Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, during Starmer’s first official visit to India, strengthened the India-UK strategic partnership with landmark agreements spanning defence, trade, technology, and climate finance. The deal aims to boost bilateral trade by $34 billion by 2040 and deepen collaboration in emerging sectors.
Overview of India–UK Strategic Partnership Enhancement
Prime Ministers Narendra Modi and Keir Starmer met in Mumbai on October 9, 2025, to reaffirm and deepen the India–UK partnership with a focus on expanding trade, defence cooperation, innovation, and climate initiatives. Their discussions followed the landmark India-UK Free Trade Agreement signed in July 2025, which aims to reduce tariffs, increase market access, and create high-skilled jobs in both countries.
Modi highlighted the synergy of "India's vibrancy combined with the UK's expertise," calling their alliance "natural partners" committed to building a brighter future. Starmer emphasized leveraging the agreement’s momentum to secure new investments and joint ventures, revealing £1.3 billion ($1.75 billion) of Indian investments planned in the UK emanating from the largest UK trade delegation in a decade.
Deepening Defence and Technology Collaboration
A highlight of their meetings was the signing of strategic defence deals worth over $800 million, including:
A £350 million ($468 million) contract for the UK to supply lightweight multi-role missiles to India, produced in Northern Ireland.
An initial £250 million ($335 million) collaboration on developing electric powered naval engines.
A military training cooperation agreement with Indian Air Force instructors partnering with the UK Royal Air Force.
Additionally, a collaborative centre for artificial intelligence and an India-UK connectivity and innovation hub were announced, alongside a critical minerals guild aimed at securing supply chains and advancing green technologies.
Expanding Education and Climate Finance Initiatives
Education ties are set to strengthen with nine UK universities authorized to open campuses in India, including three in the GIFT City economic zone, fostering knowledge exchange without adding migration pressures.
The leaders launched the India–UK Climate Finance Initiative, designed to fund startups and projects advancing clean energy and sustainability, further reinforcing their shared net-zero commitments.
Notable Updates:
India-UK Free Trade Agreement targets an additional £25.5 billion ($34 billion) bilateral trade by 2040.
64 Indian companies pledged £1.3 billion ($1.75 billion) investment in the UK.
Defence deals total over $800 million, covering missile supply and naval engine collaborations.
Joint AI research centre and innovation hubs to foster technology collaboration.
UK universities to open campuses in India, expanding educational partnerships.
Climate Finance Initiative launched to support green technology startups.
Modi and Starmer underscored mutual respect for strategic autonomy amid geopolitical nuances.
This phase of India-UK relations represents a broad, strategic, and future-focused partnership embracing trade, defence, technology, education, and sustainable development, positioning both nations as key collaborators on the global stage.
Sources: Press Information Bureau (PIB), Times Now News, Reuters, Economic Times, Financial Express, India Today.