs tied to business outcomes.
Because organizations treat AI as experimentation rather than infrastructure. Production metrics and scale pathways are defined too late.
It shifts focus from linear funnels to lifecycle loops including repair, reuse, upgrade, and advocacy stages.
By introducing shared risk models, co-funded initiatives, and enterprise-level platforms rather than isolated departmental tools.
Because new systems, AI, and sustainability mandates demand new skills. Strategy fails without talent alignment.
Delhi Climate Innovation Week 2026 did more than convene conversations.
It demonstrated a blueprint for ecosystem-scale execution.
For CX and EX leaders navigating silos, AI gaps, and fragmented journeys, the message is unmistakable:
Leadership today is not about owning the journey.
It is about orchestrating the ecosystem that delivers it.
And that shift—from control to coordination—may define the next era of experience transformation.
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