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DP World to build inland logistics hub in central India

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WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TODAY

THIS AFTERNOON: Iraq, Saudi barrels rebound as India moves away from Russian crude

Good afternoon, friends. We are closing the week with updates from logistics, aviation, and data centers.

**A QUICK PROGRAMMING NOTE– EnterpriseMENA<>India is taking a publication holiday on Monday and will be back in your inboxes on Wednesday afternoon. Until then, enjoy the weekend.

The big story today: DP World is pushing inland into India with a rail-linked logistics hub in Madhya Pradesh. This hub will directly link central India to the Nhava Sheva Port in Maharashtra, where DP World already operates two terminals. The bet: to cut transit times by up to 40%.

PLUS: Our exclusive report on how India’s operational infrastructure is shaping up for the more than USD 50 bn in data center investment pledges.

Meanwhile: Iraq and Saudi Arabia are reclaiming their fair share in India’s crude basket as both state and private refiners cut Russian barrels in January.

All of that and more, below.

Watch this space

OIL WATCH — Iraq and Saudi Arabia are emerging as the primary beneficiaries from Gulf crude regaining ground in India’s import basket, as Indian refiners recalibrate sourcing amid pressure from US sanctions, Economic Times reports, citing Kpler data.

By the numbers: In a renewed tilt towards long-term Middle East suppliers, imports from Iraq rose 18% m-o-m to about 1.07 mn bpd in the first half of January, while shipments from Saudi Arabia jumped 36% to roughly 954k bpd. The shift is a windfall for Riyadh, with imports from the UAE falling 40% to about 352k bpd as spot prices for UAE Muruban soared in recent weeks.

The rebalancing comes as Reliance Industries reportedly halted Russian crude imports this month, prioritizing sanctions-compliant barrels to protect its high-margin fuel exports to Europe.

Why it matters: As Saudi Arabia and Iraq reclaim some of their market share, the India-MENA energy corridor is adjusting lines around the fate of Russian barrels. For India’s private refiners, Russian barrels are proving to be more trouble than they’re worth, despite higher discounts, given the sanctions and regulatory risks.


AVIATION — Tata Group-owned airline Air India is expecting an annual loss of at least INR 150 bn (USD 1.6 bn) for FY 2026 — a setback with implications for long-haul routes linking India with Europe and Middle East, Bloomberg reports. The projected loss follows a June 2025 Boeing 787 Dreamliner crash that killed more than 240 people and disrupted the airline’s turnaround trajectory.

What changed: The crash came as Air India was nearing operational breakeven and was followed by higher long-haul costs after Pakistan closed its airspace to Indian carriers last year, forcing longer routes to MENA and western cities. The airline has accumulated losses of about INR 322 bn over the past three years, Bloomberg adds citing data from market intelligence firm Tofler. The airline sought at least INR 100 bn in fresh funding from its promoters last year.

Corridor impact: Route diversions caused by Pakistan’s airspace closure raise fuel and operating costs, adding pressure to its international network including on high-frequency India-GCC routes. The pressure echoes broader operational strains seen across India’s aviation sector, as highlighted in our recent coverage of disruption risks linked to crew rules and network concentration.


TAX WATCH — A coalition of 60 Indian startups, including Meesho, Acko, and Swiggy, has urged New Delhi to shield legacy foreign investments from tax scrutiny after a Supreme Court ruling reopened uncertainty around offshore structures, Reuters reports. The court recently labeled New York-based investment firm Tiger Global’s Mauritius-based entities as “conduits” for tax evasion linked to sale of stake in Flipkart to Walmart in 2018, effectively allowing domestic anti-avoidance laws to override international treaty benefits.

Why it matters: The ruling has significant implications, particularly for the estimated USD 171 bn in FDI channeled through Mauritius to India over the past two decades — approximately 25% of India’s total inflows. The decision introduces a retroactive tax risk for every major fund that utilized this route prior to 2017. For the India-MENA capital corridor, this could trigger a more assertive stance from the Indian tax authorities, potentially a shift in capital flows toward more transparent jurisdictions such as the UAE or the investor-friendly GIFT City in Gujarat.

