Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
International

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull To Meet Indian CEOs, Business Leaders In Mumbai

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Apr, 2017 11:52 AM
    Energy, education and trade are likely to form the backdrop to the forthcoming three-day visit of Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull to India.
     
    "My first visit to India as Prime Minister is a chance to further co-operate across a wide range of sectors including energy, education and trade," Turnbull said which delivering a speech at the Sydney Institute on Thursday night. 
     
    "But there are many more opportunities. India wants to provide energy security through a range of technologies, including nuclear, clean coal, natural gas and renewable energy. Australia is well placed to provide many of the raw materials, and some of the latest technology," he said in a reference to Australia being endowed with an abundance of natural resources including coal, uranium and natural gas. 
     
    Some commentators Down Under are interpreting this part of the speech as another testimony of Australian political leadership's support for a mega coal mine project planned by Indian mining and energy tycoon Gautam Adani. 
     
    Besides the powerful coal lobby, the Liberal Prime Minister's visit to India would be followed with avid interest by the Australian universities and vocational training institutes. In fact, Turnbull's visit would coincide with a visit by a large delegation of Australian universities and colleges. 
     
    Education Minister Simon Birmingham is leading a delegation of 27 university Vice Chancellors and officials visiting India to seek opportunities to train hundreds of young Indians under various programmes started by India's BJP government. The Australian universities are optimistic of getting a positive response as education happens to be Australia's second largest export to India. 
     
    Australia's education exports to India are worth $2.3 billion a year with more than 60,000 Indian students studying in Australia last year. Turnbull is likely to promote Australian universities courses to Indian students and also seek opportunities for Australian vocational training institutes to open shop in India.
     
    Besides coal and education, the bilateral trade between the two Indian Ocean Rim countries is increasing at a healthy pace and has doubled to more than A$20 billion in the past one decade. The Australian policymakers are buoyed by the fact that the Indian economy is growing at 7 per cent a year and would draw level in size with the United States by about 2050. 
     
    "India is undergoing a dramatic economic transformation and our close partnership creates opportunities for both nations," Turnbull said. 
     
    "Alongside China, India is a land of immense opportunity for Australia," he added.
     
    The Indian leadership is like to press the Australian leader to expedite the process to export uranium to India. 
     
    According to some media reports, the Australian Prime Minister would seek to rejuvenate the negotiations over a free trade agreement between Australia and India. The FTA talks have slowed down for various reasons in the recent past. 
     
    Turnbull, who is visiting India from April 9-12, would meet his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi in Delhi on Monday. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Donald Trump Signs Revised Immigration Executive Order

    US President Donald Trump on Monday signed a revised version of his executive order on immigration, that places a 90-day ban on people from six predominantly Muslim nations.

    Donald Trump Signs Revised Immigration Executive Order

    Two Indian Men Racially Abused, Attacked In New Zealand, Told To Go Back To Their Own Country

    Two Indian Men Racially Abused, Attacked In New Zealand, Told To Go Back To Their Own Country
    Narindervir Singh streamed the video live on Facebook and while he informed the driver that he's uploading the video live, the situation escalated and Singh was abused, sworn at and told to go back to his own country.

    Two Indian Men Racially Abused, Attacked In New Zealand, Told To Go Back To Their Own Country

    Sikh Man Shot At In US, Attacker Allegedly Shouted 'Go Back To Your Country'

    Sikh Man Shot At In US, Attacker Allegedly Shouted 'Go Back To Your Country'
    The victim, who was not identified by name by officials or the media, survived the attack that took place on Friday night unlike the two others, Harnish Patel of Lancaster, South Carolina, was killed on Thursday, and Srinivas Kuchibhotla murdered on February 22 in Olathe, Kansas. 

    Sikh Man Shot At In US, Attacker Allegedly Shouted 'Go Back To Your Country'

    Indian-Origin Businessman Harnish Patel Shot Dead Outside His Lancaster Home In South Carolina

    Indian-Origin Businessman Harnish Patel Shot Dead Outside His Lancaster Home In South Carolina
    Harnish Patel, 43, had closed his shop at 11.24 p.m. and barely 10 minutes later was shot dead outside his house, according to media reports.

    Indian-Origin Businessman Harnish Patel Shot Dead Outside His Lancaster Home In South Carolina

    Donald Trump's Wire-Tapping Claims Simply False: Obama Spokesman

    Donald Trump's Wire-Tapping Claims Simply False: Obama Spokesman
    US President Donald Trump's accusation that his predecessor Barack Obama had his "wires tapped" in Trump Tower before Election Day is "simply false", Obama spokesman Kevin Lewis said on Saturday.

    Donald Trump's Wire-Tapping Claims Simply False: Obama Spokesman

    Risk Of Post-ISIS Chaos In Iraq Casts New Light On Canada's Support For Kurds

    Risk Of Post-ISIS Chaos In Iraq Casts New Light On Canada's Support For Kurds
    The threat of political chaos looms over the imminent defeat of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in Mosul, fuelling fear of a dramatically different — and deadly — use for Canada's military support for Kurdish peshmerga forces.

    Risk Of Post-ISIS Chaos In Iraq Casts New Light On Canada's Support For Kurds