Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s five-nation diplomatic tour in May 2026, which included the UAE and four European countries—the Netherlands, Sweden, Norway and Italy—was one of India’s most strategically important foreign visits of the year.
Coming at a time of global economic uncertainty, supply-chain disruption, energy insecurity, and major technological competition, the trip was designed to strengthen India’s partnerships with Europe on trade, innovation, clean energy, defence, and strategic stability.
Although the tour also began in the UAE, the European leg of the visit drew particular attention because it brought India into closer contact with some of Europe’s most influential economies and policy blocs. The visit reinforced India’s efforts to deepen engagement with the European Union and the Nordic region, and it was widely seen as an important step in building momentum around the India-EU Free Trade Agreement, technology cooperation, and long-term strategic alignment.
Why the visit mattered
The timing of the trip was significant. India was looking to expand export markets, secure better access to advanced technologies, attract investment, and diversify partnerships amid shifting global geopolitics. For Europe, India has become an increasingly important partner because of its large market, growing economy, and strategic weight in the Indo-Pacific.
The main themes of the visit were:
- energy security
- semiconductors and advanced manufacturing
- artificial intelligence and emerging technologies
- green transition and clean energy
- trade and investment
- defence and security cooperation
- resilient supply chains
- maritime and Arctic cooperation
The visit also reflected India’s broader diplomacy: building relationships not just with major powers, but with technologically advanced middle powers that can contribute to India’s growth goals.
1. The Netherlands: semiconductors, water technology and innovation
The Netherlands was one of the most important stops on the tour because of its global leadership in semiconductors, logistics, water management, and advanced innovation systems.
Key focus areas
- semiconductor ecosystem cooperation
- green hydrogen
- water technology and climate resilience
- innovation partnerships
- defence and strategic engagement
Why the Netherlands matters to India
The Netherlands is a key European hub for high-tech manufacturing and one of the world’s most critical players in the semiconductor supply chain. For India, closer ties with Dutch industry are useful in the push to build its own semiconductor ecosystem and reduce dependence on concentrated supply sources.
Outcome
The visit helped strengthen cooperation in:
- semiconductor supply chains
- advanced technology investment
- water management solutions
- sustainable industrial development
It also reinforced the idea that India and the Netherlands can work together in sectors that directly support India’s “Make in India” and “Digital India” ambitions.
Broader significance
This part of the tour was not just about technology. It also signaled India’s intention to position itself as a reliable partner in future-facing industries, especially where Europe has capability and India has scale.
2. Sweden: AI, green transition and resilient supply chains
Sweden was a major highlight of the European leg, especially because the discussions focused on artificial intelligence, innovation, clean energy, and supply-chain resilience.
Key focus areas
- artificial intelligence
- emerging technologies
- green transition
- innovation and startups
- resilient supply chains
- industrial cooperation
Why Sweden matters to India
Sweden has a strong innovation ecosystem, globally respected engineering firms, and a policy environment that supports green technology and digital transformation. For India, Sweden is an ideal partner in areas where technology, sustainability, and industrial collaboration overlap.
Outcome
The visit deepened cooperation in:
- AI and advanced digital technologies
- green-tech partnerships
- industrial innovation
- sustainable business collaboration
There was also strong emphasis on building more robust supply chains at a time when many countries are looking to reduce strategic dependence on fragile or overly concentrated networks.
Broader significance
The Sweden stop underlined how India is building partnerships not only for trade, but for long-term technological upgrading. This is especially important as India seeks to move up the value chain in manufacturing and digital infrastructure.
3. Norway: India-Nordic Summit and energy cooperation
Norway was perhaps the most symbolically important stop in the Nordic region because Modi participated in the third India-Nordic Summit in Oslo.
Key focus areas
- renewable energy
- blue economy
- Arctic cooperation
- defence and security
- trade and investment
- sustainable development
Why Norway matters to India
Norway is a leader in maritime affairs, renewable energy, offshore technology, and sustainable resource management. It also has a strong voice in Arctic-related policy discussions. India has growing interests in all these areas, particularly as it seeks new energy partnerships and maritime cooperation.
