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INDIA AND SWEDEN

What’s on the agenda for Sweden-India relations in 2024?

From ministerial visits to factory openings, from the start of the cricket season to classical music recitals, here's what's on the agenda for Sweden-India relations in 2024.

What's on the agenda for Sweden-India relations in 2024?
A dance troupe performs at the Namaste Stockholm festival in 2023. Photo: Rana Pratap Photography

When Sweden’s prime minister, Ulf Kristersson, launched the India-Sweden Industry Transition Partnership at the COP28 climate conference in Dubai in December, it was yet another sign of the growing economic and political links between the two countries.

The roughly 65,000 Indians working and studying in Sweden are increasingly making their mark culturally, arranging festivals and events, and taking part in the social scene in Sweden’s cities. 

Indian consultancies like Wipro, TCS, HCL, Infosys and Tech Mahindra are rapidly establishing themselves, while Indian giants like Tata Steel, Aditya Birla Group and Bharat Forge have bought up historic Swedish industrial companies like Surahammars Bruk, Domsjö Fabriker, and Imatra Kilsta.

At the same time, India has become the prime investment destination and target market for Swedish companies as they seek to diversify away from China.

“When we investigate how Swedish companies see the business climate in different countries, it’s very obvious that India is a country where many Swedish companies are seeing an extremely positive outlook,” Cecilia Oskarsson, trade commissioner at Sweden’s embassy in Delhi, told The Local.

“India is where most Swedish companies anticipate that they will be, where they will make investments in the coming years.”

Sweden’s Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson meets his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi at the COP28 summit in Dubai. Photo: Indian Ministry of Extrernal Affairs

Here’s what’s on the agenda. 

February 

Sweden’s foreign minister, Tobias Billström, will be attending India’s biggest foreign policy conference, the Raisina Dialogue, which is held between February 21st and February 24th. 

Billström will also take part in an event discussing Sweden’s partnership with India on the green transition, which is being run by Business Sweden, Sweden’s trade promotion agency. 

March 

Håkan Jevrell, Sweden’s state secretary for foreign trade, will be visiting India for the third time in just one and a half years in March. 

Saab is set to start construction of a new factory in India, where it will produce the shoulder-launched Carl-Gustaf M4 weapon system for the Indian armed forces. Saab is the first global defence company to be approved by the Indian government for 100 percent foreign direct investment for a manufacturing facility.

Two delegations of Swedish universities to India are being planned this spring by the Swedish embassy’s Office of Science and Innovation (OSI) in New Delhi, one focusing on Life Science and the other on collaborations in the social sciences, humanities and economics. 

May 

The Indian election is expected to be held around the middle of the year, probably in May. Indian ministers are likely to delay visiting Sweden until the election is over and the new government is in place.

India currently does not offer Indian citizens who are abroad the possibility of voting at embassies, and postal voting is generally restricted to government employees and members of the armed forces stationed abroad. 

The Swedish cricket league will start its 2024 cricket series on May 30th, with India supplying many of the teams’ most dexterous batsmen and bowlers. 

June 

The UN International Day of Yoga will hold its 10th anniversary on June 21st. The Indian embassy in Stockholm will hold an open air yoga session on Riddarholmen, the islet off Stockholm’s Gamla Stan old town. Indian associations in cities across Sweden will hold their own events, as will many of Sweden’s yoga centres. 

For the fourth year running, India will host a series of talks titled Engaging India at Almedalen at the Almedalen political festival between June 25th and 28th. In 2023, the talks were held at the Visby town library. 

September 

The Namaste Stockholm event run by India Unlimited takes over Kungsträdgården in central Stockholm at the start of September, with music and dance performances put on primarily by Indians living and working in Sweden, a food court serving food from across India and more besides. 

India Unlimited also runs the India Sweden Innovation Day, which will take place in Stockholm “in the autumn”, with dates yet to be set. 

October 

The Durga Puja festival is celebrated with events in all of Sweden’s major cities, with at least two events in Stockholm, and celebrations in Helsingborg, Gothenburg, Uppsala and even as far north as Luleå.  

The Stockholm Sangeet Festival, Sweden’s leading Indian classical music event, typically takes place at the start of October, with performances at theatres and other venues in central Stockholm. In 2023, top Indian classical performers, such as Hassan Haider Khan, Vidushi Mita Nag and Subhen Chatterjee, took part. 

The India Sweden Baltic Business Conclave, hosted by the Confederation of Indian Industry, will be held in New Delhi in the last three months of the year. 

The Diwali festival falls this year on October 31st, with events held by Indian associations and temples in all of Sweden’s major cities. 

