Canada, India negotiating pact to double trade by 2030, says Carney

Excellent — rich official facts from Tier 1 (PIB, MEA) and Tier 4 sources. Proceeding to write the study note.


UPSC Study Note: Canada–India CEPA Negotiations — Doubling Trade by 2030


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2010 India–Canada CEPA talks first launched
2013 Negotiations stalled after 13 rounds — divergences on dairy, pharmaceutical IP, Mode-4 (movement of professionals)
March 2022 India–Canada announce re-launch of CEPA negotiations [S7]
2023 Diplomatic crisis: Canada alleges India's involvement in killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar (Sikh separatist, Canadian citizen); bilateral ties severely downgraded
2024 Carney wins Canadian federal election; signals reset with India
June 2024 (G7, Italy) PM Modi attends G7 as guest; Carney later invites Modi to G7 Canada [S6]
Late 2024 Modi visits Canada for G7; both PMs agree to re-engage on security, energy, technology [S6]
Nov 2024 (G20, Johannesburg) Modi–Carney launch India–Canada–Australia trilateral on critical minerals and technology [S6]
March 2, 2026 Terms of Reference signed; formal CEPA negotiations launched [S4]
May 2026 2nd round of CEPA negotiations concluded [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

Agreement Details - Name: Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) — India–Canada - Coverage: Trade in goods, services, and other mutually agreed policy areas [S1] - Trade target: USD 50 billion (≈ CAD 70 billion / INR 4.65 lakh crore) by 2030 [S2][S4] - Deadline for signing: End of 2026 [S6] - Current bilateral trade (FY 2024-25): USD 8.66 billion [S1] - Indian exports to Canada: USD 4.22 billion - Indian imports from Canada: USD 4.44 billion

Key Institutions / Signatories - Indian side: Ministry of Commerce & Industry; Minister Piyush Goyal - Canadian side: Minister of International Trade Maninder Sidhu - Nodal dept (India): Department of Commerce, hosted Round 2 at Vanijya Bhawan, New Delhi [S1] - Round 2 venue: Vanijya Bhawan, New Delhi (May 4–8, 2026) [S1]

Sectoral Pillars Identified - Food & Energy (Canada described as "food and energy superpower") [S6] - Nuclear cooperation — Canada as long-term uranium supplier; cooperation on Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) [S6] - Critical minerals & metals — for India's manufacturing, clean tech, nuclear industries [S6] - Fintech & payments — Finance Ministers' Economic and Financial Dialogue; focus on instant payments and cross-border remittances [S2] - Clean energyMoU on Clean Energy Cooperation signed [S2]

India–Canada–Australia Trilateral - Launched at G20 Summit, Johannesburg (Nov 2024) [S6] - Focus: Critical minerals and technology [S6]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Scientific / Technological

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. India–Canada CEPA is a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement covering trade in goods, services, and other mutually agreed policy areas. [S1]
  2. The Terms of Reference for India–Canada CEPA were signed on 2 March 2026 at Hyderabad House, New Delhi. [S4]
  3. The bilateral trade target set under CEPA is USD 50 billion by 2030 (also expressed as CAD 70 billion / INR 4.65 lakh crore). [S2]
  4. India–Canada bilateral trade in FY 2024-25 stood at USD 8.66 billion (Exports: USD 4.22 bn; Imports: USD 4.44 bn). [S1]
  5. The 2nd round of CEPA negotiations was held at Vanijya Bhawan, New Delhi, May 4–8, 2026, hosted by the Department of Commerce. [S1]
  6. Canadian PM Mark Carney's visit (Feb–Mar 2026) was the first bilateral visit by a Canadian PM to India since 2018. [S3]
  7. India–Canada–Australia trilateral on critical minerals and technology was launched at the G20 Summit in Johannesburg (2024). [S6]
  8. Canada identified as a potential long-term supplier of uranium and partner for Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) to India. [S6]
  9. MoU on Clean Energy Cooperation was signed during PM Carney's March 2026 India visit. [S2]
  10. The original India–Canada CEPA talks were first launched in 2010 and stalled after 13 rounds (concluded around 2013). [S7]
  11. CEPA talks were re-launched in March 2022 — before breaking down again due to the Nijjar diplomatic crisis (2023). [S7]
  12. Indian side CEPA negotiations are led by the Ministry of Commerce & Industry (not MEA). [S1]
  13. The Finance Ministers' Economic and Financial Dialogue was established in March 2026, focused on instant payments and cross-border remittances. [S2]
  14. CEPA target signing deadline: end of 2026. [S6]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers & Headings

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Bilateral, Regional and Global groupings & agreements; India's foreign policy
GS-III Indian Economy — trade, FTAs, critical minerals, energy security; Technology & innovation
GS-II Diaspora and its impact on India's foreign policy

Plausible Mains Question Stems

  1. "The India–Canada CEPA is as much a geopolitical statement as an economic one. Critically examine the opportunities and challenges in concluding the agreement by 2026." (GS-II)

  2. "India's approach to Free Trade Agreements has evolved from reluctance to strategic selectivity. Analyse the India–Canada CEPA in this context, with reference to India's interests in critical minerals, energy, and services trade." (GS-III)

  3. "How has the Indian diaspora in Canada simultaneously served as an asset and a liability in India–Canada bilateral relations? Illustrate with recent examples." (GS-II)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
India's FTA strategy (RCEP exit, UAE-CEPA, UK-FTA, GCC-FTA) Comparative framework for understanding India's selective FTA approach
Critical Minerals policy of India (National Critical Mineral Mission, 2024) Canada is a key source; CEPA's strategic value hinges on minerals
India's Nuclear Energy programme (CANDU reactors, uranium import dependence, SMRs) Canada–India nuclear cooperation is a core CEPA pillar
India–Australia Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (ECTA/CECA) Third leg of India–Canada–Australia trilateral; comparative FTA
India–G7 engagement (G7 outreach/guest invitations to Modi) Strategic context for Carney's reset and CEPA momentum
Khalistan issue and India's diaspora diplomacy Root cause of 2023 diplomatic freeze; latent risk for CEPA
National Green Hydrogen Mission / Clean Energy MoU Canada's clean energy MoU links to India's hydrogen targets
Mode-4 in Trade in Services Key offensive Indian interest in all FTAs — contentious in Canada given immigration politics

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. "CEPA = FTA" — Not identical. CEPA is broader than a Free Trade Agreement; it covers goods + services + investment + cooperation areas. FTA typically covers only goods. India has both CEPAs (UAE, Australia, Canada) and FTAs — do not conflate.

  2. Wrong year for Terms of Reference signing — Signed 2 March 2026, not during Carney's election victory (2024) or G20 Johannesburg meeting (2024). Do not front-date the formal launch.

  3. Confusing the 2022 re-launch with the 2026 formal CEPA launch — CEPA was re-announced in March 2022 but talks broke down in 2023 post-Nijjar crisis. The Terms of Reference (the formal structural launch) came only in March 2026.

  4. Trade target confusion — The target is USD 50 billion by 2030, NOT "double" from current levels in simple arithmetic (USD 8.66 bn × 2 = USD 17.3 bn). The political language of "double" used by Carney refers broadly to ambition, but the official figure is USD 50 billion. [S6][S2]

  5. Implementing ministry — Nodal agency for CEPA negotiations is the Department of Commerce under Ministry of Commerce & Industry, NOT the Ministry of External Affairs (which handles political diplomacy). [S1]


11. Sources