Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrives in Oslo for a two-day state visit to Norway, marking the first visit by an Indian prime minister since Indira Gandhi’s trip in 1983. The visit also forms the fourth leg of his five-nation tour.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi landed in Oslo on Monday for an official two-day state visit to Norway. The visit is the fourth leg of PM Modi’s five-nation tour in West Asia and Euorpe. This is PM Modi’s first visit to Norway, where he will attend the third India-Nordic summit. This is also the first Norway visit undertaken by an Indian president in 43 years. The last Indian prime minister to visit Norway was Indira Gandhi, who toured the country in 1983.
PM Modi’s Norway visit brings into focus deepening bilateral ties between the two country. He will hold bilateral talks with Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store, followed by a formal audience with King Harald V and Queen Sonja.
The two leaders will oversee the signing of three major government-to-government Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) designed to link Indian scaling power with Norwegian specialised innovation.
In a major boost for India’s space programme, the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) has completed the installation of specialised ground antennas at the KSAT satellite facility in Svalbard, Norway. The newly operational infrastructure will significantly enhance deep-space communication and tracking for upcoming missions.
Separately, India and Norway are set to sign an agreement to co-develop and export open-source digital public goods, aimed at strengthening digital governance frameworks for countries in the Global South.
A comprehensive health cooperation framework is also expected, focused on strengthening pharmaceutical supply chains, advancing medical research, and expanding digital healthcare delivery systems.
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Capitalising on the Efta free trade accord
Alongside the government protocols, PM Modi and Store will co-address the Norway-India Business and Research Summit, where nearly 20 distinct business-to-business (B2B) agreements are set to be executed.
The business conclave focuses primarily on implementing the landmark Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (Tepa) signed between India and the European Free Trade Association (Efta)—the trade bloc comprising Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Switzerland.
With bilateral trade between India and the Nordic region currently sitting at approximately $19 billion, New Delhi is looking to increase its intake from Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG), which already holds nearly $28 billion in Indian capital markets. Key sectors targeted for these incoming investments include maritime shipbuilding, carbon capture, wastewater management, and offshore wind energy infrastructure.
The 3rd India-Nordic summit
The true strategic weight of the tour will culminate on Tuesday, when PM Modi co-chairs the Third India-Nordic Summit in Oslo.
The Indian PM will be joined at the roundtable by a united front of Northern European leadership, including Prime Minister Store, Denmark’s Mette Frederiksen, Finland’s Petteri Orpo, Iceland’s Kristrún Frostadóttir, and Sweden’s Ulf Kristersson. The multilateral summit will move past standard trade parameters to solidify joint strategic frameworks across maritime defence routing, Arctic exploration security, and the green transition of heavy global industries
First Published:
May 18, 2026, 12:01 IST
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