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India News Updated Jul 9, 2026

PM Modi's Australia Visit Delivers 18 Major Outcomes Across Key Sectors

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Australia visit from July 8-10 resulted in 18 major outcomes across defence, energy, technology, education, and culture. Key agreements include a Joint Declaration on Defence and Security Cooperation and a Maritime Security Collaboration Roadmap. The visit also enabled Australian uranium supply to India under the Civil Nuclear Agreement and repatriated three Indian antiquities. Economic and education outcomes include new campus approvals for Australian universities in India and a solar training academy.

PM Modi's Australia visit delivers 18 major outcomes, deepening defence, energy, technology and education ties

Melbourne, July 9

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Australia from July 8-10 culminated in 18 major outcomes spanning defence, maritime security, energy, critical technologies, education, mining, research and cultural cooperation, significantly expanding the India-Australia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.

According to the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), the outcomes include the adoption of a Joint Declaration on Defence and Security Cooperation, a Maritime Security Collaboration Roadmap, an India-Australia Joint Statement on Energy Security, and an administrative arrangement under the India-Australia Civil Nuclear Agreement, alongside a series of agreements in education, skills development, research, innovation and heritage conservation.

The Joint Declaration on Defence and Security Cooperation aims to advance defence industrial collaboration and joint innovation ecosystems, promote information sharing, and deepen cooperation in humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HADR).

The Maritime Security Collaboration Roadmap seeks to enhance information sharing, capability development and operational coordination while strengthening cooperation in HADR, pollution response and search and rescue operations.

The two countries also issued a Joint Statement on Energy Security, reaffirming their commitment to strengthening energy security, recognising India's role as an important supplier of liquid fuels and downstream energy products to Australia, and supporting the continued flow of energy products between the two countries.

An administrative arrangement under the India-Australia Civil Nuclear Agreement will enable the supply of Australian uranium to India, diversify India's energy sources and strengthen its energy security.

Among the strategic initiatives, India and Australia launched the Australia-India Partnership for Cyber, Critical Technologies and Supply Chains to strengthen cooperation in cybersecurity, resilient supply chains and emerging technologies. An MoU was also signed between the Indian Coast Guard and Australia's Maritime Border Command to enhance coordinated coastal surveillance, maritime domain awareness and maritime law enforcement.

Australia further invited an Indian military instructor to join the Australian Defence College for 2028-29, aimed at strengthening professional military engagement and knowledge exchange.

The economic and education outcomes included an MoU to establish a Centre of Excellence in Mining and Mining Equipment, Technology and Services at the National Skill Training Institute (NSTI), Bhubaneswar, a Letter of Intent for Flinders University to establish a campus in Bengaluru, and a Letter of Approval permitting Victoria University to establish its campus in Gurugram.

India's National Council for Vocational Education and Training (NCVET) and the Australian Skills Quality Authority (ASQA) also signed a Letter of Intent to strengthen quality assurance in vocational education, align occupational standards and promote capacity building.

The visit also saw the repatriation of three Indian antiquities from Australia: the sacred bull Nandi, an 11th-12th century granite sculpture; a bronze Trident with Bhadrakali; and a 12th-century basalt sculpture of the six-headed Skanda (Karttikeya).

Both sides operationalised the Rooftop Solar Training Academy at Pandit Deendayal Energy University, Gandhinagar, to train 2,000 women and youth as solar technicians under India's clean energy programme.

Other agreements included an MoU under the Australia-Canada-India Technology and Innovation (ACITI) Partnership; cooperation between Geoscience Australia and Geological Survey of India on advanced mineral exploration; a Traditional Knowledge Digital Library access agreement between Council of Scientific and Industrial Research and IP Australia; an MoU between CSIR and University of Melbourne on collaborative research; and an agreement between Satyajit Ray Film and Television Institute and Griffith Film School to promote collaboration in film education and academic exchanges.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

The education outcomes are fantastic - Australian universities setting up campuses in Bengaluru and Gurugram will give our students more options for quality education without having to go abroad. Plus the Centre of Excellence in Mining in Bhubaneswar is a great idea for skill development! 🌟

James A

It's good to see India and Australia strengthening ties. The return of the three Indian antiquities is particularly meaningful - cultural heritage is so important. I hope these collaborations lead to real outcomes on the ground and not just MoUs on paper.

Kavya N

The Rooftop Solar Training Academy training 2,000 women and youth as solar technicians caught my eye! That's exactly the kind of inclusive development we need. Women-led clean energy initiatives will transform rural India. Proud to see Modi ji focusing on practical outcomes. ☀️

Rohit P

18 outcomes is impressive but we need to ensure these agreements translate into real benefits for common people. An Indian military instructor at Australian Defence College in 2028-29 seems far away. Let's hope implementation doesn't get lost in bureaucracy. Still, overall positive step for India's global standing.

Sarah B

Great to see civil nuclear cooperation progressing - Australian uranium will help India meet its clean energy goals while reducing coal dependency. The cybersecurity partnership is also timely given increasing cyber threats. A win-win for both nations! 🤝

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

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