India-Norway ties elevated to green strategic partnership, says Prime Minister Støre during PM Modi's visit
Oslo, May 18
India and Norway on Monday elevated their bilateral relationship to a "green strategic partnership" with a renewed focus on sustainability, clean energy, and technology-driven cooperation.
The announcement was made by Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre while addressing a joint press statement alongside Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is on a two-day visit to the Nordic country.
According to Støre, the upgraded partnership would provide a strong foundation for both countries to collaborate on knowledge sharing, resource management, and ambitions related to the green transition.
"We are now elevating our relationship to a green strategic partnership, which gives us the foundation to work on knowledge, resources, and ambitions for the green transition, on which we depend for succeeding, both of us," the Norwegian PM said.
Støre further agreed to strengthen cooperation in the health sector, including the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) aimed at developing high-tech quality health services. The agreement will expand collaboration in digital health, artificial intelligence, research, and health technology.
He further emphasised deeper engagement in digital development, including cooperation on digital public infrastructure and digital public goods, areas where India has emerged as a global leader.
"We are strengthening our cooperation in health. A lot to learn from India. We are signing a Memorandum of Understanding on developing high-tech quality health services and closer cooperation on digital health, artificial intelligence, research, and health technology. We also deepen our cooperation on digital development, including work on digital public infrastructure and digital public goods," he said.
Støre also praised India's growing global role in technology, innovation, and renewable energy, noting the evolution of bilateral ties over the past decades.
Recalling his earlier visit to India in 2001 with then Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg, Støre said that the early 2000s marked the beginning of a new phase in India-Norway economic relations, which have now matured into a broader and more strategic partnership.
"India is today a leading global force in technology, innovation, and renewable energy. I remarked to the Prime Minister that I accompanied then-Prime Minister Stoltenberg to India in 2001, that is a quarter of a century ago, when we agreed that this was opening a new chapter of economic cooperation between Norway and India," he stated.
The remarks come as part of Prime Minister Modi's five-nation tour, which also included the Nordic country.
PM Modi is in Norway in the fourth leg of his five-nation visit. He reached Oslo after visiting the UAE, the Netherlands and Sweden.
During the visit, PM Modi will take part in the third India-Nordic Summit. He will also call on Norway's King Harald V and Queen Sonja.
He is on a five-nation tour from May 15 to 20 and is scheduled to visit Italy in the last leg of his tour.
— ANI
Reader Comments
While the green transition is important, I hope this partnership also brings tangible benefits for Indian workers and industries. Norway has expertise in offshore wind and sustainable technologies - we need concrete joint projects, not just MoUs. Also, let's not forget their pension funds had some investments in sensitive areas earlier.
Fantastic! India-Norway relations are really maturing. The health sector collaboration on AI and digital health is especially promising - imagine Indian startups working with Norwegian researchers on telemedicine solutions. And PM Modi visiting Norway after decades shows our growing global stature. Jai Hind!
Living in Norway, I can say this green partnership is a big deal here. Norwegians take sustainability very seriously, and seeing our country partner with India on this is heartening. But implementing green tech in India's diverse contexts will require careful adaptation - one size doesn't fit all.
The focus on digital health and AI is the right direction. India's healthcare system needs such high-tech partnerships to reach our rural areas. But I hope this isn't just another photo-op - we need clear timelines and funding commitments. Our domestic pharma and health tech sectors should be involved too.
Interesting to see India positioning itself as a leader in digital public goods and green tech. The Norway partnership seems well-aligned with India's renewable energy goals (500 GW by 2030). Would like to see how they address intellectual property sharing and technology transfer - that's often the bottleneck.
We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.