India-Canada Relations Reset: Carney's Visit to Solidify Bilateral Ties

Indian High Commissioner Dinesh Patnaik states that Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's upcoming visit will solidify the reset in India-Canada relations, which had been strained under former PM Justin Trudeau. The visit, part of an Indo-Pacific tour, aims to expand cooperation across trade, energy, defense, and technology, including artificial intelligence. Key expected outcomes include formal negotiations on a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) and deals on uranium supply and critical minerals. Both nations view their economies as complementary, with the partnership helping India diversify its supply chains.

Key Points: Canada PM Carney's India Visit to Strengthen Bilateral Partnership

  • Reset of bilateral relations
  • CEPA trade deal negotiations
  • Energy & uranium supply agreements
  • AI & critical minerals partnership
3 min read

"Will put stamp on all activities to solidify relationship": Indian High Commissioner Dinesh Patnaik on Canada PM Carney's visit

Canadian PM Mark Carney's visit aims to solidify India-Canada relations, focusing on trade, energy, and defense deals, resetting ties strained under Trudeau.

"This visit will put a stamp on all the activities... to solidify the relationship - Dinesh Patnaik"

By Ayushi Agarwal, Ottawa, February 24

High Commissioner of India to Canada, Dinesh Patnaik, on Tuesday, said that the relationship between Canada and India has transformed in recent months and added that Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's visit to India will "put a stamp" on all bilateral steps taken to "solidify" the New Delhi-Ottawa relationship, which was strained under the leadership of former Canada PM Justin Trudeau.

Noting the efforts from both sides to "reset" the relationship, Dinesh Patnaik shared that Carney's visit on February 26 will ensure increased bilateral cooperation among all sectors.

Speaking with ANI, Dinesh Patnaik said, "The Canadian relations have transformed over the last few months, especially after Prime Minister Modi visited Canada to attend the G7 Summit. Since the last four to five months, we've been working very hard to ensure that the relationship is reset to what it was before... This visit will put a stamp on all the activities that have happened to solidify the relationship and to take it to the next level," he said.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is set to visit India from February 26 to March 7, 2026, as part of a broader Indo-Pacific tour aimed at strengthening trade, energy, and strategic partnerships. During his visit, Carney will meet with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to discuss expanding cooperation in areas like trade, energy, technology, artificial intelligence, talent mobility, culture, and defence.

He said that we can expect agreements on various sectors such as cultural, defence, aerospace, space, energy, critical minerals, innovations, education and AI, adding, "This is a multi-dimensional relationship, and you will see all dimensions during the visit."

Noting that New Delhi and Ottawa are "complementary economies," Dinesh Patnaik said that cooperation between both countries will help India to diversify its supply chain.

"Canada and India have complementary economies. Canada has a large number of resources, including energy, agriculture, fertiliser, and critical minerals, which are part of the supply chain we are thinking of setting up. A deal with Canada would help us very much in diversifying our supply chain away from the traditional sources," he said.

The India-Canada relationship suffered after Justin Trudeau alleged Indian agents' involvement in the killing of NIA-designated terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar outside a gurdwara in Canada in 2023. India had rejected the allegations, calling them "politically motivated".

After Mark Carney succeeded Trudeau, both countries have worked together to improve the relationship.

In November, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Carney agreed to formally relaunch talks on the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Johannesburg

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's visit to India on February 26 will bring potential outcomes on the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA), formal negotiations are expected to begin, aiming to double bilateral trade to $70 billion by 2030; Energy and Uranium deals, a 10-year Canadian $ 2.8 billion uranium supply deal and agreements on energy and mining are likely to be signed and AI and Innovation partnerships in critical minerals is expected to be a focus area.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone working in tech, the focus on AI and innovation partnerships is exciting. Canada has strong research institutions and India has the talent and scale. This could be a game-changer for both economies if they get the talent mobility part right.
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Vikram M
Diversifying our supply chain away from traditional sources is crucial for national security. Canada's resources in energy and critical minerals are exactly what we need. Hope the uranium deal goes through smoothly for our nuclear energy goals.
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Priya S
While the economic focus is good, I hope the "cultural" dimension mentioned is substantive. The previous tensions affected the diaspora deeply. Rebuilding trust at the people-to-people level is just as important as signing trade deals.
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Rohit P
Frankly, we need to be cautious. The relationship has been on a rollercoaster. One visit "putting a stamp" is fine, but we need consistent, long-term policy from Canada that doesn't change with every election. Our foreign policy should prioritize stable partners.
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Meera T
The defence and aerospace cooperation is a key takeaway. In today's geopolitical climate, having reliable partners in the Indo-Pacific is vital. Hope this visit lays a solid foundation for strategic ties, beyond just the economics.

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