Canadian Government - DFAITC - Features Klean Industries for Trade in India


The Canadian government (DFAITC) has officially recognized Klean Industries as a leader in India’s cleantech and circular economy solutions for trade opportunities. With India’s growing demand for sustainable waste-to-energy projects, Klean Industries is at the forefront of delivering cutting-edge pyrolysis, gasification, and recycling technologies to transform industrial waste into valuable resources. This recognition highlights Klean’s role in supporting India’s environmental initiatives and fostering international cleantech collaboration.

On behalf of the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada, Namaskar! It is an honor and a pleasure to address this distinguished group of Indian and Canadian business leaders.

The first step on the road that brought me here today was the visit of Prime Minister Chrétien at the head of the ground-breaking Team Canada mission to India one year ago. As you may recall, that visit brought seven provincial premiers, two cabinet ministers, and representatives of over 200 Canadian companies to India. Exactly a year ago today, January 10, the Prime Minister inaugurated Canada Day at the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), which honored Canada as your Partner country and gave the Team Canada visit to India a most successful launch. We are most grateful to the CII for this all and for its support in strengthening our business links.

That visit signaled a bold new chapter in India-Canada relations. And it could not have come at a better time. Our countries have been re-situating themselves in the changing international social, political, and economic environment. In Canada’s case, the end of the Cold War has allowed us to expand our ties with many more nations, just as it has created the need for more international cooperation.

For India, your new economic dynamism has expanded your interest in trade and the corresponding need for a stable international environment where trade can flourish. As India becomes increasingly engaged internationally on both the political and the economic fronts, it is emerging as one of the major world players of the 21st century. Canada recognizes this, and we want to give India the priority it deserves in our foreign relations.

As we face the challenges and seize the opportunities presented by the new international environment, we can build a strong and lasting partnership. By partnership, I mean a relationship based on mutual respect and complementarity, in which both sides benefit and a wide-ranging and balanced relationship.

Today, I would like to outline some of the steps that we in government have taken to build this relationship, not least by encouraging and facilitating private-sector partnerships. I would also like to speak about two of the most significant aspects of our bilateral relations: economic ties and security cooperation.

Building on Team Canada

The Team Canada visit launched the reinvigoration of Canada-India relations. It was followed by Minister Gujral’s visit to Canada in September. This highly successful visit was crucial to maintaining our momentum and laying the foundations for the agreements we have now reached. Another key event was your [Confederation of Indian Industry] visit to Canada in June.

I have come to India in response to Minister Gujral’s invitation. On Wednesday, I met with him to discuss ways to make this enhanced relationship a reality. We agreed to form a Joint Ministerial Committee, which will allow us, along with our respective cabinet colleagues, to consult regularly on various political and economic issues as they arise.

I will meet Minister Gujral again on Monday to officially open the new Canadian office in Chandigarh, the capital of Punjab and Haryana states. In addition to assisting visa applicants, this office will help build contacts between Canadian and Indian businesses active in the region. It will complement our recently opened trade office in Bangalore and our newly appointed Honorary Consul in Madras. To expand the services we provide to Canadians further, we also intend to appoint an Honorary Consul in Calcutta.

As you know, I have not come to India alone on this visit. Building on the Team Canada approach pioneered by our Prime Minister, I am accompanied by a distinguished group of Parliamentarians and the Attorney General of the province of British Columbia. As a sign of the importance of trade and investment in our relationship with India, I have also taken advantage of my visit here to lead a delegation of representatives of Canadian businesses in the telecommunications, insurance, and science and technology sectors. These companies are world leaders in their fields and have much to offer India and other countries.

Economic Relations

Expanding our trade and investment ties is a significant element of our enhanced relationship. As a result of the Team Canada visit, 75 business deals worth over $3.3 billion were signed, over 95 percent of which are still active. Canada-India trade in 1995 totaled almost $1 billion. We have seen a dip in trade figures, but the size of India’s market and its growth rate suggest that our trade could grow significantly in future years.

