Key Points

PM Modi has presented a comprehensive five-point roadmap to strengthen India-Japan economic cooperation. He emphasized Japan's crucial role in India's development with over $40 billion in investments across various sectors. The roadmap covers manufacturing expansion, technology collaboration, green energy transition, infrastructure development, and skill exchange programs. Modi invited Japanese businesses to leverage India's growth story and jointly shape what he called the "ASEAN century" of shared prosperity.

Key Points: Modi Presents 5-Point Roadmap to Deepen India-Japan Cooperation

  • Modi highlights Japan's $40 billion investment in India's development journey
  • Proposes joint leadership in semiconductors, robotics and nuclear energy sectors
  • India aims for 500 GW renewable energy by 2030 with Japanese collaboration
  • Calls for Japanese businesses to "Make in India and Make for the World"
3 min read

PM Modi presents 5-point roadmap to deepen India-Japan bilateral cooperation

PM Modi outlines strategic partnership with Japan covering manufacturing, tech innovation, green energy, infrastructure, and skill development to boost bilateral ties.

"Japan is a technology powerhouse, and India is a talent powerhouse. Together, we can lead the tech revolution of this century. - PM Narendra Modi"

Tokyo, Aug 29

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday participated in the India-Japan Economic Forum in Tokyo alongside Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba. Addressing top industry leaders, PM Modi highlighted the strong economic partnership between the two countries and laid out a five-point roadmap to deepen bilateral cooperation.

“Japan has always been an important partner in India’s development journey. From metros to manufacturing, from semiconductors to startups, our partnership symbolises mutual trust in every sector. Japanese companies have invested over 40 billion dollars in India,” he said, praising the robust investment ties between the two nations.

PM Modi emphasised India's transformation over the last decade, saying, “Over the past eleven years, you are all well aware of India’s unprecedented transformation. Today, India has political stability, economic stability, transparency in policies, and predictability. India is currently the fastest-growing major economy in the world and is soon set to become the third-largest economy globally... Behind this transformation is our approach of Reform, Perform, and Transform.”

Calling the partnership “strategic and smart”, the Prime Minister proposed five key areas of cooperation:

First is Manufacturing and New Sectors. “Together, we can replicate our success in manufacturing and autos in batteries, robotics, semiconductors, shipbuilding, and nuclear energy. Especially, in the development of the Global South, including Africa, our partnership holds great potential,” PM Modi remarked.

Second is 'Technology and Innovation' on which the Prime Minister said, “Japan is a technology powerhouse, and India is a talent powerhouse. India has taken bold steps in AI, quantum computing, semiconductors, biotechnology, and space. Together, we can lead the tech revolution of this century.”

"Third: Green Energy Transition," said PM Modi, adding, “India is progressing rapidly toward achieving 500 GW of renewable energy by 2030 and 100 GW of nuclear power by 2047. There are immense opportunities in solar, green hydrogen, and clean energy. Through the joint credit mechanism, we can build a clean and green future together.”

Fourth is Next-Gen Infrastructure. “In the last decade, India has made remarkable progress in logistics and mobility infrastructure. Over 1,000 km of metro lines have been built. With Japan’s support, the Mumbai-Ahmedabad high-speed rail project is progressing,” said PM Modi.

The fifth area, as suggested by PM Modi, is Skill Development and people-to-people ties.

“India’s skilled youth are meeting global demands. Japan can benefit by training them in the local language and integrating them into its workforce,” he said,

PM Modi concluded by calling on Japanese businesses: “Come, Make in India and Make for the World. Together, India and Japan will help shape the ASEAN century, a century of stability, growth, and shared prosperity.”

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
The skill development partnership is much needed. So many Indian engineers and technicians can benefit from Japanese training programs. Hope this translates into real opportunities!
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Michael C
As someone working in renewable energy sector, the green energy collaboration is exciting. Japan's technology combined with India's scale could really accelerate clean energy adoption.
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Ananya R
While the vision is good, I hope the government ensures that these partnerships actually benefit Indian SMEs and not just large corporations. The details matter!
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Vikram M
Japan has been a reliable partner for decades. From Delhi Metro to bullet trains, their quality and precision is unmatched. More such collaborations will boost Make in India!
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Sarah B
The semiconductor partnership is crucial given global supply chain issues. India and Japan complement each other perfectly in tech manufacturing. Smart move!

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