Antier Solutions Pvt. Ltd. has signed a five-year Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with NIELIT, an autonomous scientific society under India’s Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), according to LatestLY.

The MoU was executed on June 10, 2026 at the NIELIT corporate office in New Delhi. Dr. Alok Tripathi, Director (Scheme/Skilling) & Chief Controller of Examinations at NIELIT, and Vikram R. Singh, Founder and CEO of Antier Solutions, signed the agreement.

What the MoU commits to

LatestLY says the partnership is aimed at technology education and “digital learning infrastructure,” plus the co-development of “emerging digital solutions.” The five-year duration is explicit in the source text.

In practical terms, this reads like an attempt to formalize training capacity rather than run one-off workshops. Antier Solutions positions itself as a blockchain consulting and development company in the LatestLY brief, which suggests the work likely centers on curriculum support, learning tooling, and applied skills.

Who’s involved and why it matters

NIELIT operates under MeitY as an autonomous body, per LatestLY. That matters because government-linked skilling efforts tend to connect training to broader institutional programs, rather than leaving it solely to private vendors.

The agreement is described by LatestLY as a “landmark” MoU between NIELIT and Antier Solutions. Whatever the marketing language, the core point is still the same. The parties are putting a multi-year structure around education and infrastructure for blockchain and AI.

For readers watching India’s AI and blockchain talent pipeline, this is the kind of signal you want to track. Skill-building partnerships can influence what gets taught, how, and through what platforms.

What to watch next

The provided source text does not include milestones, course catalogs, or public delivery timelines. LatestLY also does not specify whether the work will be aimed at students, working professionals, government training schemes, or a mix.

With that gap, the next concrete questions are straightforward:

  • What learning programs or digital platforms will the partnership build.
  • Whether co-developed “emerging digital solutions” ship as products, tooling for training, or research prototypes.
  • How NIELIT plans to measure completion, outcomes, or certification.

If those details emerge, they’ll determine whether this MoU stays a headline or turns into usable infrastructure for blockchain and AI skilling across India.