Skip to main content

Cookie Consent

We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience, serve personalised ads or content, and analyse our traffic. Learn more

AI in ASIA
Asia AI funding
Business

Asia’s AI Funding Pulse: Four Public Windows to Watch in 2026

If you’re building in AI across Southeast Asia or Oceania, timing matters as much as technology. Read on for the latest upcoming grants.

Intelligence Desk4 min read

AI Snapshot

The TL;DR: what matters, fast.

The Philippines has opened its 2026 Capability Development Program, an umbrella programme offering various grants for AI-related research and institutional development.

This programme from the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) includes funding for establishing research labs, strengthening regional research, and integrating data science and AI systems.

Singapore has committed S$1 billion over five years to public AI research as part of its national RIE roadmap.

Who should pay attention: AI builders in Southeast Asia and Oceania | Researchers | Innovators

What changes next: Further details on Singapore's AI research funding focus are anticipated.

Right now, several public funding programmes are either open or signalling serious capital commitments for applied AI, research capability, and inclusive innovation.Here’s a tight, practical overview with direct links for easy follow-up.

🇵🇭 Philippines: DOST-PCIEERD Capability Development Program (CapDev 2026)

The Department of Science and Technology (DOST), through Philippine Council for Industry, Energy and Emerging Technology Research and Development (PCIEERD), has opened its 2026 Capability Development Program.

Deadline: 20 February 2026

  • Regional Research Institution (RRI) Grants: Up to around ₱1 million per slot to strengthen regional research capability.
  • ExpertISE: Connects regional institutions with industry to identify niche R&D challenges.
  • GODDESS Stream: Focused on systems integrating data science and AI, including predictive analytics, NLP, computer vision, and governance use cases.
  • Balik Scientist / Balik Saliksik: Designed to bring overseas Filipino expertise back into the national R&D system.

This is one of the most immediate AI-relevant public funding windows in the region.

🇸🇬 Singapore: S$1 Billion AI Public Research Commitment (RIE 2025–2030)

Under its national RIE roadmap, Singapore has committed S$1 billion over five years to strengthen AI public research.

The funding focus includes:

  • Fundamental AI research
  • Applied AI addressing real-world industry challenges
  • AI talent development
  • New and expanded research centres tackling long-term questions such as responsible and resource-efficient AI

The strategic signal is clear:

  • AI is no longer experimental policy. It’s infrastructure.
  • For startups, research institutions, and enterprise partners, this means:
  • Larger public-private collaboration pathways
  • Stronger grant-backed research consortia
  • Government-aligned procurement opportunities in sectors like manufacturing, health, and sustainability

🇳🇿 New Zealand: He Ara Whakahihiko – Rangapū Rangahau 2026

In New Zealand, the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) has reopened the He Ara Whakahihiko Capability Fund for 2026.

Under the Rangapū Rangahau stream:

  • Up to NZ$6.5 million total available
  • Multi-year projects (typically two years)
  • Designed to strengthen partnerships between Māori organisations and the national science, innovation and technology ecosystem

A separate Ara Whaihua track supports translation of research into economic impact.

For AI practitioners, this is particularly relevant if your work:

  • Is co-developed with Indigenous communities
  • Addresses data sovereignty, ethical AI, or culturally grounded innovation
  • Builds long-term research capability rather than short-term pilots

🇵🇭 Bangsamoro: Ideation Impact Challenge 2026

The Bangsamoro Youth Commission has opened its Ideation Impact Challenge (IIC 2026).

Deadline: 27 February 2026

Key points:

  1. Five selected proposals receive approximately ₱200,000 each
  2. Focused on youth- and gender-anchored policy research
  3. Research must be grounded in the Bangsamoro context
  4. AI tools are permitted but must be disclosed and cannot replace core research work
  5. While smaller in scale, this is strategically important. It shows regional governments are actively integrating AI-assisted research into policy innovation frameworks, with guardrails.

What This Signals for Asia’s AI Ecosystem

A few patterns are emerging:

  • AI funding is no longer centralised in capital cities alone. Regional research capacity is now a policy priority.
  • Capability building is as important as commercial output
  • Labs, talent pipelines, and partnerships are being funded alongside product development.
  • Responsible and inclusive AI is structurally embedded
  • Indigenous partnerships in New Zealand and youth policy research in Bangsamoro are not side projects. They’re formal funding pillars.
  • Deadlines are immediate: Two Philippine calls close in February 2026. If you’re serious, the clock is already ticking.

Asia’s AI story is not just about private capital and hyperscalers. It’s increasingly about coordinated public research, regional inclusion, and structured capability development.

If you’re building applied AI in the region, this is your cue to align early with institutional partners rather than chasing funding reactively.

And if you’re reading from outside Asia, pay attention. These aren’t isolated grants. They’re policy signals about where the next five years of AI infrastructure will be built.

Clear thinking in an AI world. Shaping Asia’s AI story.

Do any of these loom right to you? Let us know if you'll apply!

YOUR TAKE

We cover the story. You tell us what it means on the ground.

What did you think?

Written by

Share your thoughts

Be the first to share your perspective on this story

This is a developing story

We're tracking this across Asia-Pacific and may update with new developments, follow-ups and regional context.

This article is part of the This Week in Asian AI learning path.

Continue the path →

Liked this? There's more.

Join our weekly newsletter for the latest AI news, tools, and insights from across Asia. Free, no spam, unsubscribe anytime.

Loading comments...