Context:
Following the Canadian Prime Minister’s visit (Feb–March 2026), India and Canada relaunched CEPA negotiations aiming to double bilateral trade to $70 billion by 2030.
Key Highlights:
- Agreement Insights
- Signing of Terms of Reference for restarting Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) negotiations.
- Target to finalize CEPA by 2026.
- Trade & Investment Details
- Bilateral trade target: $70 billion by 2030.
- Existing $2.6 billion uranium supply agreement between India and Cameco.
- Canadian institutional investors have invested over $100 billion in India.
- Sectoral Cooperation
- Canada: Oil, gas, uranium, critical minerals.
- India: Technology, pharmaceuticals, infrastructure demand.
- Indian firms like HCL Technologies expanding in Canada.
- Stakeholders Involved
- Governments of India and Canada
- Private sector companies
- Institutional investors
- Energy and critical mineral industries
- Significance / Concerns
- Enhances energy security and resource diversification for India.
- Boosts market access and investment flows.
- Past diplomatic tensions may still pose strategic challenges.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- CEPA (Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement)
- Broad trade pact covering goods, services, investment.
- Critical Minerals
- Essential for EVs, semiconductors, renewable energy.
- Cameco
- Canadian company supplying uranium to India.
- Bilateral Trade
- Trade between two countries (exports + imports).
Relevant Mains Points:
- Economic Significance
- Diversifies India’s energy imports and supply chains.
- Supports Make in India and industrial growth.
- Enhances India’s role in global value chains.
- Strategic Importance
- Strengthens ties with a G7 country.
- Aligns with India’s push for critical mineral security.
- Counterbalances geopolitical dependencies.
- Challenges
- Residual political/diplomatic tensions.
- Regulatory and market access barriers.
- Need for alignment in standards and policies.
- Way Forward
- Fast-track CEPA negotiations with clear timelines.
- Enhance people-to-people and business ties.
- Focus on technology transfer and innovation partnerships.
- Ensure stable diplomatic engagement.
UPSC Relevance:
• GS 2 – International Relations (India–Canada relations)
• GS 3 – Economy (trade agreements, investment flows, energy security)
• Prelims – CEPA, critical minerals, bilateral agreements
