Karnataka’s tech capital appears to be going all-in on blockchain. Behind closed doors, Coinbase’s legal chief and Indian officials mapped out a surprising alliance: developer tools, cyberdefense, and a potential policy shift that could influence India’s onchain playbook.
On August 6, Coinbase’s chief legal officer Paul Grewal revealed high-level discussions with Karnataka’s IT minister, Priyank Kharge, signaling a strategic pivot for the exchange in India.
The talks centered on blockchain infrastructure, with proposals for developer education, cybersecurity partnerships, and even state-backed hackathons. The meeting marks a deliberate shift in Coinbase’s approach to one of the world’s most challenging crypto markets, where regulatory friction has historically pushed the company to the sidelines.
According to IT Minister Priyank Kharge, the conversation with Coinbase was less about crypto as an asset class and more about blockchain as a civic tool. In his official statement, Kharge noted that the U.S. firm’s developer platform could help streamline how onchain applications are built and deployed.
For a state that has positioned itself as India’s tech vanguard, the emphasis on blockchain infrastructure aligns with its history of early adoption. Notably, this isn’t Karnataka’s first foray into blockchain.
Back in 2017, Kharge himself spearheaded a seminar on blockchain’s governance potential, framing it as a tool for transparency rather than just a speculative asset. That forward-looking stance makes Karnataka an ideal testing ground for Coinbase’s new approach.
The exchange, which has faced regulatory roadblocks in India since its failed UPI rollout in 2022, appears to be sidestepping direct consumer services altogether. Instead, it’s leveraging its institutional expertise in developer tools, compliance infrastructure, and cybersecurity to embed itself in India’s digital public stack.
The timing is strategic. Coinbase’s talks coincide with its broader push to advise governments on crypto policy, a pivot announced earlier this year. It also follows the exchange’s quiet withdrawal from India’s retail market in late 2023, when it abruptly instructed users to liquidate holdings.
While the company hasn’t officially re-entered trading, its behind-the-scenes maneuvering, including Grewal’s February appointment to the US-India Business Council, hints at a long-game strategy. If Karnataka adopts Coinbase’s proposals, it could serve as a blueprint for other states, softening regulatory resistance in the process.