Energy independence, transition take center stage at India’s flagship industry forum

Visitors explore exhibitor booths at India Energy Week 2026 in Goa, Jan. 28, 2026. (India Energy Week)
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Updated 28 January 2026
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Energy independence, transition take center stage at India’s flagship industry forum

  • Modi announces investment opportunities of $500 billion in India’s energy ecosystem
  • India, Canada launch ministerial energy dialogue during India Energy Week 2026

NEW DELHI: Thousands of top industry executives, innovators and policymakers are gathered in Goa for India Energy Week 2026, where they are discussing global energy transition technologies, including hydrogen and future fuels.

Organized under the patronage of India’s Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, the event opened on Tuesday and will run through Jan. 30, featuring 10 country pavilions and exhibitions by more than 700 local and international industry players.

The organizers expect 75,000 people to visit the venue at the ONGC Advanced Training Institute in Goa — a petroleum industry training campus operated by Oil and Natural Gas Corporation, India’s largest state‑owned oil and gas company.

In his opening remarks, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced investment opportunities of up to $500 billion in oil and gas exploration, refining, and energy infrastructure.

“We are doing reforms to empower domestic hydrocarbons and are creating a transparent and investor-friendly environment for global collaboration. India is now working on the mission of energy independence, moving beyond energy security,” he said.

“We are striving to take investment in our oil and gas sector to $100 billion by the end of this decade.”

The minister of petroleum and natural gas, Hardeep Singh Puri, told participants that India’s share of global energy demand is estimated to be 10 percent by 2050 — about 30 percent more than at present — and it will be backed by conventional and renewable energy sources.

“While renewable and alternative energy sources are expanding at pace, conventional energy will remain essential to meet growing demand. Energy transition, energy security, and system resilience must advance together, and energy addition has emerged as a practical pathway to balance these priorities,” he said.

“India is diversifying its energy journey on a sustainable path. With strong progress across green hydrogen, compressed biogas, CNG (compressed natural gas), and LNG (liquefied natural gas), India continues to address the energy trilemma of availability, affordability and sustainability.”

India depends mainly on Russia, Iraq and Saudi Arabia for crude, and Qatar for LNG.

A new source for both may become Canada, whose Energy Minister Timothy Hodgson launched with Puri the India-Canada Ministerial Energy Dialogue on the sidelines of the Goa event on Tuesday.

Hodgson told India Energy Week participants that Canada could supply crude oil and LNG to India, as well as uranium — which India needs to achieve its target of 100 GW nuclear capacity by 2047.

“Canada used to provide 98 percent of its energy to one customer,” Hodgson said, referring to the US. “We are committed to diversifying our supply. We see the opportunity to work with India.”


Socialist defeats far-right candidate in Portugal’s presidential runoff, exit polls show

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Socialist defeats far-right candidate in Portugal’s presidential runoff, exit polls show

  • The presidency is a largely ceremonial role in Portugal but wields some key powers such as veto legislation

LISBON: Moderate Socialist Antonio Jose Seguro appeared to be headed for a ​landslide victory in Portugal’s presidential runoff on Sunday, with two exit polls putting him in the 67 percent-73 percent range, well ahead of his far-right, anti-establishment rival Andre ‌Ventura.
The exit ‌polls conducted ‌for ⁠television ​channels ‌RTP, SIC and TVI/CNN placed Ventura at 27 percent-33 percent, still a better result than the 22.8 percent his anti-immigration Chega party achieved in last year’s general ⁠election.
Last year, Chega became the ‌second-largest parliamentary force, overtaking the ‍Socialists and ‍landing behind the center-right ruling ‍alliance, which garnered 31.2 percent.
Despite his loss on Sunday, 43-year-old Ventura, a charismatic former TV sports ​commentator, can now boast increased support, reflecting the growing ⁠influence of the far right in Portugal and much of Europe.
The presidency is a largely ceremonial role in Portugal but wields some key powers, including in some circumstances to dissolve parliament, to call a snap parliamentary ‌election, and to veto legislation.