OTTAWA, Canada – Canada’s new government is moving from reliance to resilience by pragmatically building a dense web of new connections – attracting investment, diversifying trade, and doubling our non-US exports in the next decade.
Today, prime minister, Mark Carney, announced that he will travel from November 18 to 24, 2025, for a bilateral visit to Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (UAE), and the G20 Leaders’ Summit in Johannesburg, South Africa. The visits will focus on catalysing new trade and investment partnerships, accelerating new deals, and finding new investors to fuel our plans to build Canada strong.
In Abu Dhabi, prime minister Carney will meet with the president of the UAE, His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, to expand the Canada-UAE economic partnership in key sectors such as energy, agriculture, infrastructure, and AI. He will engage with business executives and investors to increase market access for Canadian exporters and attract private capital to build Canada’s export infrastructure.
This year’s G20 Leaders’ Summit will be the first hosted by South Africa – a strong partner to Canada – and the first on the African continent. At the Summit, the prime minister will deepen Canada’s partnerships in energy, trade, and defence – building on progress achieved throughout Canada’s G7 Presidency this year.
With our robust advantages in natural resources, agriculture, critical minerals, nuclear energy, and advanced technologies, the prime minister will meet with leaders across business and government and underscore opportunities to increase investment and trade with Canada. He will also advance global cooperation on shared priorities such as disaster and wildfire response, clean energy, and development. Prime Minister Carney will underscore cooperation in sustainable finance and global emissions reductions, where governments can deploy scarce public dollars to maximise private capital.
In a world of rapid change, Canada’s new government is focused on what we can control. We are growing a strong economy – one that is built on the solid foundation of thriving Canadian workers and strong Canadian industries, and bolstered by diverse international trade partnerships.
“The UAE and South Africa represent two of the world’s largest emerging markets, and the G20 encompasses 85 percent of the world’s economy. Canada’s new government is focused on creating high-paying careers at home – with new partners, new deals, and new investors to build in Canada and to build Canada strong,” prime minister Carney said.




