UAE would help India develop strategic petroleum reserves
India and the United Arab Emirates will set up a multi-billion dollar fund to invest in Indian infrastructure projects and cooperate in producing military equipment, space technology and nuclear energy, officials said on Monday.
Indian foreign secretary Subrahmanyan Jaishankar announced the plans at the end of a two-day visit to the UAE by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, which focused on both business ties and national security.
India is eager for foreign capital and technology to develop its economy while the UAE, one of the richest of the Gulf Arab energy exporters, wants to use overseas investments to diversify its asset base beyond oil.
The fund will aim to raise $75 billion to build railways, ports, roads and other projects in India, Jaishankar said. He did not give a time frame, say how such a huge sum would be financed or describe how the fund would be structured.
A joint statement by the two governments said the UAE would help India develop strategic petroleum reserves in addition to its upstream and downstream petroleum sectors.
It set a target of increasing bilateral trade by 60 percent in the next five years and pledged cooperation in developing and launching satellites, as well as peaceful uses of nuclear energy.
The governments will "cooperate in manufacture of defence equipment in India", the statement said without elaborating.
Both countries have been in conflict with Islamist militants, and the statement undertook to increase cooperation in counter-terrorism operations and intelligence sharing.
The UAE has an Indian community of over 2.5 million people. Jaishankar said the UAE had agreed to provide land to build an Indian temple in Abu Dhabi, the first such temple in the capital. The neighbouring emirate of Dubai already has a temple.
Modi sells India dream to UAE prime minister
PHOTOS: When Dubai waited for Modi magic
In UAE, Modi treated to 100-karat gold dessert, 5-course feast
PM holds talks with UAE crown prince, discusses security and trade
Delay in OROP will lower morale of armed forces: Ex-service chiefs write to PM