Events which will happen at some point 

Negotiations are ongoing on the EU-India free trade agreement. When talks resumed in 2022, the aim was for a deal to be reached before the Indian and EU elections in June 2024. Sweden, with its open, export-oriented economy is seen by India as one of the European countries most in favour of a far-reaching, ambitious deal. 

A Swedish space delegation is likely to visit the offices of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) in Bangalore, following the visit of an Indian delegation to the Swedish space industry around Kiruna in 2023. 

The visit would allow companies that are part of Sweden’s thriving space start-up scene to sell their services to India’s space industry, which recently opened up to the private sector.

A third Indo-Nordic Summit between India’s prime minister and the prime ministers of the five Nordic countries may be held again, following the second summit in Copenhagen in May 2022, but is unlikely to take place until well into the second half of the year.     

Business Sweden hopes to arrange a delegation of Indian mining companies, such as NMDC, Tata Steel, Vedanta Resources and Hindustan Zinc to Sweden, where they will meet Swedish suppliers of equipment and technology, such as Epiroc, Sandvik, and Volvo Construction Equipment, and visit mines around Kiruna in Lapland.

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POLITICS

‘It’s time to reset Britain’s relations with Europe’

As he begins his first overseas trip, the UK's new Foreign Secretary David Lammy writes for The Local on how Britain plans to rebuild ties with Europe and become a better neighbour.

'It’s time to reset Britain's relations with Europe'

I am a man of multiple identities. Londoner. English. Patriotic Brit. Proud of my Caribbean heritage. A transatlanticist. And, throughout my political career, absolutely committed to a close partnership with our European neighbours. 

As the new British Foreign Secretary, with our Prime Minister Keir Starmer, this government will reset relations with Europe as a reliable partner, a dependable ally and a good neighbour. 

That is why I am travelling immediately to some of our key European partners. Sitting down with Germany’s Annalena Baerbock, Poland’s Radek Sikorski and Sweden’s Tobias Billström, my message will be simple: let us seize the opportunity for a reset, working even more closely together to tackle shared challenges. 

READ ALSO: New UK foreign minister in Germany for first trip abroad

The most immediate of these challenges, of course, is Ukraine. We will stand by the brave people of Ukraine, as they defend their freedom against Vladimir Putin’s new form of fascism.

British military, economic, political and diplomatic support for Ukraine will remain ironclad. But we are always stronger when we work with others. Germany, Poland and Sweden are all also staunch supporters of Ukraine. European security will be this government’s foreign and defence priority.

Russia’s barbaric invasion has made clear the need for us to do more to strengthen our own defences.

Next week, the Prime Minister, the Defence Secretary and I will all travel to Washington for the NATO Summit. 75 years ago, my political hero and former Labour Foreign Secretary, Ernest Bevin, was pivotal to forming the Alliance. He would have been delighted to see NATO grow larger over the years, with Germany, Poland and now Sweden all joining the most successful defensive alliance in history. 

This Government’s commitment to the Alliance is unshakeable, just as it was in Bevin’s time. I will be discussing this weekend how NATO allies can go further in investing in our tightly connected defence industries and providing Ukraine with its own clear path to joining our alliance. 

Alongside security, we want to do more together to bring prosperity to our continent. None of us can address the urgency of the climate emergency alone – we need coordinated global action. This is particularly important in Europe, whose energy networks are so closely connected – together, we must invest in the industries of the future and deliver sustained economic growth for all.

And finally, we must do more to champion the ties between our people and our culture. Holidays, family ties, school and student exchanges, the arts, and sport (I was of course cheering on England in the Euros…). Thanks to this, our citizens benefit from the rich diversity of our continent. 

We can deliver more cooperation in many areas bilaterally, via NATO and in groupings like the G7, the Joint Expeditionary Force or the European Political Community which will gather at Blenheim Palace on July 18th. 

But if we are to fulfil our ambitions for a reset, we must also improve Britain’s relationship with the European Union.

I will be explaining to my new fellow Foreign Ministers how our new Government’s proposal for an ambitious and broad-ranging UK-EU Security Pact would underpin closer cooperation between us, enshrining a new geopolitical partnership. I also look forward to hearing their ideas for how we can rebuild trust and reset the relationship between the UK and the EU. 

Over centuries, our individual and national stories have come together to tell a wider story of shared progress. Today, we all share a commitment to democracy, human rights and international law. Tragic experiences in our continent’s shared past have helped us to understand how our shared security and prosperity depend on these shared values.

And I believe these values also offer a foundation for closer partnership in the future. My visit this weekend is just the beginning. I look forward to seeing Britain reconnect with our European neighbours in the years ahead.

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