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Technology ‘no longer optional’ for Pakistan, says Jam Kamal

February 15, 2026
in Technology
Technology ‘no longer optional’ for Pakistan, says Jam Kamal
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Federal Minister for Commerce Jam Kamal Khan stressed on Friday that technology was foundational and emphasized the urgent need for preparing Pakistan for the fast-evolving global technological landscape.

While addressing a gathering at National University of Technology (NUTECH) as the chief guest, the minister underlined that the world was undergoing an unprecedented technological transformation driven by artificial intelligence, data analytics, quantum computing, automation and digital platforms.

“Nations that invest in engineering, research and technical human capital are shaping the future global economy.

“Technology is no longer optional; it is foundational,” he said.

Kamal observed that artificial intelligence tools (AI) were transforming decision-making, research, governance and business models, and Pakistan must position itself proactively within this emerging AI-driven ecosystem.

The minister noted that countries that prioritised engineering and technical skills at scale have rapidly advanced in industrial competitiveness.

“Pakistan must strengthen its engineering base, technical institutions and industry-academia collaboration to remain competitive.”

READ MORE: Cambodia seeks to expand digital, technology cooperation with Pakistan

Referring to Pakistan’s mineral resources — including copper and rare earth elements- the minister said the country holds significant untapped potential that must be strategically utilised through modern technology and policy reforms.

He stressed that policy frameworks must evolve with technological change.

“Reforms cannot be delayed,” he said, emphasising governance reforms, industrial modernisation, agricultural transformation, and digital policy upgrades as “essential pillars for national progress”.

Addressing the students, Kamal urged them to look beyond traditional career paths and prepare for emerging fields such as artificial intelligence, robotics, industrial automation, e-commerce, data science, and advanced engineering systems.

He encouraged universities to focus on practical skills, incubation platforms, startup support and industry-linked research.

He reiterated the government’s commitment to facilitating innovation ecosystems, supporting startups, and strengthening collaboration between academia, industry and policymakers.

“If government, universities, industry and youth move in one direction, Pakistan can achieve technological and industrial advancement within a short span of time,” he said.

Tags: CambodiaFederal Minister for CommerceJam Kamal KhanKamalNational University of Sciences and TechnologyNUTECHPakistan
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