What’s next? All eyes are on the Finance Ministry to see if it reaffirms the 2017commitment, when India explicitly assured that investments made before April 2017 would not face retrospective taxation under the amended India-Mauritius tax treaty. If the government stays silent or endorses the court’s view that domestic anti-avoidance laws can override treaty benefits, it could lead global investors to question India’s policy predictability.

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Happening next week

The EU-India FTA signing is expected next week. The mother of all agreements — as the European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen described the India-EU freetrade agreements, stating that conversations are nearing a “breakthrough” while addressing the World Economic Forum in Davos. Invited as the chief guest for India’s Republic Day celebrations, von der Leyen signalled a final-stage political push after years of stalled negotiations. She noted the agreement could create a combined market of roughly 2 bn people and nearly 25% of global GDP.

Plus: India’s Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will present the national budget for FY 2026-27 on Sunday, 1 February. A day prior to the budget, the ministry will publish the annual Economic Survey Report which serves as a “state of the union” on all things macroeconomy in India.

The big story abroad

Several big business stories are making the rounds in the foreign business press this morning:

#1- US President Donald Trump has sued JP Morgan Chase and its CEO Jamie Dimon, seeking at least USD 5 bn in damages after accusing them of closing his accounts unfairly for political reasons in 2021. While Trump claims the bank debanked him because “the political tide at the moment favored him doing so,” the bank has so far dismissed the claims and said it only closes accounts when they pose regulatory or legal risks for them.

The move comes as just the latest in several feuds Trump has sought out with perceived political enemies. He has already sued Capital One for similar claims.

#2- Venezuela’s national assembly is backing a new law that opens up its hydrocarbons sector to the private sector, paving the way for foreign investments into the country’s oil industry after the US’ capture of Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro.

#3- Trump said yesterday the US will gain total access to Greenland as part of a framework agreement with NATO, even as the country’s leader and other EU allies say they remain in the dark on the details of the agreement. The agreement provided respite after EU-US ties were deteriorating on the US’ threats of tariffs on EU countries who opposed his plan to take over Greenland.

#4- The US has also officially launched his Board of Peace at Davos, despite some concerns and controversy, and on the same day announced plans for what he calls a “New Gaza”, which his son-in-law Jared Kushner presented as a master plan with data centers, residential developments, and industrial cities.

Market watch

India’s equity markets are witnessing their sharpest foreign exodus in six months as US trade volatility overrides bullish domestic sentiment.

Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) have pulled INR 322.5 bn (USD 3.96 bn) from Indian equities this month, sending the INR to a record low of 91.29 per USD, according to the National Securities Depository. This marks the worst exit since August 2025, when single-month withdrawals hit INR 349.9 bn.

Domestic cushion: While the foreign money is fleeing, domestic institutional investors have pumped INR 419.8 bn (USD 5.06 bn) in equities to limit the slide.

Why it matters: For global investors, the volatility in the Indian equities market is likely to continue amid downward pressure on the INR. The sell-off is in part triggered by US President Trump’s tariff threats against European nations over Greenland. Geopolitical and trade uncertainties have dampened the appetite for riskier assets in favor of more stable US-based investments, analysts told Times of India.

Across the pond: Foreign investors ended 2025 as net buyers of UAE equities, even as flows turned choppier toward year-end, according to Kamco Invest’s latest GCC Trading Activity report (pdf). Abu Dhabi emerged as one of the region’s top foreign capital magnets, with USD 3.4 bn in net inflows into the ADX over the year, second only to Saudi Arabia at USD 5.5 bn. The DFM also closed the year in positive territory, attracting USD 1.3 bn of net foreign buying.

Circle your calendar

Check out our full calendar on the web for a comprehensive listing of upcoming news events, national holidays and news triggers.

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THE BIG STORY TODAY

Madhya Pradesh becomes DP World’s hinterland logistics play

Dubai-based logistics giant DP World is moving into the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh to capture cargo flows through a new rail-linked inland logistics hub, Economic Times reports. DP World inked an agreement with the Madhya Pradesh government at Davos to develop the logistics.

Project details: The logistics hub will integrate rail, warehousing, cold chain and cargo aggregation, linking central India directly to Nhava Sheva Port along India’s western coast in Maharashtra to accelerate exports of agri and manufactured goods. Nhava Sheva is the country’s largest container port where DP world owns two terminals.

