In a significant development, the Confederation of Real Estate Developers Association of India (CREDAI) has announced that its annual convention, NATCON2024, will be hosted in Australia in September 2024.
This decision comes after extensive deliberations, with Austrade South Asia – the Australian Trade and Investment Commission – actively advocating for Australia as the host country.
Philip Green OAM, Australia’s High Commissioner to India, said:
“We look forward to welcoming CREDAI National to Sydney & to offer whole of govt. support for the success of #NatCon2024. Austrade will support engagements b/w the best of developers & service providers to collaborate on #GreenEconomy & sustainable cities.”
The event is expected to draw over 1500 High Net Worth Individuals (HNIs) from India’s leading corporates, promising substantial economic and business benefits for Australia.
Irfan Razack, the past Chairman of CREDAI National, in a message extended a warm invitation to all members to register for NATCON 2024.
Austrade’s enthusiasm for the convention stems from its potential to foster collaboration between Indian and Australian stakeholders in driving initiatives toward a Green Economy and achieving NetZero targets.
By bringing together key players from both nations this event aims to facilitate discussions and partnerships on critical issues and innovations in urban development projects.
These discussions are anticipated to focus on reducing energy consumption and emissions, enhancing efficiency, and ensuring safety across major urban development endeavours in India.
The decision to hold NATCON2024 in Australia reflects a mutual commitment to strengthening bilateral ties between India and Australia, particularly in the realms of real estate development and sustainable urban planning.
Support Our Journalism
Global Indian Diaspora needs fair, non-hyphenated, and questioning journalism, packed with on-ground reporting. The Australia Today – with exceptional reporters, columnists, and editors – is doing just that. Sustaining this needs support from wonderful readers like you.
Whether you live in Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada, the United States of America, or India you can take a paid subscription by clicking Patreon Buy an annual ‘The Australia Today Membership’ to support independent journalism and get special benefits.