Outcome
The summit strengthened the India-Nordic framework and created more room for:
- renewable energy cooperation
- maritime and blue economy collaboration
- Arctic and climate-related dialogue
- investment and technology exchange
The summit also gave India a multilateral platform to engage several Nordic leaders at once, including Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Sweden and Norway. This made it more than a bilateral event; it was a broader strategic engagement with a highly advanced regional group.
Broader significance
The India-Nordic summit is becoming an important diplomatic format for India. It helps India connect with countries that may be smaller in size but are influential in technology, climate policy, and governance.
4. Italy: strategic partnership, trade and Europe-wide coordination
Italy was the final European stop on the tour and an important one in terms of political symbolism and strategic continuity.
Key focus areas
- bilateral trade and investment
- industrial cooperation
- defence and security
- technology
- green energy
- regional and global coordination
Why Italy matters to India
Italy is an influential European economy with strong manufacturing, design, engineering, and maritime expertise. It also plays an important role inside the European Union, making it useful for India’s wider engagement with Europe.
Outcome
The visit aimed to:
- deepen the India-Italy strategic partnership
- expand cooperation in multiple sectors
- improve coordination on regional and global challenges
- support broader India-EU engagement
The visit also highlighted India’s interest in working with European partners on defence, green energy, and industrial supply chains.
Broader significance
Italy served as a bridge between India’s bilateral diplomacy and its wider European strategy. It strengthened India’s presence in southern Europe and reinforced the view that India’s engagement with Europe is no longer limited to a few traditional partners.
Major outcomes of the European visit
1. Stronger India-Europe strategic partnership
The tour reinforced India’s long-term strategic outreach to Europe. It showed that India is not only interested in trade but also in deeper cooperation on security, technology, and global governance.
2. Momentum for the India-EU Free Trade Agreement
One of the most important background themes of the trip was the India-EU FTA. The visit helped create goodwill and political momentum for faster progress on trade negotiations and market access issues.
3. Technology and innovation cooperation
Across all European stops, the emphasis on semiconductors, AI, water tech, and green transition reflected India’s desire to learn from advanced European systems and attract high-quality investment.
4. Energy security and green transition
Europe is an important partner in India’s transition toward cleaner energy. The trip reinforced cooperation on renewables, hydrogen, offshore energy, and sustainable industrial practices.
5. Greater strategic convergence
Issues such as supply-chain resilience, defence, maritime security, and regional stability showed growing convergence between India and Europe on global concerns.
6. India’s image as a global partner
The visit projected India as a serious, confident, and forward-looking global actor. It demonstrated India’s willingness to engage major economies through substance rather than symbolism.
What this visit means for India
This five-nation tour was more than a routine diplomatic exercise. It reflected India’s larger foreign policy vision: diversify partnerships, reduce vulnerability, expand technology access, and build a network of trusted global relationships.
For India, the outcomes are expected to include:
- more investment interest from Europe
- stronger technology links
- better access to advanced industrial ecosystems
- more political support for India’s global ambitions
- deeper cooperation on energy, climate, and security
For Europe, India is increasingly seen as a major partner in an era of geopolitical uncertainty and economic restructuring.
Conclusion
PM Modi’s May 2026 visit to the Netherlands, Sweden, Norway and Italy marked an important chapter in India’s engagement with Europe. The tour strengthened bilateral ties, advanced the India-EU partnership, and opened new possibilities in sectors such as semiconductors, AI, green energy, defence, and trade.
While many of the agreements and discussions will take time to translate into concrete projects, the strategic direction is clear: India and Europe are moving toward a more ambitious and multi-layered relationship. The visit was therefore not just about diplomacy in the present, but about shaping India’s economic and strategic future in a rapidly changing world.

