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HD Hyundai Chairman Chung Kisun Holds Talks with Prime Minister Modi to Discuss Bilateral Cooperation
HD Hyundai and Indian entities signed MOUs to jointly build shipyards and develop port crane projects, supporting India's Maritime Amrit Kaal Vision 2047, officials said.
- On January 28, 2026, HD Hyundai Chairman Chung Ki-sun and CEO Kim Hyung-kwan attended a high-level roundtable hosted by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the Prime Minister's official residence in New Delhi to discuss expanding shipbuilding cooperation.
- HD Hyundai signed an exclusive MOU with the government of Tamil Nadu to jointly build a shipyard and advance port crane cooperation with state-owned BEML, the company said India is poised to become a new growth engine.
- More recently, HD Hyundai expanded collaboration with Cochin Shipyard to include naval vessels and will cooperate on ship design, procurement, productivity and workforce capability development.
- Around 30 participants including Prime Minister Narendra Modi joined the roundtable during India Energy Week 2026, and Chung Ki-sun, HD Hyundai Chairman, thanked the Indian government for its strong commitment and sought continued support for collaborative projects.
- Amid growing India–South Korea ties, cooperation spans commercial and naval shipbuilding and port crane projects, with joint shipyard development planned, the company said, following India's ministerial visits last year and this year.
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HD Hyundai Chairman Chung Kisun Holds Talks with Prime Minister Modi to Discuss Bilateral Cooperation
Chairman Chung Kisun attends high-level roundtable at Prime Minister Modi's invitationCooperation spans commercial and naval shipbuilding and port crane projects; joint shipyard development to be pursued"India is a key pillar of our overseas production diversification strategy, poised to become HD…
·Calhoun, United States
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Total News Sources26
Leaning Left6Leaning Right2Center10Last UpdatedBias Distribution56% Center
Bias Distribution
- 56% of the sources are Center
56% Center
L 33%
C 56%
11%
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