“India is the world’s fastest-growing major economy. We just arrived in Mumbai to meet with business leaders — and forge partnerships that will unlock new opportunities for Canadian workers and businesses.” — Mark Carney, on landing in India
In a dramatic diplomatic turnaround, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney arrived in Mumbai on February 27, 2026 for a four-day official visit — signalling the most significant reset in India-Canada relations since the two countries hit rock bottom in 2023 over the killing of Khalistani figure Hardeep Singh Nijjar. The visit culminated in a Modi-Carney summit at Hyderabad House, New Delhi on March 2, 2026, with a packed agenda covering trade, uranium, critical minerals, LNG, AI, and the long-stalled CEPA negotiations.
📜 The Dramatic Backstory: From Rock Bottom to Reset
On June 18, 2023, Hardeep Singh Nijjar — a Canadian citizen of Indian origin and a prominent figure in the Khalistani separatist movement — was shot dead outside a Sikh temple in Surrey, British Columbia. He was the head of Sikhs for Justice, designated a terrorist organisation by India.
Three months later, in September 2023, Canadian PM Justin Trudeau stood in Parliament and alleged that “agents of the Government of India” were involved in Nijjar’s killing on Canadian soil. India called the allegation “absurd and motivated” and rejected it entirely.
What followed was a cascade of diplomatic damage: India suspended visa services for Canadians, both countries expelled their respective High Commissioners, bilateral relations hit their lowest point in decades, and the long-running CEPA negotiations — already stalled for 16 years — were effectively frozen.
Don’t confuse the timeline: Nijjar was killed in June 2023, but Trudeau’s allegation came in September 2023 — three months later. The diplomat expulsions and visa suspension followed after the allegation, not immediately after the killing.
🌍 The Thaw: How Carney Changed Everything
The reset began with a change of leadership. Justin Trudeau’s government collapsed under the weight of domestic unpopularity, rising cost-of-living concerns, and mounting internal party pressure. Mark Carney — a globally respected economist who had previously served as Governor of both the Bank of Canada (2008–2013) and the Bank of England (2013–2020) — became the Liberal Party leader and Prime Minister in early 2025.
Carney’s approach was immediately different. When he won the Liberal leadership, Modi called him within hours — a signal of India’s willingness to work with a new Canadian government. The first major breakthrough came at the G7 Summit in Kananaskis, Alberta (June 2025), where Carney had invited Modi. The two leaders agreed to formally relaunch CEPA negotiations. By September 2025, both countries had reappointed High Commissioners, restoring the formal diplomatic channel that had been severed during the crisis.
Just before Carney’s India visit, a senior Canadian official stated that “India is no longer a threat” to Canadian security — walking back the framing that had dominated the Trudeau-era narrative.
Think of the India-Canada relationship like two business partners who had a major public falling-out. With a new CEO (Carney) at one company, both sides decided the business opportunities were too valuable to let personal disputes dominate. The reset is not about resolving the original dispute — it’s about choosing economic partnership over diplomatic paralysis.
✈️ Carney Arrives in Mumbai: The Four-Day Visit
On February 27, 2026, Mark Carney landed in Mumbai — India’s financial capital — accompanied by his wife Diana Fox Carney and a high-level delegation of business leaders and government officials.
Days 1–2 (Feb 27–28): Mumbai Business Engagement. Carney’s Mumbai schedule was dense with economic substance — meetings with Indian and Canadian CEOs, innovators, financial experts, and representatives of major Canadian pension funds, which already have approximately $100 billion invested in Indian infrastructure, logistics, and real estate.
Day 3 (March 1): Travel to New Delhi for preparatory meetings ahead of the summit.
Day 4 (March 2): Modi-Carney Summit at Hyderabad House. The diplomatic centrepiece — formal bilateral talks with PM Modi at Hyderabad House, India’s traditional venue for high-level diplomatic summits. The agenda covered trade, energy, critical minerals, technology, agriculture, education, and innovation, alongside India-Canada CEOs Forum meetings.
Hyderabad House: India’s traditional venue for high-level bilateral diplomatic summits in New Delhi. Frequently tested in diplomatic GK questions. Modi has hosted multiple foreign leaders here — including US Presidents, UK Prime Ministers, and now Carney.
📌 What’s on the Table: The Big-Ticket Agenda
1. CEPA — The 16-Year-Old Frozen Trade Deal. The Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement between India and Canada has been under negotiation since 2010 — never concluded due to disagreements over market access in dairy, automotive, and services sectors. Carney’s visit is expected to formally relaunch negotiations. India’s High Commissioner Sanjay Kumar Verma suggested a deal could be done “in less than 12 months if all goes well.” Canada’s desperation to diversify away from the US (amid Trump-era tariff pressure) is a significant new incentive.
