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Recently, PM Narendra Modi attended the 3rd India-Nordic Summit at Oslo. The relationship between India and the Nordic countries (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden) has undergone a profound transformation. What once was a quiet, development-assistance-oriented connection has evolved into a future-focused, high-tech, and Green Strategic Partnership.

Evolution of India-Nordic Countries Relations:
| Post-Independence Period |
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| Expansion of Economic and Development Cooperation (1990s) |
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| Strategic and Innovation-Oriented Partnership (2000s) |
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| Emergence of the India–Nordic Framework (2018 Onwards) |
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What are the various initiatives undertaken to strengthen the India–Nordic relationship?
- India-Nordic Summits: The introduction of the plurilateral India-Nordic Summit format completely institutionalized the India-Nordic relationship, shifting the dialogue from bilateral pleasantries to a structured regional framework:
- 1st India-Nordic Summit (Stockholm, 2018): Focused on global security, economic growth, and innovation.
- 2nd India-Nordic Summit (Copenhagen, 2022): Emphasized post-pandemic economic recovery, climate action, and maritime cooperation.
- 3rd India-Nordic Summit (Oslo, May 2026): Marked a historic peak, formally upgrading ties to a comprehensive Green Technology and Innovation Strategic Partnership.
- EFTA TEPA Agreement: The signing and activation of the Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA) with the European Free Trade Association (which includes Norway and Iceland) has opened a pipeline for a targeted $100 billion investment into India, aiming to generate one million direct jobs.
India-EU FTA: Negotiations with EU-member Nordic states (Denmark, Sweden, Finland) are moving concurrently to further diversify supply chains and lower trade barriers. - Green Strategic Partnership (Norway): India and Norway elevated their ties to this level, focusing on carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) , offshore wind, and green shipping. This includes establishing “Green Shipping Corridors“ to decarbonize maritime routes.
- Circular Economy: India and Finland are jointly hosting the World Circular Economic Forum in Gujarat, highlighting shared initiatives in waste management and bioeconomy.
- Next-Gen Telecom: Finland and Sweden are heavily integrated into India’s 5G/6G rollout. Joint research initiatives have been launched specifically targeting 6G technologies, AI, and quantum computing.
- Defense & Space: Sweden’s advanced manufacturing and defense capabilities have aligned with India’s “Make in India” defense push. Nordic defense firms are increasingly looking at India’s defense industrial corridors, leveraging provisions like 100% FDI.
- Maritime Cooperation: India & Nordic countries are collaborating on green shipping corridors, sustainable fisheries management, and smart port logistics.
- Arctic Research: India has expanded its scientific footprint in the Arctic region (India’s ‘Himadri‘ research station in Svalbard, Norway). Through institutionalized polar research collaborations, Indian and Nordic scientists are jointly studying climate change, glacier melting, and cryosphere dynamics.
- Multilateral Reform: The Nordic countries have consistently vocalized their support for India’s permanent membership in a reformed UN Security Council (UNSC) and its bid for the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG).
- Indo-Pacific & Connectivity: Both regions are actively working to link Nordic economies to the Indo-Pacific through corridors like the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC), ensuring secure and resilient supply chains.
What is the significance of India-Nordic Relationship?
- Strategic & Diplomatic Significance: The Nordic countries, despite their small size, exert greater influence in global governance, multilateralism, and international institutions — areas where India, as a rising power, seeks wider partnerships. Both sides share commitments to a rules-based international order, democratic values, and multilateral frameworks like the UN.
- Economic & Trade: Nordic countries are home to globally competitive companies in sectors like shipping (Denmark’s Maersk), telecom (Nokia, Ericsson), energy, and life sciences. For India, Nordic firms are important sources of technology, investment, and innovation.
- Climate & Clean Energy: The Nordics are world leaders in green technology — wind energy, hydropower, carbon capture, and sustainable urban planning. India, with its massive climate commitments under the Paris Agreement and its National Solar Mission, sees the Nordics as critical partners in its clean energy transition.
- Technology & Innovation: Nordic nations consistently rank among the world’s most innovative. Collaboration in digital infrastructure, fintech, AI, cybersecurity, and the startup ecosystem is growing. India’s large and skilled tech workforce complements Nordic technological leadership.
- Arctic & Maritime: Norway and Iceland give the relationship an Arctic dimension. As India develops its Arctic Policy (released in 2022), Nordic expertise in polar research, sustainable Arctic development, and maritime governance becomes increasingly relevant.