Another reason to predict trade growth is the complementarity of our two economies. For its part, Canada has much to offer India in terms of high technology as it expands and upgrades its infrastructure. This is particularly the case in the four sectors we have chosen to focus on: telecommunications and information technology; power and energy equipment and services; oil and gas; and environmental products and services. Canada also has much to offer in the service sector, including engineering and financial services.

In addition to trade, we will encourage more significant Canadian investment in India. Canada was the ninth-largest direct investor in India; we hope to move up in the standings in the coming years. The Bell/Tata communications project in Andhra Pradesh will be a significant factor in boosting Canadian investment.

Investment is not a one-way street either; Indian companies are increasingly investing in Canada. These are innovative companies. Investing in Canada gives them free market access to the United States and Mexico through the North American Free Trade Agreement and Chile and Israel through bilateral free trade agreements. These investments will benefit India, as these companies’ profits are repatriated to those who invested in them.

Economic Reform

The private sector is the driving force behind trade and investment and potential growth in trade and investment. It is people like yourselves. One of the key roles of government should be to facilitate and encourage your efforts. That is why the economic reform program that India has undertaken is so crucial.

Minister Gujral and I signed an agreement and witnessed two others that exemplify the role of government as a facilitator of reform and liberalization. These projects involve cooperation in developing India’s private sector and energy infrastructure and improving tax administration. Canada will provide development assistance funding for these projects, totaling almost $30 million.

India is to be commended for its perseverance in the reform of its economy. We in Canada know from our experience with fiscal deficit reduction and trade liberalization that reform does not always satisfy everyone. However, we have also found that efforts in these areas can have a substantial positive effect. In the five years since Canada entered the North American Free Trade Agreement, our manufactured product exports have grown from one-third to nearly half of the production. Moreover, the most significant strides were accomplished in areas liberalized under the Free Trade Agreement.

Our experience has convinced us that open economies tend to do better at absorbing new technologies essential to sustainable growth. Open economies are forced to compete with the world’s most successful exporting countries, and they can more easily adapt because they are constantly exposed to international markets. Again, the private sector—business people like yourselves—are most directly exposed to these benefits of an open, liberalized economy.

Co-operation in Security

Governments today may be leaving the center stage of economic relations to the private sector. But they remain front and center in guaranteeing the most basic conditions necessary for economic growth: peace and stability. Seventeen hundred years ago, the great Indian poet Kalidasa wrote, “A prosperous State is a heaven on earth.” To maintain that heaven on earth, the State must be at peace. Without a basic level of security, prosperity could not survive long.

A good example of the link between prosperity and security is the recent agreement signed by India and Bangladesh on distributing Ganges water. This positive move has made both countries more secure by improving relations and regularizing access to an essential natural resource. It also allows both sides to meet fundamental economic and human needs in a stable, predictable environment.

As a significant power and emerging global economic force, India has a key role in international and regional security. Canada is eager to work with India to enhance security and prosperity in various issues and institutions. With our shared democratic values, India and Canada see eye-to-eye on many security questions, including those relating to Asia.

India and Canada have a long history of cooperation in international security, including our joint efforts under international auspices to bring peace to Indochina, Cambodia, and the former Yugoslavia. The challenge before us now is to adapt and work together to combat new types of security threats in a rapidly evolving international environment: terrorism, drugs, environmental degradation, and the abuse of human rights.

In the face of these threats, Canada and India must continue to cooperate effectively in the ASEAN [Association of Southeast Asian Nations] Regional Forum [ARF], in the UN, or bilaterally. We must forge the new tools required to make our multilateral institutions and international diplomacy more effective.

Indian participation in the ARF, which is emerging as the main forum for institutionalized security cooperation and dialogue in Asia, is crucial. Canada was glad to support India’s successful bid to join last year. We look forward to India’s contribution to the ARF’s work and to India’s assistance in making the ARF stronger and more active.