(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

Why this matters: DP World already controls critical nodes in India’s maritime gateways and is now moving upstream into hinterland logistics enhancing trade corridors that supply to Gulf and global markets. DP World estimates the hub will cut transit times by 30-40% and reduce post-harvest losses for agricultural produce by up to 25%, improving export margins for Indian producers and throughput volumes for Gulf-owned logistics infrastructure.

Aiming for a circuit: DP World handles approximately 26% of India’s container traffic. By expanding into Madhya Pradesh, the company is now securing cargo at the source. This ensures that goods move through their own inland rail networks before reaching their ships. It represents a strategic investment in a hinterland state that recorded exports of USD 7.8 bn last year.

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SPOTLIGHT

Power, water and skilled workforce is the new cap on India’s data centre ambitions

Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft, and Google have committed more than USD 50 bn to build cloud and AI infrastructure in India—the country’s largest-ever digital investment cycle rivalling UAE and Saudi Arabia. But while capital is accelerating, the physical reality is lagging: Power, water, and talent shortages now threaten to disrupt the pipeline.

The demand is locked in: 5G rollout, AI deployment and data-localization laws have pushed installed capacity from 590 MW in 2019 to 1.4 GW today with a projected five-fold increase to 8 GW by 2030. But the supply is fragile as India hosts nearly 20% of the world’s data but holds less than 6% of global capacity.

“This is not a normal incremental build-out, it’s hyperscaling,” Unaise Urfi, partner at KPMG in India, told EnterpriseAM. “The demand is real and rising. Where there is sustained demand, supply will follow. Hyperscalers don’t commit at this scale unless they see a long runway.” Urfi cautioned that long-term returns will now be determined by operational conditions — particularly around power, water, land readiness, and skilled manpower.

Power and water constraints

Power constraint: Hyperscale facilities require near-perfect uptime, but grid reliability across major hubs such as Mumbai and Chennai still falls short of the “five nines” (99.999%). Data centers could consume 2.6% of India’s total electricity by 2030, up from 0.8% today.

“Power is now the most existential constraint,” Urfi said. Operators continue to rely heavily on diesel generator back-up — that is increasingly costly, carbon-intensive, and exposed to regulatory scrutiny.

As hyperscalers tighten renewable-energy requirements across their global supply chains, power is shifting from a “basic utility input to a license-to-operate issue”, Urfi added.

AI-grade servers consume 5-6x more power than conventional servers, creating heat densities that legacy cooling cannot handle. “Power is not just needed for computation anymore — it is also needed for cooling at much higher densities,” Urfi said.

Cooling costs: This has pushed water availability to the centre of site-selection decisions. Legacy cooling systems rely heavily on water-intensive evaporation methods, making sustainability and water stewardship increasingly critical. An average 1 MW data-centre load can consume more than 25 mn litres of water annually for cooling. “The industry has long focused on PUE (power usage effectiveness), WUE (water usage effectiveness) is becoming equally non-negotiable,” Urfi said.

With most data centres concentrated in water-stressed urban markets — Mumbai and Chennai alone account for over 70% of India’s installed capacity — resource realism apart from connectivity or customer proximity, is beginning to shape where new capacity gets built.

Permits are faster, but land readiness lags

India’s permitting environment has improved materially over the past five years, reflecting greater recognition of data centres as strategic digital infrastructure. Approval timelines are shorter and procedural clarity has increased across several states.

Land readiness: However, bottlenecks have shifted. “The challenge today is less about approvals in principle and more about making land infrastructure-ready,” Urfi said, pointing to delays in power connectivity, environmental clearances, cooling-related permissions, and grid readiness. Large hyperscale campuses typically require 20-50 acres of contiguous land near power and fiber infrastructure, a combination that remains difficult to secure quickly in metro regions.

Talent is the next binding constraint

While India has a deep IT talent pool, data-centre operations require a different skill set altogether — spanning mechanical and electrical systems, advanced cooling, critical infrastructure safety, and data-centre infrastructure management systems.“As AI workloads grow, operations are shifting toward GPU-dense environments that require continuous monitoring and automation,” Urfi said. “Without proactive reskilling, talent constraints could slow commissioning and increase operating risk.”

Execution test: For now, hyperscalers with strong balance sheets and long-term capacity commitments remain insulated. But for smaller or merchant developers, delays or cost overruns could quickly strain returns.

