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Japan PM Takaichi heads to India for talks with PM Modi on strategic partnership

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi will visit India for talks with Narendra Modi at the annual summit. The meeting is expected to shape the next phase of trade, technology and strategic cooperation.

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Japan PM Sanae Takaichi and PM Narendra Modi (File Photo: X/@narendramodi)
Japan PM Sanae Takaichi and PM Narendra Modi (File Photo: X/@narendramodi)

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi will begin a three-day visit to India on Wednesday, with talks expected to focus on expanding trade and investment, strengthening strategic cooperation and deepening collaboration in critical technologies as New Delhi and Tokyo seek to bolster their partnership.

Takaichi's visit, her first official trip to India since taking office, comes less than a year after Prime Minister Narendra Modi travelled to Tokyo for the 15th India-Japan Annual Summit. The two leaders are expected to hold wide-ranging discussions on trade, investment, defence, semiconductors, artificial intelligence, critical minerals and regional security.

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ANNUAL SUMMIT TO SET FUTURE ROADMAP

PM Modi and Takaichi will co-chair the 16th India-Japan Annual Summit, the highest-level dialogue between the two countries that alternates between New Delhi and Tokyo.

According to reports, the summit will review progress across trade, technology, infrastructure, defence cooperation and people-to-people exchanges while also addressing regional and global developments.

The leaders are expected to issue a joint statement outlining the next phase of bilateral cooperation.

The visit is also expected to reaffirm the direction set during PM Modi's visit to Japan last year, when both countries agreed to deepen cooperation across security, economic resilience and innovation.

ECONOMIC TIES IN FOCUS

Economic cooperation is expected to dominate the talks.

Both sides will focus on boosting investment and innovation while strengthening resilient supply chains in sectors considered vital to national security, including semiconductors, batteries and critical minerals.

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India and Japan are also expected to discuss expanding cooperation in pharmaceuticals, advanced manufacturing and clean energy. Expected outcome documents include memorandums of understanding covering artificial intelligence, pharmaceuticals, battery technology and critical minerals.

GREEN ENERGY AND BUSINESS COOPERATION

The leaders are expected to discuss several major investment proposals, including a large-scale green ammonia project in Odisha, expanding cooperation in biogas and strengthening regional energy resilience through the POWERR Asia initiative.

Takaichi will also participate in the India-Japan Business Forum, where business leaders from both countries are expected to explore new investment opportunities.

Around 1,400 Japanese companies currently operate in India, nearly half of them in the manufacturing sector. Japanese companies have also expanded their presence in India's financial sector, including a recent $1.6 billion investment for a 20 per cent stake in Yes Bank.

The leaders are also expected to review progress under the Free and Open Indo-Pacific vision, which both countries see as central to ensuring stability, secure sea lanes and a rules-based regional order.

India and Japan are key members of the Quad grouping alongside the United States and Australia, and defence cooperation between New Delhi and Tokyo has steadily expanded in recent years through military exercises, technology partnerships and strategic dialogue.

PARTNERSHIP CONTINUES TO GROW

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India and Japan elevated their relationship to a Special Strategic and Global Partnership in 2014, and cooperation has broadened significantly over the past decade.

During PM Modi's visit to Tokyo in August 2025, Japan pledged to more than double its investment in India to over $61 billion over the next decade.

Government data shows bilateral trade reached $27.5 billion in the 2025-26 financial year, while Japanese investment in India totalled $3.2 billion between April and December 2025.

Japan remains one of India's biggest foreign investors and has supported several landmark infrastructure projects, including the Mumbai-Ahmedabad high-speed rail corridor.

- Ends
Published By:
Satyam Singh
Published On:
Jun 30, 2026 20:26 IST

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi will begin a three-day visit to India on Wednesday, with talks expected to focus on expanding trade and investment, strengthening strategic cooperation and deepening collaboration in critical technologies as New Delhi and Tokyo seek to bolster their partnership.

Takaichi's visit, her first official trip to India since taking office, comes less than a year after Prime Minister Narendra Modi travelled to Tokyo for the 15th India-Japan Annual Summit. The two leaders are expected to hold wide-ranging discussions on trade, investment, defence, semiconductors, artificial intelligence, critical minerals and regional security.

ANNUAL SUMMIT TO SET FUTURE ROADMAP

PM Modi and Takaichi will co-chair the 16th India-Japan Annual Summit, the highest-level dialogue between the two countries that alternates between New Delhi and Tokyo.

According to reports, the summit will review progress across trade, technology, infrastructure, defence cooperation and people-to-people exchanges while also addressing regional and global developments.

The leaders are expected to issue a joint statement outlining the next phase of bilateral cooperation.

The visit is also expected to reaffirm the direction set during PM Modi's visit to Japan last year, when both countries agreed to deepen cooperation across security, economic resilience and innovation.

ECONOMIC TIES IN FOCUS

Economic cooperation is expected to dominate the talks.

Both sides will focus on boosting investment and innovation while strengthening resilient supply chains in sectors considered vital to national security, including semiconductors, batteries and critical minerals.

India and Japan are also expected to discuss expanding cooperation in pharmaceuticals, advanced manufacturing and clean energy. Expected outcome documents include memorandums of understanding covering artificial intelligence, pharmaceuticals, battery technology and critical minerals.

GREEN ENERGY AND BUSINESS COOPERATION

The leaders are expected to discuss several major investment proposals, including a large-scale green ammonia project in Odisha, expanding cooperation in biogas and strengthening regional energy resilience through the POWERR Asia initiative.

Takaichi will also participate in the India-Japan Business Forum, where business leaders from both countries are expected to explore new investment opportunities.

Around 1,400 Japanese companies currently operate in India, nearly half of them in the manufacturing sector. Japanese companies have also expanded their presence in India's financial sector, including a recent $1.6 billion investment for a 20 per cent stake in Yes Bank.

The leaders are also expected to review progress under the Free and Open Indo-Pacific vision, which both countries see as central to ensuring stability, secure sea lanes and a rules-based regional order.

India and Japan are key members of the Quad grouping alongside the United States and Australia, and defence cooperation between New Delhi and Tokyo has steadily expanded in recent years through military exercises, technology partnerships and strategic dialogue.

PARTNERSHIP CONTINUES TO GROW

India and Japan elevated their relationship to a Special Strategic and Global Partnership in 2014, and cooperation has broadened significantly over the past decade.

During PM Modi's visit to Tokyo in August 2025, Japan pledged to more than double its investment in India to over $61 billion over the next decade.

Government data shows bilateral trade reached $27.5 billion in the 2025-26 financial year, while Japanese investment in India totalled $3.2 billion between April and December 2025.

Japan remains one of India's biggest foreign investors and has supported several landmark infrastructure projects, including the Mumbai-Ahmedabad high-speed rail corridor.

- Ends
Published By:
Satyam Singh
Published On:
Jun 30, 2026 20:26 IST

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