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INDIA ADDA – Perspectives On India

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Authors

Dikshu C. Kukreja
Dikshu C. Kukreja
Mr. V. Raman Kumar
Mr. V. Raman Kumar
Ms. Chandra Ganjoo
Ms. Chandra Ganjoo
Sanjay Bhatia
Sanjay Bhatia
Aprameya Radhakrishna
Aprameya Radhakrishna
Colin Shah
Colin Shah
Shri P.R. Aqeel Ahmed
Shri P.R. Aqeel Ahmed
Dr. Vidya Yeravdekar
Dr. Vidya Yeravdekar
Alok Kirloskar
Alok Kirloskar
Pragati Khare
Pragati Khare
Devang Mody
Devang Mody
Vinay Kalantri
Vinay Kalantri

AI and Drone Technology in Sustainable Construction and Mining Operations

AI and Drone Technology in Sustainable Construction and Mining Operations

Artificial intelligence (AI), drone usage, digital twins and autonomous monitoring in construction and mining projects have assumed significance due to increased efficiency and productivity in the industry. With large-scale investment in infrastructure projects such as highways, metros, industrial corridors and renewable energy projects and increased mining for the steel, energy and manufacturing industries, there is a growing need for operational efficiency in the adoption of technology.

In FY26, the use of digital solutions in the Indian industry is becoming extremely important in light of reduced timelines, strict compliance and increased safety protocols for workers. There is an increased use of AI in the project lifecycle for predictive maintenance, cost estimation, risk assessment, autonomous scheduling and optimisation. In contrast, drones are rapidly replacing manual inspection techniques for dangerous sites using 3D mapping, volumetric stockpile analysis, landform observation, and progress monitoring.

Such integration is particularly useful when it comes to sustainability. In construction, the use of AI for analytics and drones for surveys is aiding in minimizing wastage, enhancing site accuracy, and improving environmental compliance. In the mining industry, they assist in safely monitoring pits, effectively mapping out resources, saving on fuel, and improving environmental management. With India focusing on infrastructure-led development and sustainable mining, AI and drones will be key instruments in creating sustainable industries.

India Market Overview and Growth

Adoption of AI and drones in India’s infrastructure and mining sectors in FY26 is growing due to the expansion of digital engineering, geospatial intelligence, and industrial automation. By February 2026, India had registered 38,575 UAVs, certified 39,890 remote pilots by the DGCA and established 244 drone training institutes, showing the rapid growth of regulated drone ecosystem within the country. The country's regulated drone market is growing rapidly; in FY25, based on the forecast by Drone Federation of India, the total drone market in India is estimated to reach US$ 11.30 billion (Rs. 1,01,684 crore) by 2030. In terms of industrial use cases, infrastructure inspection, mining survey, geospatial imaging and construction monitoring will continue to experience strong growth.

According to IndiaAI – IDC estimates, the country's AI market was valued at US$ 8.01 billion (Rs. 72,103 crore), while NASSCOM–BCG analyses have indicated a much larger AI market size of US$ 17.46 billion (Rs. 1,57,148 crore) by FY27. This shows that there is a very strong path for reaching US$ 31.09-36.27 billion (Rs. 2,79,810–3,26,445 crore) by FY30.

Overview of India’s Internet Sector

Another trend that will play a significant role in FY26 is the use of drones, BIM (Building Information Modelling), AI-powered digital twins and the Internet of Things (IoT) in construction equipment. EPC (Engineering, Procurement & Construction) contractors and mining organisations will be able to progress towards the realization of real-time intelligence through such measures.

Policy Landscape

There are new policies under India’s policy framework that are helping the nation adopt cutting-edge technology, including artificial intelligence and drone technology. These new policies play a significant role in promoting innovation, ensuring safety and improving the ease of doing business. These new policies will contribute towards the rapid implementation of technology in the construction and mining sectors.

