Canada and India Reopen CEPA Talks, Eye USD 50 Billion in Trade by 2030
Canada and India have moved to reset economic ties, agreeing to restart negotiations on a wide-ranging Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement after a two-year pause. The revival of talks signals a fresh push to deepen bilateral trade, investment, and market access across key sectors.
The breakthrough came during a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Johannesburg, where Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi agreed to pursue a “high-ambition” CEPA. According to statements from Modi’s office, both sides are targeting a doubling of bilateral trade to USD 50 billion by 2030. The renewed mandate suggests a focus on tariff reduction, regulatory alignment, and expanded market access to support cross-border commerce.
Carney noted that a successful agreement could lift two-way trade above C$70 billion, creating broader opportunities for Canadian workers and businesses as India consolidates its position as the world’s fifth-largest economy. A reenergized CEPA is expected to prioritize services liberalization, investment facilitation, and smoother customs processes—supporting supply chain resilience and competitiveness.
Sectoral gains could be significant. Agricultural exports, energy products, technology services, and investment flows are likely to benefit as policy clarity and trade facilitation improve. The talks may also address digital trade and services, opening doors for fintech, IT-enabled services, and data-driven enterprises, while offering medium-term support to CAD-sensitive export industries and expanded access for Indian firms.
Key Points – Canada and India agreed to restart negotiations on a high-ambition CEPA after a two-year freeze. – Leaders met on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Johannesburg to secure the breakthrough. – The stated goal is to double bilateral trade to USD 50 billion by 2030. – A successful pact could push trade above C$70 billion, enhancing opportunities for Canadian businesses. – Priority areas likely include tariff cuts, services liberalization, investment facilitation, and customs simplification. – Potential gains span agriculture, energy, technology services, and broader investment flows.
Last updated on November 23rd, 2025 at 09:05 pm