In terms of regional security, Burma is just one example of the key role played by India. As the world’s largest democracy and now a member of the ARF, India is well-placed to deal with a regime whose internal problems and poor human rights record are destabilizing the surrounding region.

Let’s look more broadly at human security. There is much that Canada can do to work with India to improve poverty-driven problems, such as child labor or environmental degradation. These issues concern both Canadians and Indians for a range of reasons, including the social and economic instability and damage they produce. I have talked extensively about the issue of child labor with Minister Gujral, and I will announce ways we will cooperate in this matter later today.

Looking Ahead

The new chapter in relations between our two countries does not end with the agreements I have described today. Looking ahead, we hope to hold the first meeting of the Joint Ministerial Council in Canada in the first half of the year. In February, Canada will be participating in CII’s international engineering trade fair as the country’s partner for the environment.

As host of the APEC [Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Forum] process, Canada’s attention will be very much focused on Asia. In this role, we will continue to press for Indian membership in the APEC Working Groups to which it has requested entry. Canada will press for accession criteria, enabling India to join as a full partner.

At the same time, Canada will hold a whole series of activities as part of our Year of Asia Pacific. Our aim is not only to heighten Canadians’ awareness of APEC members and other countries of the Asia Pacific region but also to strengthen the human ties that bind us to the region. In March, India will be featured at the Team Canada Business Conference in Toronto and the Asia Pacific Week in Atlantic Canada. This will be followed by the Canada-India Business Council meetings in Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal in April. In June, the Indo-Canadian Chamber of Commerce will celebrate its 20th anniversary in Toronto.

Conclusion

Building the relationship between India and Canada to reach its full potential will take time. Our aim is a rich, comprehensive, and balanced partnership. It should include cooperation not just in the two areas I have focused on in my remarks today—economic ties and security—but in equally significant areas, such as development assistance and cultural and educational exchange.

History shows that Indian philosophy and culture enriched the lives of Southeast Asian people through trade, not conquest. Canada looks forward to enhanced trade relations with India that will offer mutual financial rewards and the opportunity to enrich each other spiritually and culturally through more excellent contact.

A future in which Canada and India work closely is not just wishful thinking. We have much in common, including deep democratic roots, shared Commonwealth traditions, and a commitment to a just and stable world. We also have essential human ties. Over half a million Canadians trace their origins to India, a large number in a country of only 30 million.

But our human links do not end there. They are built through every contact we have with one another, including the growing ties between business people on both sides. As business community members, no one knows better than you the meaning of the word partnership. You can play a key role in making our relationship a true partnership that strives toward our mutual goal: a more just, secure, and prosperous world.

Thank you.

Klean Industries featured an article in DFAIT environmental technology publications for India » GO. 

Expand Global Cleantech Trade with Klean Industries

Partner with Klean Industries for Cleantech Expansion in India!

Klean Industries is leading the charge in international cleantech trade, providing waste-to-energy, circular economy, and ESG-driven solutions to India’s growing industrial and environmental sectors. Recognized by the Canadian government (DFAITC) as a key trade partner, Klean Industries is committed to building sustainable global partnerships.

Why Work with Klean Industries for Cleantech Trade in India?

Government-Recognized Cleantech Leadership: Trusted by DFAITC for international trade expansion.
Innovative Waste-to-Energy Solutions: Delivering cutting-edge pyrolysis and circular economy technologies.
Strategic India-Canada Partnerships: Supporting India’s sustainability and industrial waste management initiatives.
Scalable, Impactful ESG Solutions: Driving low-carbon alternatives in energy and waste management sectors.

Want to Explore Cleantech Trade Opportunities in India?

Contact Klean Industries today to discuss how our internationally recognized cleantech solutions can support India’s sustainability goals » GO.


You can return to the main Company News page, or press the Back button on your browser.