SynopsisThe World Economic Forum has named 100 early-stage companies from 23 countries as its 2026 Technology Pioneers. Spanning AI infrastructure, clean energy, space and healthcare, the cohort reflects how AI is enabling small startups to solve challenges that once demanded billion-dollar budgets.ET OnlineThe World Economic Forum (WEF) has announced its 2026 technology pioneers, naming 100 early-stage companies from 23 countries that are using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to solve global issues. These innovations are addressing complex challenges, ranging from nuclear fusion to lunar mining, that previously required giant corporate budgets and massive workforces. This massive leap is happening because AI is dramatically accelerating how quickly these early-stage companies can research, build, and scale their ideas. This year's list highlights several major shifts in how global technology is evolving. First investment is moving beyond AI apps towards the infrastructure powering the AI-driven economy. Startups like Skyfire, which builds verified indeed and payment systems for AI agents, and Inception, which develops faster-running language models, reflect where the next wave of AI value is being created. None of these companies existed as commercial products three years ago. Second, because AI requires immense amounts of electricity, many pioneers are developing new power solutions, from tapping geothermal heat in deep underground rocks to beaming solar energy down from satellites. Data centres are projected to double their power consumption by 2030, making this one of the most urgent problems in tech today. Other major focus areas include robotics, quantum computing, space infrastructure, and using biology instead of chemicals to manufacture food and materials.The cohort also signals that high-tech innovation is spreading well beyond Silicon Valley. India leads emerging markets with nine companies, mostly in space and deep tech, a sector that attracted $1.6 billion in venture funding in 2025, a 78% jump from 2023. South Korea records its strongest-ever showing, while startups from Saudi Arabia, Colombia and Southeast Asia are building tools like Arabic-first speech AI for 400 million speakers and AI credit-scoring systems for unbanked workers.Two founder profiles dominate the list: lifelong scientists commercialising decades of lab research, and experienced entrepreneurs who have already built and exited one successful company before going bigger.As these 100 pioneers integrate into the World Economic Forum's network, the focus shifts from what AI can do in theory to what it can build in reality. The message from the 2026 list is clear: the next era of global tech will not be defined by the apps on our phones, but by the unseen infrastructure powering our world.Disclaimer Statement: This content is authored by a 3rd party. The views expressed here are that of the respective authors/ entities and do not represent the views of Economic Times (ET). ET does not guarantee, vouch for or endorse any of its contents nor is responsible for them in any manner whatsoever. Please take all steps necessary to ascertain that any information and content provided is correct, updated, and verified. ET hereby disclaims any and all warranties, express or implied, relating to the report and any content therein.Read More News onRead More News on
WEF names 100 tech pioneers for 2026: AI, Clean Energy and Deep Tech lead the charge
The World Economic Forum has named 100 early-stage companies from 23 countries as its 2026 Technology Pioneers. Spanning AI infrastructure, clean energy, space and healthcare, the cohort reflects how AI is enabling small startups to solve challenges that once demanded billion-dollar budgets.
WEF names 100 Technology Pioneers from 23 countries in AI infrastructure and clean energy. AI enables small startups solving billion-dollar challenges. Infrastructure, not apps, concentrates value; data centre power doubles by 2030, reshaping supply-chain planning.








