Canada-India Reset: Carney's Visit to Elevate Ties Amid Global Uncertainty

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's upcoming visit to New Delhi is seen as pivotal for consolidating a reset in Canada-India relations initiated last year. The visit aims to elevate and expand the partnership across economic, defence, technology, and cultural sectors. Key deliverables are expected on the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement, alongside announcements in energy and education. The trip is fundamentally about rebuilding trust and establishing a reliable partnership amid a shifting global landscape.

Key Points: Canada PM Carney's India Visit Aims to Rebuild Trust, Expand Partnership

  • Rebuilding bilateral trust
  • Advancing Economic Partnership Agreement
  • Expanding defence & energy cooperation
  • Strengthening people-to-people ties
  • Navigating global uncertainty
4 min read

"Carney visit will elevate relationship," says Asia-Pacific Foundation of Canada VP Veena Nadjibullah

Canadian PM Mark Carney's pivotal visit to India focuses on rebuilding trust, advancing trade deals, and expanding cooperation in defence, energy, and tech.

"It will allow to consolidate the reset... and elevate the relationship - Veena Nadjibullah"

New Delhi, February 24

As diplomatic engagement between Canada and India gathers pace, expectations are high ahead of Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's upcoming visit to the national capital.

The visit comes at a crucial time, with both governments seeking to rebuild trust and broaden cooperation across multiple sectors.

"Canada and India share a lot of things in common. We are both federal parliamentary democracies. And in that sense, as you may well know, the Indian constitution was inspired by the Canadian federal system. So I think we have a lot of things that we can cooperate on trade, on human resources, on critical minerals, on technology. So I think it's a very positive thing that India and Canada, which are middle powers in these very uncertain times, should be working together on a whole range of things, not only bilaterally, but also multilaterally," says Veena Nadjibullah, Vice President of Research and Strategy at the Asia-Pacific Foundation of Canada.

The Asia-Pacific foundation engages in track two dialogues with India and has been at the forefront of a reset in ties after the souring of relationships during the Truedeau tenure.

"Yes. So the foundation is dedicated to Canada-Asia relations. We have been working on Canada-India relations for a number of years. But in the last two years, we focused on achieving a reset in the relationship and re-establishing dialogue, including among, obviously, government channels, but also business, civil society. So we engage quite a bit. We've had a number of track two dialogues, track 1.5 dialogues in India multiple times a year. And I look forward to coming back again next week for Raisina," said Veena Nadjibullah.

Nadjibullah described the Canadia Prime Minister's visit as pivotal, "It is a very significant trip. It will allow to consolidate the reset that the two Prime Ministers initiated last year on the margins of the G7 here in Canada. It will also allow to elevate and expand the partnership. So elevate the relationship and expand the partnership in areas not only around economic and commercial engagement, but also cultural ties, technology, innovation discussions, educational ties, as well as people-to-people and defence ties. So it's a really robust agenda that the prime minister has."

Canadian PM Carney is expected to meet with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other senior officials, alongside business leaders. Nadjibullah noted that he will outline Canada's broader foreign policy direction, referencing his recent remarks in Davos.

On deliverables, she pointed to progress on the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement and anticipated announcements across energy, education, and defence.

"So there are a number of tracks. We will see some progress on the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement, which both sides confirmed that they will be negotiating last year. So that's a really important discussion. Then we'll see some announcements in energy sector. We'll also see announcements in the education sector. We'll see most likely some MOUs and other things around the defense sector," she said.

She added that maritime security, AI, innovation, and technology cooperation are also likely to feature prominently.

She stressed that the visit is about more than agreements, "Most importantly, this is about rebuilding trust. This is about putting the relationship on a new footing. This is about sharing Canada's foreign policy, new approach to partnerships. And India is going to be a big part of that."

"Ottawa has a really strong focus on diversification, as does New Delhi. This relationship needed to be put back on the right track anyways. But of course, now that we have the Trump accelerator in play, there is even more urgency behind building relationships that are reliable, that are trustworthy, and that benefit the national interests of both countries," she added.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney will travel to India, , Australia and Japan from February 26 to March 7, an official statement from Carney's office said on Monday.The focus during his visit will be on businesses across trade, energy, technology, and defence.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Rebuilding trust is the key phrase here. The previous Canadian government's stance on certain internal matters really hurt the sentiment here. If PM Carney is coming with a fresh, respectful approach focused on mutual benefit, it can be a turning point. Fingers crossed!
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Aman W
Good to see the focus on critical minerals and technology. Canada has resources, India has manufacturing and tech talent. It's a perfect match. Hope the visit speeds up the economic partnership agreement. More jobs and investment for India!
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Sarah B
As someone with family in both countries, I'm cautiously optimistic. The "Trump accelerator" comment is interesting – global uncertainty is pushing nations to find reliable partners. Hope this visit lays a strong, pragmatic foundation, not just symbolic gestures.
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Karthik V
Defence and maritime security cooperation is a big one. The Indo-Pacific is crucial for both. If Canada is serious about a strategic partnership, they need to understand India's security concerns fully. The dialogue is a start.
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Nikhil C
While I welcome the reset, I hope our government also pushes for smoother visa processes for Indian professionals and students. That's a major pain point. The relationship is strong because of the people-to-people ties. The policies should reflect that.

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