  • The policy framework for drones and artificial intelligence in India has progressed from the Drone Rules, 2021 to large-scale deployment readiness. In February 2026, there were 38,575 drones registered under the regulations, 39,890 certified pilots, and 244 training institutes. As per the SVAMITVA program, the drones have covered 3.28 lakh villages, highlighting the country’s capability in geospatial technology and the significance of the same in land intelligence, corridor planning and mining leases. The launch of Namo Drone Didi adds further value to the pilot and operational capabilities of the drones.
  • Based on the above progress in the development of drones and artificial intelligence, the Press Information Bureau’s Drone Economy Factsheet FY25 predicts the growth of India’s drone economy to US$ 11.33 billion (Rs. 1.02 lakh crore) by FY30.
  • For the AI domain, the National Strategy for Artificial Intelligence from NITI Aayog formed the foundational strategy for AI within the enterprises, while the subsequent IndiaAI initiative from MeitY is promoting industrial AI applications like predictive maintenance, digital twins, and infrastructure intelligence. As an addition to this, the BCG-NASSCOM outlook for FY26 highlights engineering analytics and asset intelligence as the leading enterprise AI applications, thereby enhancing AI usage within construction and mining processes.
  • The technology initiatives by the Ministry of Mines involving drone exploration, remote sensing, and AI-driven mineral intelligence are further contributing to increased transparency, ESG compliance and scientifically driven mineral extraction in India’s mining regions.

Key Drivers and Emerging Trends

  • The use of artificial intelligence for blast zones and clearance from hazards is a rising trend that will be dominant in FY25. In FY25, Vedanta Aluminium will use AI-operated drones for blasting clearance and danger zone detection.
  • LiDAR-assisted volumetric analysis of minerals is one of the significant factors influencing mining transparency and revenue optimisation. Uttar Pradesh introduced drones for volume measurement of minerals in FY25, where centimetre-level measurement is used to verify royalty payment, illegal mining activities, and stockpile calculation.
  • Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) practices using artificial intelligence for monitoring ecological restoration are a rising focus among coal miners. Eastern Coalfields used AI-driven drones for orthomosaic mapping and vegetation health and land reclamation analysis in early 2026 at the Sonepur Bazari coal mines.
  • The Construction 4.0 era is promoting the adoption of digital twins and drone-assisted building information modelling (BIM), particularly in tunnels, metro passages, and industrial campuses, as drone images are being used increasingly with artificial intelligence (AI) models for defect recognition, progress confirmation and resource management.
  • The integration of sensor networks is another emerging trend, as drones are currently using light detection and ranging (LiDAR), thermal imaging, geographic information systems (GIS), and global positioning system (GPS) validation tools to conduct terrain analysis, slope stability, and ventilation assessments in mining sites.
  • The move from periodic inspection to continuous monitoring has significantly impacted engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) operations, as drone images are currently providing inputs to AI models for forecasting delays, self-scheduling and logistics analysis.

Outlook and Road Ahead

By 2030, construction and mining industries in India are predicted to shift to intelligence-led autonomy, wherein AI, drone technology, digital twin technology, and robotics operate as a cohesive execution layer. Live data generated by drones alongside AI-driven analysis is expected to drive automated warnings, predictive maintenance, blast zone verification and real-time optimisation of construction activities. Digital twins that can automatically update themselves will enhance the economic feasibility of construction projects in terms of schedule management and reduced rework. Similarly, AI-powered ore intelligence, LiDAR terrain analysis, and ESG-based mine reclamation will optimize mining processes.

FAQs

How are drones improving construction and mining operations?

Drones are improving construction and mining operations by enabling faster surveys, safer inspections, stockpile analysis and real-time site monitoring.

What role does AI play in these sectors?

AI supports predictive maintenance, digital twins, risk detection and project optimisation.

Why is this trend accelerating in 2025–26?

Larger projects, stricter ESG norms and faster drone ecosystem growth are driving adoption.

Which technologies are shaping the next phase?

LiDAR, BIM, IoT, robotics, AI analytics and autonomous drones technologies are shaping the next phase.

What is the 2030 outlook?

Continuous site intelligence and autonomous operations are expected to become standard.

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