Canberra Targets India for Education, Tourism Growth: Chief Minister Barr

Andrew Barr, Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory, has declared India a priority partner for Canberra, focusing on deepening ties in education and tourism. He highlighted plans to move beyond student recruitment to foster research partnerships and innovation with Indian institutions. Barr also outlined a goal to double annual Indian tourist arrivals to 30,000 by leveraging air connectivity and Canberra's cultural offerings. He emphasized the city's economic stability and high quality of life as key attractions for Indian students, visitors, and investors.

Key Points: Canberra Seeks Deeper India Ties in Education & Tourism

  • Expanding education & research partnerships
  • Doubling Indian tourist arrivals
  • Highlighting long-term investment stability
  • Emphasizing quality of life & safety
3 min read

Canberra seeks deeper education, tourism ties with India: Barr

Australian Capital Territory Chief Minister Andrew Barr promotes Canberra as a destination for Indian students, tourists, and long-term investors.

"India is a priority partner for Canberra - our largest diaspora community - Andrew Barr"

By Ayushi Agarwal, New Delhi, February 13

Describing India as a "priority partner," Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory, Andrew Barr, has said Canberra is looking to significantly expand cooperation with India in education, tourism, and long-term investment during his ongoing visit.

In an interview with ANI, Barr underscored the importance of India as Canberra's largest diaspora community and one of the world's fastest-growing economies.

"India is a priority partner for Canberra - our largest diaspora community - and one of the world's largest and fastest growing economies. We are placing a major emphasis during this mission on promoting Canberra's two major export industries - international education and tourism," Barr said.

Calling Canberra Australia's "Knowledge Capital," Barr highlighted the city's concentration of universities, research institutions and policymakers within one urban centre. The ACT enrols over 60,000 tertiary students annually, including more than 20,000 international students, with India being the second-largest source market.

"It makes sense to strengthen and expand this relationship by going beyond recruitment and focusing on research partnerships, joint programs, innovation, and skills development," he said.

Barr noted that Canberra's economic strengths -- education and research, public administration, technology and cybersecurity, healthcare, and clean energy -- closely align with India's development priorities.

Addressing concerns over Australia's student visa risk assessment framework, Barr clarified that visa policy rests with the federal government but stressed that Indian students remain "deeply valued -- culturally, socially, and economically."

"Integrity in the system matters, but so does accessibility. Canberra's message to Indian students is that you are welcome here, and your contribution to our city is recognised, respected and highly valued," he said.

He acknowledged global competition for international students from countries such as Canada and Germany, adding that Canberra's focus remains on delivering quality education, safety, strong employment outcomes, and a high quality of life.

Ranked the world's top city for quality of life in 2025 by Oxford Economics, Canberra offers a stable economy backed by three decades of consecutive growth, low unemployment, and strong public-sector employment.

As Australia's longest-serving Tourism Minister, Barr said Canberra's visitor economy reached AUD 3.1 billion in the year to September 2025, with India being the fifth-largest international market. Plans are underway to double Indian tourist arrivals to 30,000 annually by leveraging Singapore Airlines' connections and Canberra's unique blend of culture, nature, and major events.

For investors, Barr highlighted Canberra's long-term stability and city-shaping infrastructure projects, including light rail, education and health precincts, and digital capability upgrades.

"India is not just a market for us - it is a long-term partner. This mission is about building on that partnership so that Indian students, visitors, and investors continue to see Canberra as a place where they can study, visit, invest and build a future," Barr said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

A
Arjun K
Good to see the focus moving beyond just student recruitment to joint programs and skills development. That's where real value lies. However, I hope the visa process becomes more streamlined and predictable. The uncertainty is a major deterrent for many middle-class families.
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Rohit P
Canberra is a beautiful city, very peaceful and well-planned. Doubling tourist arrivals is ambitious but doable. They need to market their unique events and natural beauty more aggressively here. A direct flight connection, even if seasonal, would be a game-changer.
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Sarah B
As an Australian living in Delhi, I'm thrilled to see this. The diaspora community here is huge and incredibly successful. Deepening these ties benefits both nations immensely. The alignment in clean energy and tech is particularly promising for the future.
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Vikram M
While the intent is welcome, actions matter more. Australian universities are excellent but very expensive. I hope such partnerships also lead to more scholarship opportunities and affordable pathway programs for deserving Indian students from smaller cities.
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Karthik V
"Knowledge Capital" is a strong brand. With India's focus on becoming a Vishwaguru, such international linkages in education and research are crucial. Hope our IITs and central universities actively explore these Canberra partnerships. The cybersecurity collaboration potential is huge.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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