The Bottom Line: India’s data-center ambition is no longer constrained by capital. The winner will be whoever can solve the power, water and skills equation first.

(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

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INVESTMENT WATCH

Trust and corporate concerns rise as investors assess long-term risks in India says PWC’s CEO survey

PwC has warned that trust gaps across governance, regulation, and technology adoption could constrain long-term investment in India, even as corporate leaders remain cautiously optimistic on growth, according to its latest Global CEO Survey.

Trust as a constraint: 77% of the Indian CEOs expect strong growth in India while 57% are confident in their own company’s revenue prospects over the next 12 months. But a rising share is flagging increased scrutiny from internal and external stakeholders over transparency, governance standards, and leadership decisions. These pressures are contributing to slower decision-making and more cautious capital allocation, especially for long-term investments, the survey added.

(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

India solidifies its position among top investment destinations — 35% of the global CEOs are planning fresh investments in the US in the next year followed by India where 13% of the global executives plan to invest. India ranks ahead of UAE in the global CEOs preference as an investment destination.

Technology + AI signals: Artificial intelligence is emerging as a major driver of business transformation over the medium term, with CEOs flagging concerns around data security, model transparency, and responsible AI use as barriers to faster deployment and scalability.

Bottom line: Growth opportunities remain, but investment decisions are becoming more selective as execution risks come into sharper focus. For the India-MENA corridor — where capital flows are increasingly long-term and strategic — factors such as trust, regulatory clarity, and technology governance are emerging alongside macroeconomic conditions as key determinants of investment outcomes.

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INVESTMENT WATCH

India’s Jai Dadi inks USD 16 mn ferro-alloys agreement in SCZone

Indian manufacturer Jai Dadi Group has inked a USD 16 mn agreement with the Suez Canal Economic Zone (SCZone) to build a ferro-alloys facility in East Ismailia’s Technology Valley of Egypt, as per a press release. The Nile Ferro Alloys plant will manufacture alloys for infrastructure, heavy engineering and rail components. It is the fourth project in the Technology Valley zone, lifting cumulative investments to USD 59 mn and employment to 1k jobs.

The pact adds to a gradual pipeline of Indian industrial investments in Egypt’s strategic Suez manufacturing corridor. This is the third Indian industrial project to anchor in the SCzone since February, following the Volkov Infra and Willow Ferro projects.

Why this matters: Egypt is actively courting Indian investors for the SCZone, proposing a dedicated Indian industrial zone. Egypt plans to offer tailored incentives to attract clusters of Indian firms in renewables, heavy industries, automotive, and AI. In an exclusive interview earlier this month, Egypt’s Ambassador to India, Kamel Zayed Galal, outlined plans to expand bilateral trade to USD 12 bn and efforts to attract these Indian investors.

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MOVES

Blinkit chief Albinder Dhindsa takes over as CEO of Eternal

Albinder Dhindsa (Linkedin) will take over as CEO of Eternal, the parent firm of food delivery platforms Zomato and Blinkit as founder Deepinder Goyal (Linkedin) steps down as Group CEO after 18 years, as per a Linkedin post. In May 2014, Dhindsa founded Blinkit (formerly Grofers) and is credited with turning the quick-commerce startup into the Eternal group’s fastest-growing and most profitable engine. Goyal will remain vice chairman and said he will focus on ventures beyond core operations of the firm.

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ALSO ON OUR RADAR

Dubai’s Eat App raised USD 10 mn to expand in India’s dine-in market

Eat App raises USD 10 mn

Eat App taps USD 10 mn to scale dine-in market in India: Dubai-based restaurant reservation and guest management platform Eat App secured USD 10 mn in a Series B extension round, aiming to boost its push into the Indian market, according to a press release. The round was led by US-based PSG Equity via its portfolio firm Zenchef, bringing the total value to USD 23 mn.

BACKGROUND- Founded in 2015 by Nezar Kadham (LinkedIn) and David Feuillard (LinkedIn), Eat App serves more than 5k restaurants across 92 countries. The platform offers a single cloud-based dashboard to help firms optimize operations through real-time reservations and guest data management. It is now looking to tap into India’s food service industry — projected to hit USD 85 bn by 2028 — and expand further beyond its core markets of the UAE, Saudi Arabia, the UK, and the US.

