India is among Patel's first major overseas visits within weeks of assuming charge as the UK's international development minister under the new Theresa May-led government.
"I look at this (Britain's vote to leave the Europe Union) from a very optimistic point of view and it is very much about the art of the possible. We are entering a golden era effectively," Patel told PTI on the eve of her visit.
In New Delhi, Patel has meetings scheduled with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley and Skill Development and Entrepreneurship Minister Rajiv Pratap Rudy.
She will also be visiting Bhopal, where she will be hosted by Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan to review some of the work her Department for International Development (DfID) has been doing on the ground.
"This is now about Britain's place in the world and how we work with our strategic partners like India to look at the new growth opportunities that we can develop together. The point is 'together' because previously we were, and still are until we officially leave the EU, a voice at the table and the negotiating bloc," Patel said.
"Trying to get 28 countries to agree is pretty tricky. But when you are doing country to country, business to business it becomes a totally different proposition," she said.
"The clear point to make is that being of Indian-origin, I have spent many years building up the UK-India relationship. With a new administration, cementing some of those personal relationships with key government ministers will help to bring a degree of continuity and also drive additional energy into this space," she said.
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Britain's bilateral aid relationship with India underwent a transformation at the end of December 2015, when DfID ceased its financial aid for the country to focus on "technical assistance" programmes.
"Prime Minister Modi's vision for India has been phenomenal. He has transformed India's reputation internationally in a very strong way, showing that India is not just a rising country but it is dynamic, innovative and out there to attract the brightest and best when it comes to overseas businesses, skills and capacity building.
"We have always been clear about the strength of the relationship; I have said on numerous occasions that we stand shoulder to shoulder with India. We have so many natural ties and synergies," she said.
"I will be picking the strands and synergies of the UK-India CEOs Forum to see how we can grow private sector partnerships to a new level across our two countries," she said.
India marks Patel's second overseas visit as international development minister, after a visit to Lebanon and Jordan last week to address the refugee crisis in the region.
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