PM Modi’s UAE visit to focus on India’s energy security: MEA
The Prime Minister is scheduled to visit Abu Dhabi on May 15, 2026, as the first stop on a five-nation tour (UAE, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Italy; May 15–...
What Happened
- The Prime Minister is scheduled to visit Abu Dhabi on May 15, 2026, as the first stop on a five-nation tour (UAE, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Italy; May 15–20), with the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) stating that bilateral energy cooperation will be the central agenda item.
- The visit comes in the context of disruptions to India's Gulf energy supply chains due to ongoing conflict in West Asia, making direct state-to-state energy agreements with key suppliers more critical than ever.
- The UAE recently exited OPEC+ (the alliance of major oil-producing nations), which makes direct bilateral energy deals between India and the UAE commercially and strategically more viable without OPEC+ quota constraints.
- The two sides are expected to advance the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (elevated to this level during the UAE President's visit to India in January 2026, when a Letter of Intent for a formal Strategic Defence Partnership was signed).
- India-UAE bilateral trade crossed USD 105 billion in FY 2024–25 — surpassing the original CEPA target ahead of schedule — and both sides have a joint ambition to reach USD 200 billion by 2030.
- The Indian diaspora in the UAE numbers over 4.5 million, making it the largest expatriate community in the country.
Static Topic Bridges
India-UAE Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA), 2022
The India-UAE CEPA was signed on February 18, 2022, and entered into force on May 1, 2022. It was negotiated in a record 88 days, making it one of the fastest-concluded modern free trade agreements. The CEPA is India's first FTA with a Gulf country and covers trade in goods, trade in services, investment, intellectual property, government procurement, and competition policy.
- Signed: February 18, 2022; effective from May 1, 2022
- Nature: Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) — covers goods, services, investment
- Tariff elimination: India agreed to eliminate/reduce tariffs on 80% of UAE exports; UAE agreed to eliminate/reduce tariffs on ~90% of Indian exports
- Bilateral trade: USD 43.3 billion (2020–21) → USD 85.6 billion (2023–24) → USD 105.76 billion (2024–25) — trade nearly doubled in 3 years after CEPA
- Target: USD 200 billion bilateral trade by 2030
- UAE is India's: 3rd largest trade partner; 7th largest source of FDI into India
- Key sectors: petroleum and petroleum products, gems and jewellery, machinery, metals
- Trade deficit: India runs a structural deficit (~USD 26.8 billion in FY25) due to crude oil import dependency
Connection to this news: The CEPA established the foundational architecture for deepened economic engagement; the Modi visit builds on it to add energy-specific bilateral deals (LNG supply, crude oil storage, pipeline MoUs) that can help insulate India from multilateral supply disruptions.
India's Energy Import Dependence — Crude Oil and Gulf Exposure
India is the world's third-largest consumer of crude oil and petroleum products, and one of the most import-dependent major economies. Domestic crude oil production meets only about 10–12% of demand; the remainder (approximately 88–89%) is imported. The Gulf region has historically supplied over 60% of India's crude oil imports, making West Asia geopolitics a direct energy security concern for India.
- Crude oil import dependence: ~88–89% of domestic consumption (FY 2024–25)
- Gulf's share of crude imports: ~60–63% (reduced from 72% in 2017–18 due to Russian supply diversification)
- Russia's share: rose dramatically to ~35.8% of India's crude imports (FY 2024–25) due to discounted pricing post-Ukraine sanctions
- UAE's role: a major crude oil, LNG, and LPG supplier; ADNOC (Abu Dhabi National Oil Company) is a key counterpart
- LNG deals: India signed a USD 3 billion LNG supply deal with ADNOC Gas (0.5 million tonnes/year to HPCL over 10 years)
- Strait of Hormuz: roughly 50% of India's crude imports and over 60% of LNG/LPG shipments transit this chokepoint
- Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR): India has SPR facilities at Vishakhapatnam, Mangaluru, and Padur (total ~5.33 million tonnes capacity); UAE has agreed to explore crude oil storage in Indian SPR facilities
Connection to this news: The Modi-UAE summit takes place precisely because the Strait of Hormuz conflict disruptions have exposed how tightly India's energy security is tied to Gulf stability. Direct bilateral energy agreements — outside OPEC+ quota constraints — are a hedging mechanism for India.
