Explained | How India and UK deepened strategic partnership with key tech, defence and trade agreements during Starmer’s Mumbai visit
New Delhi, October 11. India and the United Kingdom have taken a decisive step toward transforming their strategic partnership into an outcome-driven alliance through a series of landmark agreements signed during British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s visit to Mumbai on October 8-9. The visit built on the momentum of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s July trip to London, where the two nations had finalised the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) and adopted Vision 2035 for bilateral cooperation.
The latest round of engagements focused on technology, defence, trade, critical minerals, research and investments, signalling a shift from high-level policy frameworks to concrete projects and industrial collaboration.
Connectivity and innovation centre for next-gen telecoms
A highlight of the visit was the launch of the India-UK Connectivity and Innovation Centre (CIC), backed by 24 million pounds in joint funding. The centre will drive research in AI-native 6G networks, satellite and airborne communication systems, and telecom cybersecurity. The initiative seeks to create shared testbeds, strengthen supply-chain resilience, and develop export-ready telecom technologies jointly produced by Indian and British firms.
Joint Centre for Artificial Intelligence
Complementing the telecom collaboration, both sides announced the creation of an India-UK Joint Centre for AI. The institution will focus on responsible and ethical AI research across key domains such as healthcare, climate action, fintech and engineering biology. The centre would provide a structured platform for academic collaboration, innovation, and startup support.
Defence industrial cooperation strengthened
In a significant move, India and the UK finalised a 350-million-pound defence deal for the supply of lightweight multirole air-defence missiles and launchers manufactured by Thales in Northern Ireland for the Indian armed forces. The agreement is seen as the foundation of a larger complex-weapons partnership.
Additionally, the two countries advanced work on a 250 million-pound collaboration on electric-powered ship engines and naval propulsion systems. Together, these projects mark a transition from strategic dialogue to co-production and supply-chain integration in the defence sector, with the UK projecting the deals to support hundreds of jobs in its defence industry.
Critical minerals partnership enters phase two
The UK-India Critical Minerals Supply Chain Observatory entered its second phase, aimed at expanding mineral coverage and incorporating advanced technologies for sustainable mining and processing. A satellite campus at IIT (ISM) Dhanbad will anchor research and skill development in the field. The visit also saw the launch of a Critical Minerals Industry Guild, designed to promote industrial collaboration in downstream manufacturing and processing.
These initiatives are expected to help diversify global supply chains, reduce dependence on single-country sources, and facilitate the joint development of clean-energy technologies and semiconductor components.
Trade governance and economic engagement
Prime Ministers Modi and Starmer reaffirmed their commitment to implement the CETA signed earlier this year. They also agreed to revamp the Joint Economic and Trade Committee (JETCO) to oversee implementation and ensure that tariff reductions and regulatory reforms translate into tangible business benefits.
The India-UK CEO Forum, held alongside the visit, generated several private-sector partnerships and memoranda of understanding in areas including fintech, digital payments, and AI-based services.
Investment announcements from both sides
Reflecting the growing confidence in bilateral ties, 64 Indian companies pledged over 1 billion pounds in investments across various regions of the UK, expected to create nearly 7,000 jobs. Conversely, UK firms announced commitments worth around 3.6 billion pounds in AI, fintech, and digital payment ventures in India, reinforcing the two nations’ ambition to shape the global innovation landscape together.
Education, research, and people-to-people links
Academic cooperation emerged as another strong pillar, with new research partnerships, university linkages, and funding programmes tied to the CIC and AI Centre. The IIT Dhanbad satellite campus will serve as a hub for skills development in critical minerals and technology sectors. Both sides also emphasised collaboration in fintech regulation, digital governance, and talent exchange programs.
Strategic significance
The Mumbai visit of Starmer and his accompanying delegation represents a decisive phase in the India-UK Vision 2035 roadmap, shifting from diplomatic rhetoric to implementable outcomes. By integrating defence, technology, and trade, the partnership is increasingly seen as a security-economic fusion, reflecting shared interests in resilient supply chains, digital sovereignty, and defence modernisation.
The latest agreements are expected to yield mutual economic gains – creating jobs, enhancing exports, and strengthening co-development in high-value sectors such as 6G, AI, and critical minerals – while solidifying the partnership as a cornerstone of global stability and innovation.