“This capital will help the projects get built faster and supercharge our energy industries, while helping to create thousands of high-paying careers for Canadians,” Carney told reporters at the Doha press conference. The PMO added that those investments will enhance the development of the “clean energy, health, AI, and defence” sectors.
Carney reiterated his recent talking points, citing “a state of uncertainty” in the global landscape, which he said has undermined the effectiveness of multilateral institutions on which middle powers such as Canada and Qatar have historically relied for trade and investment.
‘Deepen Work’
Bilateral merchandise trade between Canada and Qatar totalled $325 million in 2024, according to a PMO news release on Jan. 8. Data from platform Trading Economics indicate that Canada’s top exports to Qatar by value are machinery and nuclear reactors, aircraft and spacecraft, electrical and electronic equipment, and commodities, while Canada’s top imports from Qatar are mineral fuels, oils distillation products, aluminum, and fertilizers.The latest Canadian-Qatari partnership will see the two nations prioritize a new Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPA) and finalize it by this summer, Carney said on Jan. 18, noting that negotiations were stalled for years after talks were initiated in 2018. Signing the FIPA would attract investment from Qatar and allow Canadian businesses easier access to expand their operations in the Gulf country, whose economy is worth nearly $290 billion, the prime minister added.
“I think it’s a good thing because what you do, you remove barriers, you increase predictability and security of investment and that’s needed in the world,” he told reporters.
The Jan. 18 PMO news release said Canada and Qatar have “agreed to immediately deepen work together” on four initiatives. One is to establish a Joint Canada–Qatar Commission on Economic, Commercial, and Technical Cooperation to boost bilateral trade and investment. As well, the two countries will soon start negotiating a new “double-taxation agreement” that would make it easier for Canadians to work and invest in Qatar and vice versa.
In terms of information technology, the two nations will expand investment opportunities in areas such as AI and information and computer technology.
The PMO in its Jan. 18 news release also said Ottawa will launch negotiations with Doha on a framework to facilitate expertise sharing on military, security, and defence matters.
“Canada will also establish a defence attaché here in Doha to further opportunities to partner in defence, joining Canadian Forces in this country,” Carney added during the press conference.
‘New Era’
During the press conference, Carney noticeably used language similar to what he used during his Beijing visit from Jan. 13 to 17, prior to visiting Doha.“It marks a new era for our relationship, one in which we move from being close friends to strategic partners,” the prime minister said of the ties between Canada and Qatar, adding that the two countries are launching a “new chapter” in their relations.
Former Canadian diplomat Michael Kovrig expressed his concerns on social media on Jan. 11, warning against expanding ties with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to reap short-term economic benefits.
“That’s why the necessary whole-of-government-and-society responses must be holistic, strategic, and grounded in principled realism and a long-term vision of statecraft rather than short-term, transactional, issue-by-issue dealmaking.”







