India-Newfoundland talks: Energy, critical minerals top bilateral agenda
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Consul General of India in Toronto, Mahaveer Singhvi, on Friday, 11 July met Tony Wakeham, Premier of Newfoundland and Labrador province in Canada, for a wide-ranging discussion on deepening bilateral cooperation across energy, trade, and academic sectors. The meeting marks the latest in a series of structured diplomatic engagements as India accelerates outreach to Canadian provinces amid a broader push to diversify critical mineral supply chains.
Key Areas of Cooperation Identified
Both sides identified a substantial range of sectors as priority areas for enhanced engagement. These include offshore energy, critical minerals, green hydrogen, mining, marine technology, port logistics, healthcare, higher education, and research collaboration.
According to the Consulate General of India in Toronto, the discussions 'reflected the strong complementarities between India and Newfoundland and Labrador and reaffirmed a shared commitment to building resilient economic partnerships, fostering innovation, expanding institutional linkages, and creating new opportunities that deliver mutual growth and long-term prosperity.'
Critical Minerals Roundtable
Earlier in the week, on Monday, Singhvi addressed a virtual 'India-Canada Roundtable on Critical Minerals' organised by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI), with participation from key government representatives and industry stakeholders. The roundtable focused on strengthening business-to-business engagement and exploring opportunities across key Canadian provinces in the critical minerals sector.
The Consul General, in his remarks, highlighted the Consulate's sustained outreach to facilitate structured engagement between Indian companies and Canadian stakeholders, covering exploration, mining, processing, technology partnerships, and investments. The session underscored the mutual benefits of an India-Canada partnership in building 'secure, resilient, and diversified critical mineral value chains,' according to the Consulate.
Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan Engagement
The week prior also saw Michael Coe, Director of Government and Public Affairs at the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan (OTPP), call on the Consul General to discuss strengthening OTPP's engagement with India. The meeting reviewed OTPP's existing significant investments in India and explored avenues for deeper institutional collaboration.
The Consulate noted that the interaction 'reflected the growing momentum in India-Canada economic engagement and reaffirmed OTPP's long-term confidence in India's strong growth trajectory and investment potential.'
Broader India-Canada Diplomatic Context
These engagements come at a notable juncture in India-Canada relations, which have experienced turbulence at the federal diplomatic level over the past two years. The Consulate's active provincial-level outreach — spanning Newfoundland and Labrador, critical minerals forums, and institutional investors — signals a deliberate strategy to sustain and deepen economic ties at the sub-national level, insulating bilateral commerce from federal-level friction. Notably, this is part of a broader Indian diplomatic effort to secure critical mineral access globally as the country scales up its electric vehicle, semiconductor, and clean energy ambitions.
With green hydrogen and offshore energy now formally on the India-Newfoundland and Labrador agenda, the next steps will likely involve sector-specific working groups and business delegations to translate diplomatic goodwill into tangible investment flows.