- People-to-People & Education: There is a growing Indian diaspora in Nordic countries, and academic exchanges, research partnerships, and cultural ties are strengthening the foundation of the relationship.
What are the challenges in India-Nordic relationship?
- Trade Asymmetry and Barriers: India’s trade with Nordic nations collectively stood at $19 billion in 2024, which, while growing, remains well below the relationship’s potential. The target to double bilateral trade by 2030 is ambitious but may be difficult to achieve given persistent trade barriers, particularly for Indian exports in textiles and pharmaceuticals.
- India’s Relationship with Russia: India’s relationship with Russia is a key stumbling block. India’s foreign policy is often misunderstood in Nordic countries. The Nordic countries, now deeply embedded in NATO and the EU’s security architecture, are particularly sensitive to India’s continued defence and energy engagements with Russia amid the Ukraine war.
- Human Rights and Democratic Values Friction: EU and Nordic concerns over India’s internet restrictions, freedom of expression, and human rights create periodic friction in diplomatic engagements. The Nordics, which consistently rank at the top of global democracy and press freedom indices, sometimes vocalize concerns about democratic backsliding that India views as interference in internal affairs.
- India Lagging Behind China as an Economic Partner: While India is emerging as a key economic and technological partner for the Nordics, it still lags behind China in terms of overall economic engagement, making it harder to displace China-centric supply chains and business ties despite the political will on both sides.
- Arctic Complexity: Since 2022, the Arctic region has faced rising tensions due to Russia’s war in Ukraine and its growing military presence near Nordic countries. At the same time, China is expanding its role in the Arctic through the “Polar Silk Road” initiative to access new trade routes and natural resources. Balancing relations with both Russia and China makes Arctic cooperation between India and Nordic countries more challenging.
- Visa and Mobility Barriers: Strict visa policies remain a challenge for Indian workers and professionals seeking to work in Nordic countries, even as Indian professionals are increasingly in demand in Nordic tech and healthcare sectors.
- Scale vs. Niche: Nordic companies are typically smaller, highly specialized niche players (in fields like green hydrogen, carbon mineralization, or biotech). Scaling these technologies to fit the sheer volume of the Indian market often overwhelms Nordic corporate structures, which are unaccustomed to navigating the complex, multi-tiered Indian bureaucratic and regulatory landscape.
What should be the way forward?
- Institutionalizing the Partnership: Establish a Permanent Secretariat to ensure continuity between summits, monitor MoU implementation, drive agenda-setting year-round, and to take the relationship beyond the periodic summits.
- Leveraging the India-EFTA TEPA & India-EU FTA: The Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement with Norway and Iceland must be operationalized effectively, with both sides actively reducing non-tariff barriers and facilitating investment flows toward the $100 billion target. Since Denmark, Finland, and Sweden are EU members, the India-EU FTA should be used to unlock deeper market access.
- Green Technology and Climate as the Anchor: The elevation to a Green Technology and Innovation Strategic Partnership is the relationship’s most promising pillar. To leverage it fully, India & Nordic countries should focus on initiatives like joint green hydrogen projects, technology transfer framework, carbon market cooperation, triangular development cooperation (Nordic countries and India can co-fund clean energy projects in the Global South).
- Managing India-Russia Relationship Diplomatically: India should proactively communicate its strategic autonomy doctrine to Nordic partners, framing it as a stabilizing rather than destabilizing posture. Track-II dialogues between Indian and Nordic think tanks can help bridge the perception gap on India’s Russia policy.
- Building a Structured Defence and Security Architecture: India should actively engage Nordic countries — especially Sweden (Saab), Norway (naval technology), and Finland (surveillance) — in its Defence Industrial Corridors under the 100% FDI framework. Cybersecurity cooperation, where Nordic nations are world leaders, should be elevated to a dedicated bilateral track.
- Arctic Engagement: India should build on its Arctic Policy (2022) and engage Nordic nations as primary partners in Arctic science, shipping route development, and environmental monitoring. Jointly countering China’s Polar Silk Road ambitions through transparent, rules-based Arctic governance frameworks would align India and Nordic interests.
- Streamlined Visa Regimes: A dedicated Nordic-India Mobility Partnership, similar to what India has with some EU states, would facilitate easier movement of students, professionals, and researchers. The Nordic nations should introduce streamlined, fast-track visa categories specifically for Indian STEM professionals, researchers, and academic exchange students involved in joint green-tech and digital projects.
| UPSC GS-2: International Relations Read More: The Hindu |




