Canada's PM Carney & FM Anand Set for Key India Visit to Boost Trade Ties

Canadian Foreign Minister Anita Anand will accompany Prime Minister Mark Carney on a visit to India to deepen economic and strategic ties. The leaders aim to diversify trade and forge new partnerships in technology, artificial intelligence, energy, and defence. PM Carney will meet with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi after a stop in Mumbai, with an ambitious goal to significantly increase two-way trade. The visit is part of a broader Indo-Pacific tour that will also include key meetings in Australia and Japan to strengthen regional security and investment.

Key Points: Canada PM Carney, FM Anand Visit India to Deepen Trade, Tech Ties

  • Elevate Canada-India trade & tech partnerships
  • Focus on energy, AI, and defence cooperation
  • Aim to double bilateral trade to $70B by 2030
  • Strengthen Indo-Pacific ties with visits to Australia & Japan
3 min read

Canada's Foreign Minister Anita Anand to visit India with PM Carney

Canadian PM Mark Carney and FM Anita Anand visit India to diversify trade, unlock opportunities in energy, tech, AI, and advance economic partnership.

"I will be returning to India with the Prime Minister this week to further diversify trade and to unlock additional opportunities for Canadians - Anita Anand"

Ottawa, February 23

Canadian Foreign Minister Anita Anand said on Monday that she will accompany Prime Minister Mark Carney on his visit to India later this month and noted that the two countries will further diversify trade and unlock more opportunities.

"I will be returning to India with the Prime Minister this week to further diversify trade and to unlock additional opportunities for Canadians, including by elevating all sectors of the Canadian economy and enhancing our people-to-people ties," Anita Anand said in a post on X.

She attached a press statement about PM Carney's visit to India, Australia and Japan.

"In a more divided and uncertain world, Canada's new government is focused on what we can control. We are building a stronger, more independent, and more resilient economy. We are building our strength at home, diversifying our trade abroad, and attracting massive new international investment, the statement said.

"To these ends, the Prime Minister, Mark Carney, announced that he will travel to India, Australia, and Japan, from February 26 to March 7, 2026, to unlock new opportunities for Canadian workers and businesses across trade, energy, technology, and defence. Through these visits to three of Canada's strongest Indo-Pacific partners, the Prime Minister will deepen regional ties that are critical to our security and prosperity," it added.

The statement said that Prime Minister Carney will first visit Mumbai, then New Delhi where he will meet with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The leaders will focus on elevating and expanding the Canada-India relationship, with ambitious new partnerships in trade, energy, technology and artificial intelligence (AI), talent and culture, and defence.

He will meet with business leaders to identify investment opportunities in Canada and create new partnerships between businesses in both nations.

PM Carney will then travel to Sydney and Canberra, Australia, to meet with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and deepen cooperation on defence and maritime security, critical minerals, trade, and advanced technologies, including AI.

He will deliver an address to both Houses of Australia's Parliament and invited dignitaries - marking the first such address by a Canadian Prime Minister in nearly 20 years.

Prime Minister Carney will also meet with business leaders and investors to attract new capital into Canada and support two-way trade and investment with Australia, the statement said.

In Tokyo, Japan, Prime Minister Carney will meet with Prime Minister Takaichi Sanae to strengthen mutual investment and partnerships in clean energy, advanced manufacturing, critical minerals, and food security. The leaders will also discuss strengthening joint efforts on security and defence, including to support a free and open Indo-Pacific.

"Canada has what the world wants - abundant energy, critical minerals, expertise in technology, and world-class talent. In a changing world, we are investing in our strength, diversifying our trade, and cultivating a dense web of new connections throughout the world to build Canada strong," the statement said.

India is the world's fastest-growing major economy and a powerhouse in global commerce and technology. In 2024, India was Canada's seventh-largest goods and services trading partner, with two-way trade coming to $30.8 billion.

At last year's G20 Leaders' Summit, Canada and India agreed to formally launch negotiations for an ambitious Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement that will support Canada's goal to more than double two-way trade to $70 billion by 2030.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
Good to see engagement returning to normalcy. The $70 billion trade target by 2030 is ambitious but achievable if both sides are sincere. As an Indian professional, easier mobility for skilled workers and students should be a top priority in these talks. Our talent is world-class.
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David E
While the economic focus is welcome, I hope PM Carney also respectfully addresses the concerns of the large Indian diaspora in Canada regarding past issues. A strong relationship needs trust on both sides, not just trade figures.
A
Aman W
Finally! The tension was hurting students and businesses the most. Canada needs Indian talent and market, India needs Canadian investment and tech collaboration. Mumbai and Delhi are the right places to talk business. Hope they sign some solid MoUs.
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Sarah B
The Indo-Pacific focus is key. With Japan and Australia also on the itinerary, it shows Canada is serious about engaging with the region's architecture. India is central to that vision. Partnerships in clean energy and maritime security make perfect sense.
K
Karthik V
"Canada has what the world wants" – true, but so does India. This should be a partnership of equals. Hope the negotiations for the economic partnership agreement are fair and don't have hidden clauses that could disadvantage our farmers or MSMEs. Jai Hind.

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