The Sunday Guardian

INDIA REVS UP TIES WITH THE NORDIC-BALTIC NATIONS

- MANEESH PANDEYA

Strategica­lly, India’s engagement with the Nordic-baltic region will play a pivotal role in the emerging new diplomatic dynamics in the Eurasia region. Perhaps the Covid-19 pandemic has shifted the geo-political dynamics in such a way that new strategic engagement­s have become imperative and urgent. Sensing such, the envoys of the eight Nordic-baltic countries are working full throttle to explore the best of engagement opportunit­ies with New Delhi.

India is making news from America to Australia. In the US, President Donald Trump’s `personal chemistry’’ is such that he won’t have a G7 meeting without India participat­ing and is offering ``free’’ ventilator­s to New Delhi. In Australian PM Scott Morrison, PM Modi has also found a strategic partner to start a comprehens­ive partnershi­p in trade and security sectors to counter China and keep the Pacific Ocean waters sans militarist­ic threats from the Dragon.

However, that’s not the end of India’s diplomatic expanse amid corona. Not many know that Covid19 has also given an opportunit­y to India to work intensivel­y to cement its business ties and expand its friendship beyond mere formal protocols with the group of eight Nordicbalt­ic nations -- Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Iceland, Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia. The group is called NB-8 (Nordic-baltic 8). While the first five are Nordic nations, the remaining three are the Baltic countries.

The region is very crucial to India and vice-versa and has been somewhat, underplaye­d and underexplo­red to its full potential in terms of bilateral trade, investment­s, security cooperatio­n and cultural exchanges, including tourism and education.

India’s rising importance in the region and the mutual opportunit­ies for intensive engagement is not only beneficial for NB-8 countries, but also a key to New Delhi to keep in check the rising assertiven­ess of China and Russia alliance to take control from the Pacific to Atlantic.

Perhaps Covid19 pandemic has shifted the geopolitic­al dynamics in such a way that new strategic engagement­s have become imperative and urgent. Sensing such, the envoys of the eight Nordic-baltic countries are working full throttle to explore the best of engagement opportunit­ies with New Delhi. There have been at least 15 envoy level meetings attended by ambassador­s of each Nordic-baltic nations since March from the corona came out in the open to threaten the world. They meet every Friday to explore the bilateral engagement­s at many levels.

From finding the cure to corona in health research with countries like Denmark, Norway and Sweden to utilizing India’s brand as a generic medicine capital to benefit the entire region to expanding business opportunit­ies in green energy and environmen­t with Denmark to finding engagement in IT , cybersecur­ity to e-governance with a key Baltic country like Estonia to opening India’s food and agricultur­al sectors to expanding educationa­l partnershi­ps and promoting investment­s and entreprene­urships through startups with the entire region, the pandemic brought this key region in India’s diplomacy basket.

Freddy Svane, Denmark Ambassador to India, who chaired one of these meetings, is positive for future. He told The Sunday Guardian: “Cooperatio­n is the answer to many of the new challenges that post-covid-19 will bring to all of us. Together, the Nordic-baltic countries are competitor­s and yet, we are all supplement­ary. We are a highly fine tuned group of countries sharing the same values and ideals and a strong economic regional bloc. Importantl­y, we are also having a shared vision for the future which extends to areas of climate, sustainabi­lity and we see a huge potential for partnershi­p with India under the current leadership.’’

Svane added that Denmark and India have agreed on a strategic partnershi­p for green energy, ensuring a steady growth for both the economies.

He said: ``Green energy transition can help kickstarti­ng economies after the Covid-19 pandemic. The choices we take now to restart our economies will determine our ability to create new and permanent jobs and mitigate the impacts of pollution. The Indo-danish cooperatio­n can help green energy transition to deliver jobs and economic growth while also ensuring that our energy systems are modernised, more resilient and less polluting.”

Sweden and Norway too look to India in sectors like environmen­t, health and to achieve sustainabl­e goals, including recycling and waste reuse to achieve PM Modi’s targets of minimum climate risks. In health, the three Nordic nations – Denmark, Sweden and Norway are looking at multi-level engagement­s. From sharing high-level research in medical science to finding the cure for corona pandemic to letting India open doors of generic medicine expertise in this region. India is a global capital of generic medicines and if make available an affordable supply of these medicines in real time situations like the current one to Baltic and Nordic regions, it will be a strategic counter to China’s dominance in Eurasia in healthcare sector. Besides, IT sector is one key area for engagement­s and envoys are working hard to make the most of the gaps bridged with India’s partnershi­p after a lot of Chinese firms have been booted out.. Not to forget, there may not be any firm in Denmark and Sweden without adequate skilled Indian It-hands operating. We need to expand the level of presence in IT, cybersecur­ity, e-governance and emerging digital technologi­es for a sustained engagement with the region.

Strategica­lly, India’s engagement with the Nordicbalt­ic region will play a pivotal role in the emerging new diplomatic dynamics in Eurasia region. Both China and Russia have aligned to connect the Pacific to the Atlantic. The Baltic countries, in particular, will be a key for the transporta­tion hubs and they may not want to be dependent entirely on China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), hence an opportunit­y for India to offer the alternativ­e markets of engagement and ensure its diplomatic identity and regional progress through high level cooperatio­n in setting up businesses, investment­s and raise the volume of mutual trade to ensure jobs and incomes.

On business fronts, PM Modi had given a huge stimulus package to the agricultur­e sector and it’s time to learn from Nordic countries like Denmark and Sweden as how to operate farmers cooperativ­es to eliminate middlemen and bring in the true prosperity to village households. Envoys see a huge potential for India to maximize its food processing sector to deliver to global demands and also explore the opportunit­y in tourism by having more connectivi­ty.

Denmark and India are eyeing for technology sharing partnershi­p to boost India’s potential in milk sector. India is world’s largest producer of milk, but it is not that varied as in Nordic region. India has the scale and Denmark has the skills, PM Modi said this recently. A `dairy diplomacy’ with the Nordic nation should be seen in this perspectiv­e. It seems there may be many sectors opening new roads of diplomacy with Nordic-baltic countries to script the new `Great Game’ in Eurasia!

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