India and Canada took a significant step toward revitalizing their bilateral energy relationship at India Energy Week 2026 in Goa, marked by the first-ever participation of a Canadian Cabinet Minister at the flagship event. Canadian Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Timothy Hodgson attended at the invitation of India’s Minister of Petroleum and Natural Gas Hardeep Singh Puri, with the two leaders launching the renewed India–Canada Ministerial Energy Dialogue on the sidelines. The meeting underscored the centrality of energy security, supply diversification, and resilience to the economic wellbeing and strategic stability of both nations.
The engagement follows direction from the Prime Ministers of India and Canada during the G7 Summit in June 2025, signaling a broader political intent to restore senior-level and working-level cooperation. Both sides emphasized the complementary nature of their energy sectors: Canada’s ambition to emerge as a global energy superpower—across clean and conventional fuels—and India’s position as the fastest-growing major energy market globally. With Canada expanding LNG, LPG, and crude oil exports to Asia, and India projected to account for over one-third of global energy demand growth over the next two decades, the Ministers agreed to deepen bilateral trade in energy fuels and explore reciprocal supply of refined petroleum products.
The discussions also highlighted strong opportunities for investment-led collaboration. Canada’s accelerated approval of major energy and resource projects—representing over $116 billion in investments—and India’s projected $500 billion investment opportunity across its energy value chain provide a foundation for long-term commercial partnerships. Alongside conventional energy cooperation, both countries reaffirmed their commitment to climate objectives, including emissions reduction, carbon capture technologies, and expanded collaboration in clean energy value chains such as hydrogen, biofuels, sustainable aviation fuel, battery storage, critical minerals, and the application of artificial intelligence in the energy sector.
Reaffirming their shared priorities, India and Canada committed to sustained government-to-government dialogue, stronger business partnerships, diversified and secure energy supply chains, and continued cooperation through bilateral and multilateral platforms. The renewed energy dialogue signals a pragmatic, forward-looking partnership—anchored in security, investment, and transition—that reflects the evolving realities of the global energy landscape.