Tata Projects to serve as EPC partner for Dubai’s SAF One

Tata Projects — the engineering, procurement and construction arm of Tata Group — and has been tapped as the EPC partner for Dubai-based SAF One’s first sustainable aviation fuel facility in the Middle East, according to a statement. Tata Projects will assist in developing a plant to convert used cooking oil and other waste fats into sustainable aviation fuel.

Why it matters: In a significant export of Indian engineering expertise to the Gulf markets, the two companies are focused on a “design one, build many” model designed to be replicated quickly across the region and in India. A facility in India is likely to follow as the domestic aviation industry faces increasing pressure to decarbonize.

Kerala’s dairy cooperative signs export pact for GCC markets

State-owned Kerala Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation (Milma) will export premium dairy products to Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Oman after an MoU with Cochin-based food distribution company Food Links, Hindu Businessline reports. Food Links will handle regulatory approvals, logistics and customs processes, while Milma will supply products from its facility in Kerala.

Why this matters: The year-long pact, extendable after review, is part of Milma’s push to scale overseas sales and build brand presence across the Gulf’s Indian diaspora-driven dairy market.

  • State-owned Indian Bank plans to set up a representative office in the UAE to tap diaspora-linked trade, remittances and corporate banking opportunities, Times of India reports. The UAE office will act as a sourcing and marketing hub rather than a full branch.
  • US-based cybersecurity company CrowdStrike will launch new in-country regional cloud environments in Saudi Arabia, India, and the UAE amid a push for data localisation in these markets, according to a company statement.
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PLANET FINANCE

Global FDI rises in 2025, but recovery is skewed toward developed economies

Global FDI rebounds in 2025 as inflows concentrate in developed countries: Global foreign direct investment (FDI) rose 14% y-o-y last year to USD 1.6 tn, marking a rebound after two consecutive years of decline, according to preliminary UN Trade and Development data in its Global Investment Trends Monitor report (pdf). However, the heavy skew towards developed economies and financial centers, without which inflows rose by just 5%, increased. FDI to developing economies fell 2% y-o-y to USD 877 bn..

Developed economies saw the biggest FDI surge, up 43% y-o-y to USD 728 bn and accounting for the bulk of global growth. The US remained the biggest recipient of FDI, with flows rising 2%, while the EU saw a massive 56% increase in capital allocations, supported by large cross-border M&A and strong inflows into Germany, France, and Italy.

The widening discrepancy comes as FDI flows grow more concentrated into large-scale data centers — which attracted one-fifth of flows into greenfield projects — and other tech-intensive sectors which are more feasible in higher-income countries, the report said. Financing constraints, risk perceptions, and structural vulnerabilities also added to the problem.

Of the FDI flows into developing economies last year, most are concentrated in three countries: The UAE, Singapore, and Hong Kong, which accounted for over a third of total FDI inflows to developing economies last year.

The UAE also featured prominently on the outbound side, particularly in technology-driven megaprojects. The report cited big-ticket investments, with Abu Dhabi AI investor MGX’s USD 43 bn AI campus project in France being the largest greenfield project last year. The Stargate UAE AI data center project was included among the biggest 10 international agreements, whilst Adnoc’s USD 14.3 bn takeover of Germany’s Covestro was also flagged.

On the other hand, sectors that are exposed to tariffs and are heavily reliant on international supply chains — like electronics, textiles, and machinery — saw a dip on the back of tariff uncertainty, while a downturn in renewables investment led international infrastructure investment to dip 10%.

For 2026, eased borrowing costs, an uptick in M&A, and improved inflation figures could lead to an increase in FDI. However, downside risks remain from conflicts and geopolitical tension, as well as global economic tensions and polarization. It’s looking likely that semiconductors and data centers will be the FDI darlings yet again next year.

MARKETS THIS MORNING-

Asian markets are continuing to rally, tracking Wall Street gains on the back of easing geopolitical tensions. Asia-Pacific markets were all comfortably in the green this morning, led by Hong Kong’s Hang Seng. Over on Wall Street, while all three indices saw a “risk-on” rally yesterday due to eased geopolitical tensions in Greenland, a disappointing earnings report and forecast from Intel have put downward pressure on futures.

