Key Points

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer's recent visit to India has resulted in twelve significant bilateral agreements. The nations launched joint centres for artificial intelligence and critical minerals research. Nine UK universities received approval to establish campuses across Indian cities including Bengaluru and GIFT City. These developments strengthen cooperation in technology, education, and sustainable economic growth between both countries.

Key Points: Starmer India Visit Yields 12 Tech Education Trade Deals

  • New India-UK AI Joint Centre launched to advance artificial intelligence research
  • Nine UK universities approved for Indian campuses including Lancaster and Surrey
  • Critical Minerals Supply Chain Observatory Phase II ensures green tech resources
  • Climate Technology Startup Fund supports entrepreneurs in sustainability sectors
  • India-UK CEO Forum reconstituted to boost bilateral trade and investment
  • New satellite campus at IIT-ISM Dhanbad enhances technical education collaboration
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UK PM Starmer's India visit concludes with 12 key outcomes in technology, education, trade, and research

UK PM Keir Starmer's India visit concludes with 12 major outcomes including AI research centres, 9 new UK university campuses, and critical minerals partnership.

"The visit concluded with a comprehensive list of 12 key outcomes, marking a major step forward in bilateral cooperation - Ministry of External Affairs"

New Delhi, October 10

The visit of United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer to India on October 8-9 concluded with a comprehensive list of 12 key outcomes, marking a major step forward in bilateral cooperation across technology, education, trade, climate, health and research, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said on Thursday.

Both nations announced the establishment of the India-UK Connectivity and Innovation Centre to enhance collaboration in frontier technologies. The India-UK Joint Centre for Artificial Intelligence (AI) was also launched. Additionally, Phase II of the UK-India Critical Minerals Supply Chain Observatory was launched, alongside the establishment of a new satellite campus at IIT-ISM Dhanbad. The establishment of the Critical Minerals Industry Guild will further secure supply chains and promote sustainable green technologies.

Education cooperation received a significant boost with the handover of the Letter of Intent for Lancaster University to open its campus in Bengaluru and in-principle approval for the University of Surrey to set up in GIFT City.

Further, these are nine universities: Southampton University in Gurgaon, Queen's Belfast University in GIFT City, Coventry University in GIFT City, the University of Surrey in GIFT City and the University of Bristol in GIFT City. The University of York in Mumbai, the University of Liverpool in Bengaluru, the University of Lancaster in Bengaluru, and the University of Aberdeen in Mumbai received approvals to open campuses in India.

The two sides convened the inaugural meeting of the reconstituted India-UK CEO Forum. They also agreed to reset the India-UK Joint Economic and Trade Committee (JETCO), which will support the implementation of the CETA and drive economic growth and job creation in both countries.

Another key development was the launch of a new joint investment in the Climate Technology Startup Fund, a strategic initiative under the MoU between the UK government and the State Bank of India for supporting innovative entrepreneurs in sectors such as climate technology and AI.

The visit also marked the launch of Phase III of the Bio-Medical Research Career Program. An Offshore Wind Taskforce. Further, a Letter of Intent was signed between India's ICMR and the UK's NIHR to strengthen health research initiatives.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great to see focus on critical minerals and green tech. India needs to secure its supply chains for the renewable energy transition. Hope this leads to more manufacturing jobs in the sector.
A
Ananya R
While the education partnerships sound impressive, I hope the fees for these UK campuses will be affordable for middle-class Indian families. Otherwise it defeats the purpose of having them here.
V
Vikram M
The biomedical research collaboration is much needed. With our population size and medical challenges, joint research can lead to breakthroughs that benefit both countries. Good step forward!
S
Sarah B
As someone working in climate tech, the startup fund announcement is exciting. Hope this translates to real funding opportunities and not just paperwork. India has so much innovation potential in this space.
K
Karthik V
The offshore wind taskforce is a smart move. With our long coastline, India can become a leader in offshore wind energy. UK expertise combined with Indian execution capability - perfect match!

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