Three officials with Global Affairs Canada (GAC) who are working to update Canada’s Indo-Pacific Strategy said the new plan will focus on boosting trade to the region as well as building stronger defence ties with regional allies.
Canada’s Indo-Pacific plan is undergoing a “recalibration” to meet growing energy demand from Asia and significant opportunities to increase trade and form stronger defence ties with allies throughout the Indo-Pacific region, the officials said during testimony Nov. 19 before the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade.
“Much more must be done for Canada to continue to diversify its exports in line with the prime minister’s objective of doubling Canada’s non-U.S. exports over the next decade,” said Weldon Epp, assistant deputy minister of GAC’s Indo-Pacific branch. Epp added that the update is actively “underway” and won’t “take very long.”
According to the director general of Indo-Pacific Strategy Planning at GAC, Valérie Samaan, her department has been consulting with all provinces and territories this week to ensure every stakeholder gets to provide input on the new strategy. The previous Indo-Pacific Strategy was released in 2022 under then-Minister of Foreign Affairs Mélanie Joly.
Epp, Samaan, and Aly-Khan Rajani, director of GAC’s Indo-Pacific Regional Coordination in the Policy and Planning division, said Canada will focus on being a dependable supplier of energy and critical minerals to the Indo-Pacific region as well as building stronger defence partnerships amid Russia’s ongoing war against Ukraine.
“The world of 2025 is not the same as the world of 2022,” Epp told senators, mentioning the ongoing war in Ukraine as well as U.S. tariffs as ruptures in the current geopolitical landscape. “It is good timing to have a review, and that’s underway.”
In addition to growing trade, GAC officials said defence and security will be a cornerstone of the updated Indo-Pacific Strategy, with Epp highlighting a boosted Canadian naval presence of three Royal Canadian Navy frigates per year going to the region and a number of defence agreements with Japan, Indonesia, South Korea, and the Philippines.
India
Epp said engagement with India and forming a stable bilateral relationship with the country is key for trade diversification and security. Relations have been warming in recent months after a diplomatic break in 2023 when former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau accused the Indian government of involvement in the assassination of B.C. Sikh separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar. India said it had no involvement in Nijjar’s murder.“None of [the challenges] should stop Canada and India from developing more stable relations across the board,” Epp said.
Rajani and Samaan also said Canada’s Indian diaspora will be an asset in engaging with India, as well as something to be managed in terms of potential dangers of foreign interference that might arise.
“[We are trying] to change the channels in order to be able to manage risks and opportunities,” Rajani said.
The Carney government has restarted relations with India, with Carney meeting with Indian leader Narendra Modi this past June.
China
Epp noted that the updated Indo-Pacific Strategy will also include engagement with China, as did the previous strategy, particularly in ensuring continuation of agricultural trade between Canada and China.“We see indications that China is changing its Canada policy. If it’s possible now for ministers to travel to China and be met by their counterparts, that’s good news,” Epp said.
Carney had previously called China the biggest national security threat to Canada. A public inquiry formed by the government said in January that China is the most active foreign power meddling in Canada’s affairs.