Sensex

81,689

-0.7% (YTD: -3.7%)

NIFTY 50

25,094

-0.8% (YTD: -4%)

ADX

10,282

-0.2% (YTD: +3.1%)

DFM

6,478

-0.2% (YTD: +7.4%)

Tadawul

11,133

+1.6% (YTD: +6.1%)

EGX30

46,462

+0.9% (YTD: +11.1%)

Boursa Kuwait

8,276

+0.5% (YTD: -0.3%)

QSE

11,336

+1% (YTD: +5.3%)

S&P 500

6,913

+0.5% (YTD: +1%)

FTSE 100

10,171

+0.2% (YTD: +2.2%)

Euro Stoxx 50

5,950

-0.1% (YTD: +2.8%)

Brent crude

USD 64.75

+1%

Natural gas (Nymex)

USD 4.93

-2.4%

Gold

USD 4,955

+0.9%

BTC

USD 89,184

-0.9%

The values in the table above are listed according to the market position as of 3:30pm IST / 2pm GST.


JANUARY

26 January (Monday): Republic Day.

27 January (Tuesday): India-EU Summit (To potentially finalize FTA), New Delhi.

27-30 January (Tuesday-Friday): India Energy Week 2026, ONGC Advanced Training Institute, Goa.

30-31 January (Friday-Saturday): India-Arab Foreign Ministers’ Meeting, New Delhi.

30 January-1 February (Friday-Sunday):India Agri Expo 2026, Ludhiana Exhibition Centre, Punjab.

31 January (Saturday): Commencement of Budget Session 2026, Parliament of India, New Delhi.

FEBRUARY

1 February (Sunday): Union Budget 2026-27, Parliament of India, New Delhi.

2-8 February (Monday-Sunday): IndOman International Film Festival 2026, Muscat.

3-6 February (Tuesday-Friday): ChemTECH World Expo 2026, Jio World Convention Centre, Mumbai.

9-10 February (Monday-Tuesday): Pune International Business Summit (PIBS), SL Kirloskar Convention Center, JW Marriott, Pune.

14-18 February (Saturday-Wednesday): IHGF Delhi Fair(Spring) 2026, New Delhi.

16-20 February (Thursday-Friday): India-AI Impact Summit, Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi.

25 February (Wednesday): World Sustainable Development Summit, Taj Palace, New Delhi.

MARCH

4 March (Wednesday): Holi.

12 March (Thursday): ET Entrepreneur Summit & Awards 2026, Bengaluru.

19-22 March (Thursday-Sunday): Bharat Urja Manthan – Global Energy Conclave, New Delhi.

20 March (Friday): Eid Ul-Fitr.

23-25 March (Monday-Wednesday): Indiasoft 2026: International IT Exhibition & Conference, New Delhi

23-25 March (Monday-Wednesday): Smart Cities Expo, Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi.

23-25 March (Monday-Wednesday): PLASTIWORLD India 2026, Jio World Convention Centre, Mumbai.

31 March (Tuesday): Mahavir Jayanti.

Signposted to happen sometime in March 2026

  • Election Commission of India is expected to announce polling dates for elections in the states of Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal, Assam, and the union territory, Puducherry.

APRIL

3 April (Friday): Good Friday.

23-25 April (Thursday-Saturday):Rail & Metro Technology Conclave 2025, Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi.

29 April-2 May (Wednesday-Saturday): Bharat Buildcon 2026, Yashobhoomi, Dwarka, Delhi.

7-10 April (Tuesday-Friday), India Rubber Expo 2026, ITPO, Pragati Maidan, Delhi.

MAY

1 May (Friday): Buddha Purnima.

26 May (Tuesday): Eid Ul-Adha.

JUNE

24-25 June (Wednesday-Thursday): India Homeland Security Expo 2026, Bharat Mandapam, Pragati Maidan, New Delhi.

26 June (Friday): Muharram.

Signposted to happen sometime in 1H 2026:

AUGUST

15 August (Saturday): Independence Day.

26 August (Wednesday): Prophet Mohammad’s Birthday.

OCTOBER

2 October (Friday): Gandhi Jayanti (Mahatma Gandhi’s Birthday).

20 October (Tuesday): Dussehra.

NOVEMBER

24 November (Tuesday): Guru Nanak Jayanti.

DECEMBER

8-11 December (Tuesday-Thursday), Expand North Star 2026, Dubai.

25 December (Friday): Christmas Day.

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