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Canada-India renewable agreements draw praise from green groups
Summary
Canada signed a series of energy agreements with India covering solar, wind, hydrogen and biofuels and committed to join the India-led International Solar Alliance; Canadian renewable organizations welcomed the commitments.
Content
Canadian officials signed several energy agreements with India after Prime Minister Mark Carney's four-day visit to Mumbai and New Delhi. The two leaders met and concluded a strategic energy partnership that includes cooperation on solar, wind and hydrogen. Canada committed to join the India-led International Solar Alliance and to upgrade to full member status in the Global Biofuels Alliance. Simon Fraser University signed a research agreement with the Hydrogen Association of India, and the governments also agreed on supplies of uranium and critical minerals.
Key details:
- Prime Minister Mark Carney met Prime Minister Narendra Modi and signed a strategic energy partnership after a four-day visit to Mumbai and New Delhi.
- Canada committed to join the India-led International Solar Alliance, where other G7 countries are already members.
- Simon Fraser University and the Hydrogen Association of India agreed to collaborate on hydrogen research.
- Canada will upgrade from observer to full member in the Global Biofuels Alliance.
- The agreements include arrangements to supply India with uranium and critical minerals.
- India's ministry of new and renewable energy reports more than 271 gigawatts from renewables, accounting for over half of its power supply.
Summary:
Canadian renewable organizations welcomed the agreements as reinforcing multilateral cooperation and as creating opportunities for research and supply partnerships. The article reports that some Canadian groups see potential to learn from India's rapid expansion of solar and storage. Undetermined at this time.