India-UAE Comprehensive Strategic Partnership — Diplomatic Architecture
India-UAE diplomatic relations, established in the 1970s, underwent a qualitative transformation after the Prime Minister's 2015 visit to the UAE — the first by an Indian head of government in 34 years. Relations were elevated to a "Comprehensive Strategic Partnership" through subsequent bilateral summits. A Strategic Defence Partnership framework was signalled through a Letter of Intent signed during the UAE President's January 2026 state visit to India.
- Diplomatic relations: established 1972
- 2015: Prime Minister's visit (first in 34 years); bilateral economic and cultural agreements signed
- 2017: Comprehensive Partnership established
- 2022: UAE President's visit to India; CEPA signed; bilateral investment targets set
- January 2026: UAE President's state visit to India; Letter of Intent for Strategic Defence Partnership signed; four bilateral agreements in the energy sector signed
- Strategic Defence Partnership areas: defence manufacturing, technology transfer, training, cybersecurity, counter-terrorism
- Indian diaspora: 4.5 million Indians in the UAE (largest expatriate community); annual remittances ~USD 15–18 billion
Connection to this news: The May 2026 visit deepens an already maturing relationship — moving from trade and investment (cemented by CEPA) toward a full strategic partnership that now incorporates energy security as a pillar, in response to the new geopolitical context of a conflict-affected West Asia.
India's Energy Security Policy Framework
India's energy security strategy rests on four pillars: (i) domestic production enhancement (OALP — Open Acreage Licensing Policy); (ii) import diversification across geographies and modalities; (iii) strategic petroleum reserves; and (iv) accelerated transition to renewables (500 GW non-fossil capacity target by 2030 under NDC commitments). The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas is the nodal ministry; the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) under the Ministry of Power handles energy conservation frameworks.
- India's oil imports bill: approximately USD 120–130 billion annually (one of the largest items in the import basket)
- OALP: Open Acreage Licensing Policy — allows exploration companies to select blocks on a round-the-year basis
- India's renewable target: 500 GW non-fossil electricity capacity by 2030 (updated NDC commitment, 2022)
- IEA membership: India became a full member of the International Energy Agency (IEA) — previously an Associate Member — in 2021, deepening its integration with global energy security architecture
- Abraham Accords (2020): UAE's normalisation of relations with Israel restructured West Asian geopolitics; India's ties with both parties make it a significant stakeholder in the new Gulf diplomatic order
- India Strategic Petroleum Reserves Ltd (ISPRL): manages India's SPR facilities under the Ministry of Petroleum
Connection to this news: The UAE visit operationalises multiple pillars of this framework simultaneously: LNG supply agreements (diversification), crude storage MoUs (reserves), and the broader strategic engagement that keeps Gulf supply lines politically insulated for India.
Key Facts & Data
- India-UAE CEPA: signed February 18, 2022; in force from May 1, 2022
- Bilateral trade: USD 43.3 bn (2020–21) → USD 105.76 bn (2024–25); target USD 200 bn by 2030
- UAE is India's 3rd largest trade partner; 7th largest FDI source
- India's crude oil import dependence: ~88–89% (FY 2024–25)
- Gulf's share of India's crude imports: ~60–63%
- Russia's share: ~35.8% of India's crude imports (FY 2024–25)
- India's LNG deal with ADNOC Gas: USD 3 billion; 0.5 million tonnes/year to HPCL over 10 years
- Indian diaspora in UAE: 4.5 million (largest expatriate community in UAE)
- India's SPR capacity: ~5.33 million tonnes at three sites (Visakhapatnam, Mangaluru, Padur)
- UAE exited OPEC+ (effective 2025), enabling direct bilateral crude supply deals outside cartel quota constraints
- IEA membership: India became a full member in 2021
- India's renewable electricity target: 500 GW non-fossil by 2030