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India, Brazil Sign Mining Pact as Modi Targets $20 Billion Trade in Five Years

By Manoj Kumar and Mayank Bhardwaj
NEW DELHI, Feb ⁠21 (Reuters) – ⁠India moved to deepen trade ⁠ties with Brazil on Saturday, signing a pact to expand cooperation ​in mining and minerals as it seeks to meet rising domestic steel demand and support capacity ‌expansion amid a global race ‌for raw materials.
The agreement was signed in the presence of India’s Prime Minister Narendra ⁠Modi and ⁠Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who arrived in New Delhi ​earlier this week for a three-day visit.
Brazil is among the world’s top producers of iron ore and holds large reserves of minerals critical to steelmaking. Closer cooperation is expected to improve India’s ​access to raw materials and technologies needed to sustain long-term growth in its steel ⁠sector, an ⁠Indian government statement said.
INFRASTRUCTURE ⁠INVESTMENT
The cooperation ​will focus on attracting investment in exploration, mining and steel sector infrastructure, the statement said.
India ​has steelmaking capacity of ⁠218 million metric tons, and companies are expanding output to meet rising domestic demand driven by infrastructure development and industrialisation.
Addressing a meeting with a Brazilian delegation led by Lula, Modi said their talks had focused on ways to deepen the India-Brazil trade partnership.

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