India, Australia & Canada Launch ACITI Partnership for Technology and Innovation
Why in News?
India, Australia, and Canada officially launched the Australia–Canada–India Technology and Innovation Partnership (ACITI) on 9 July 2026. The trilateral initiative aims to deepen cooperation in Artificial Intelligence (AI), green energy technologies, critical minerals, and resilient supply chains, strengthening technological collaboration among the three countries.
ACITI Key Highlights
- ACITI is a trilateral technology and innovation framework involving India, Australia, and Canada.
- The partnership was announced following a meeting between Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney during the G20 Summit in Johannesburg on 22 November 2025.
- It focuses on critical and emerging technologies, clean energy, industrial innovation, critical mineral supply chains, and net-zero transition.
Areas of Cooperation
The partnership will promote collaboration in:
- Artificial Intelligence (AI) and advanced digital technologies.
- Green energy and clean technology solutions.
- Critical minerals for batteries, semiconductors, renewable energy, and defence manufacturing.
- Resilient and diversified supply chains to reduce dependence on single-source suppliers.
- Net-zero emission technologies and sustainable industrial ecosystems.
The three countries bring complementary strengths—Canada in AI research and clean technologies, India in digital infrastructure and innovation at scale, and Australia in critical mineral resources and commercialisation.
ACITI: Important facts for Exams
- ACITI stands for Australia–Canada–India Technology and Innovation Partnership.
- Launch Date: 9 July 2026.
- Focus sectors include AI, critical minerals, green energy, and resilient supply chains.
- The partnership supports secure access to minerals essential for electric vehicles, renewable energy systems, electronics, and defence technologies.
- On the same day, India and Australia also finalized administrative arrangements under their 2015 Civil Nuclear Cooperation Agreement, enabling long-term Australian uranium exports for India’s peaceful nuclear energy programme.
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