2. Uranium Deal — Powering India’s Nuclear Future. Canada is one of the world’s largest uranium producers (Saskatchewan is the global hub). A uranium supply agreement worth approximately $2.8 billion CAD over 10 years is under active negotiation. India-Canada nuclear cooperation has a troubled history — Canada suspended nuclear ties after India’s 1974 test (“Smiling Buddha”) used a Canadian-supplied reactor. The 2008 India-US Civil Nuclear Agreement opened the door for resumed nuclear trade with India globally.
3. Critical Minerals and LNG. Canada possesses vast reserves of lithium, cobalt, nickel, and rare earth elements — essential for India’s EV, battery, and semiconductor supply chains. Both countries seek to reduce dependence on China-dominated supply chains. On LNG, Canada is looking to diversify exports away from the US; India — a rapidly growing energy consumer — is a natural long-term buyer.
4. AI and Technology. Given Canada’s strengths in AI research (Toronto-Waterloo corridor, Mila in Montreal) and India’s growing AI infrastructure ambitions (IndiaAI Mission, ₹10,372 crore), collaboration frameworks in AI and digital technologies are a natural fit.
| Agenda Item | Canadian Interest | Indian Interest |
|---|---|---|
| CEPA | Diversify trade away from US dependence | Access to Canadian markets, services, tech |
| Uranium Deal | $2.8B CAD export revenue over 10 years | Fuel India’s nuclear energy expansion |
| Critical Minerals | Monetise vast lithium, cobalt, nickel reserves | Reduce dependence on China-controlled supply chains |
| LNG | New Asian export market beyond the US | Diversify energy imports; meet growing demand |
| AI & Tech | Expand Canada’s AI ecosystem globally | Leverage IndiaAI Mission; access research expertise |
Canada’s pivot toward India is not entirely altruistic — it is being driven by US President Trump’s aggressive tariff policies, which have threatened Canadian exports. This “strategic autonomy” push by Carney mirrors India’s own multi-alignment doctrine. Two countries with different motivations are finding common cause in reducing US dependence. Does shared strategic vulnerability create more durable partnerships than shared values?
⚖️ The Unresolved Issue: Nijjar and Transnational Repression
The reset is real — but it is happening alongside, not because of, a resolution of the Nijjar controversy. Four suspects have been arrested by Canadian police for Nijjar’s murder. The trial is proceeding. Canada’s Foreign Minister Anita Anand stated that transnational repression concerns are “always at the forefront of our minds.”
Sikh community leaders in Canada remain under active threat. Just before Carney’s India visit, police warned Moninder Singh, head of the Sikh Federation of Canada, that his wife and children were also at risk. India, for its part, maintains it had nothing to do with Nijjar’s killing and has consistently rejected Canadian characterisations of Indian government involvement.
The two sides appear to have reached an unspoken agreement to park the controversy and focus on economic opportunities — a pragmatic approach driven by mutual self-interest rather than any resolution of the underlying dispute.
🌍 Why This Matters for India’s Larger Diplomacy
Carney’s India visit is part of a broader pattern of middle-power diplomacy in the Trump era. Canada, facing aggressive tariff pressure from the US, is pursuing a “strategic autonomy” strategy — Carney articulated this at Davos in January 2026, calling on middle powers to resist being subordinated to great powers. His Asia trip (India, then Australia and Japan) is a direct expression of this strategy.
For India, the Canada reset is one more data point in its “multi-alignment” posture — deep ties with the US, reset with Canada, ongoing engagement with Russia, and strengthened partnerships with middle powers across the Indo-Pacific. The reset also reflects India’s growing economic pull: when you are the world’s fastest-growing major economy, even countries that publicly accused your government of murder come calling.
The India-Canada reset raises a fundamental question for international relations: Can pragmatic economic interests permanently override unresolved sovereignty disputes? Compare with India-China relations post-Galwan (2020), where border tensions coexist with trade worth $100B+ annually. Is economic interdependence a conflict-dampener or just a temporary gloss over deeper tensions?
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Carney landed in Mumbai on February 27, 2026 — starting with business meetings before moving to New Delhi for the summit with PM Modi on March 2.
CEPA (Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement) negotiations between India and Canada began in 2010 and remained stalled for 16 years without conclusion.
Hyderabad House in New Delhi is India’s traditional venue for high-level diplomatic summits. The Modi-Carney bilateral was held here on March 2, 2026.
Mark Carney served as Governor of the Bank of Canada (2008–2013) and the Bank of England (2013–2020) before becoming Canadian PM.
Trudeau made the allegation about Indian government involvement in Nijjar’s killing in September 2023 — three months after the killing in June 2023.