Australian business leaders see strong opportunities in tourism, clean energy after Pm Modi's CEO forum address
Melbourne, July 9
Business and tourism leaders in Australia hailed Prime Minister Narendra Modi's address at the Australia CEO Forum. Industry officials are hopeful of significant collaboration opportunities between India and Australia regarding tourism, critical minerals, clean energy, and green gas.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrived in Australia on Wednesday in the second leg of his three-nation visit. On Thursday, PM Modi joined his Australian counterpart, Anthony Albanese, at the India-Australia CEO Forum and Economic Roadmap Business Reception.
Speaking with ANI, Peter Shelley, Managing Director of the Australian Tourism Export Council (ATEC), said the address underscored the immense potential for expanding tourism ties between India and Australia.
Peter Shelley, Managing Director of the Australian Tourism Export Council (ATEC), said "The biggest takeaway is the opportunity for Australia and India, especially in tourism."
He further added, "I think the interest is already very strong across many dimensions and in the tourism context we just keep seeing Indian tourism building and building all the time and we're really excited about that."
Anil Advaney, Founder of Amore Advisory, said the discussions reflected a genuine intent from both nations to deepen economic collaboration. Reflecting upon PM Modi's speech, he further added "We have a lot of opportunity in critical minerals, clean energy, green gas."
He further stressed manufacturing will be a key driver of future cooperation, with significant scope for sector-specific investments between India and Australia. The willingness to collaborate already exists on both sides, backed by strong enthusiasm from businesses across the two markets. What is needed now is a clear roadmap and focused direction to translate that intent into tangible partnerships and investments.
Viswanathan, Chair of the Make in India Focus Group at the Australia India Business Council, said Prime Minister Modi had laid out a clear roadmap for the next phase of bilateral engagement.
Hailing PM Modi for talking about nuclear programs and renewables he said, "I was particularly impressed how each state of India will be able to contribute to the Australia's economic growth and by this collaboration in many sectors. So that is particularly very important to bilateral relations and he has set a tone for the future direction and the future level of engagement what is going to happen between Australia and India."
On the other hand, Robin Mack, Managing Director of Tourism Australia, said the Prime Minister's visit would further strengthen tourism cooperation between the two nations.
"We see such growth in opportunities ahead for Indian visitors coming across to Australia. We have 450,000 visitors from India every year and we see future growth opportunities coming through future investment and future interest in having a holiday here," he added.
— ANI
Reader Comments
450,000 Indian visitors a year is impressive but I think that number can easily double in the next 5 years if we have better flight connectivity and cheaper fares. The mention of each Indian state contributing to Australia's growth is interesting - states like Gujarat and Maharashtra already have strong diaspora links there. Hope Make in India gets a boost through this collaboration!
I am cautiously optimistic. The rhetoric is always positive but execution matters. We've seen many MoUs signed in the past that didn't materialize into concrete projects. That said, the CEO Forum format is practical - direct business-to-business engagement can cut through bureaucracy. Let's see if the green gas and clean energy partnerships actually get off the ground with timelines and funding.
The growing India-Australia relationship makes so much sense - complementary economies, shared democratic values, and strong people-to-people ties. PM Modi talking about nuclear programs and renewables is a big deal, especially for our clean energy transition. Just wish the media covered these substantive economic partnerships more instead of just the ceremonial aspects. 🤞
Indian tourism to Australia is booming because of our growing middle class and disposable incomes. The ATEC MD is right - the interest is very strong. I would love to see more direct flights from tier-2 cities like Ahmedabad, Lucknow, and Coimbatore to Melbourne and Sydney. Also, Australia should make student visa processing faster for genuine students from India, especially in STEM fields that align with the clean energy focus mentioned here.
We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.