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Foreign Policy Watch: India – EU

India-EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA)

Why in the news?

Recently, the India-European Union Free Trade Agreement (India-EU FTA) was concluded at the 16th India-EU Summit. The conclusion of this FTA positions India and the European Union as trusted partners committed to open markets, predictability, and inclusive growth.

Key Statistics 

  1. The European Union is India’s one of the largest trading partners. In 2024-25, India’s bilateral trade in goods with the EU stood at INR 11.5 Lakh Crore (USD 136.54 billion) with exports worth INR 6.4 Lakh Crore (USD 75.85 billion) and imports amounting to INR 5.1 Lakh Crore (USD 60.68 billion). 
  2. India-EU trade in services reached INR 7.2 Lakh Crore (USD 83.10 billion) in 2024.
  3. India and EU are 4th and 2nd largest economies, comprising 25% of Global GDP and account for one third of global trade. 

What is the India-EU FTA?

  1. The India-EU FTA is a comprehensive trade and investment pact designed to liberalize trade in goods and services, enhance market access, streamline customs, and deepen economic cooperation between India and the EU’s 27 member states. 
  2. It is often described as the “mother of all deals” in recent Indian trade diplomacy due to its scale and ambition.

Why is this FTA historic?

  1. Two-decade effort completed: Talks originally began in 2007, stalled in 2013, and were revived in 2022 before concluding in January 2026.
  2. Massive economic coverage: Encompasses goods, services, investment, customs, rules of origin, digital trade, and SMEs.
  3. Covers about a quarter of global GDP and opens trade between two large markets representing ~2 billion people.

Key provisions & benefits

    1. India Secures Strategic Access to European Markets: India has gained preferential access to the European markets across 97% of tariff lines, covering 99.5% of trade value
      1. EU gains: Up to €4 billion per year in tariff savings on EU exports like machinery, optical, medical equipment.
      2. India gains: Preferential access for labour-intensive sectors such as textiles, leather, marine products, gems & jewellery, making ~99% of Indian exports duty-free.
    2. India’s offer to the European Union: Overall, India is offering 92.1% of its tariff lines which covers 97.5% of the EU exports, in particular:  
      1. 49.6% of tariff lines will have immediate duty elimination
      2. 39.5% of tariffs lines are subject to phased elimination over 5, 7, and 10 years
      3. 3% of products are under phased tariff reductions and few products are subject to TRQs for Apples, Pears, Peaches, Kiwi Fruit.
    3. Services-the key growth driver of trade in future: Under the FTA, broader and deeper commitments have been secured from the EU across 144 services subsectors, including IT/ITeS, professional services, education, and other business services.
  • Product Specific Rules aligned with existing Supply Chains: Balance origin compliance with global input flexibility, enable self-certification, lower export compliance costs, support MSMEs through quotas, and incentivise Make in India via phased sectoral transitions.
  • Driving Agricultural Growth and Farmer Livelihoods, with adequate Safeguards: Preferential Market Access for agricultural products like tea, coffee, spices, grapes, gherkins and cucumbers, dried onion, fresh vegetables and fruits as well as for processed food products will make them more competitive in the EU.

Why is the EU’s regulatory regime India’s biggest challenge?

  1. Expanding standards: EU sustainability, labour, environmental and due-diligence rules, including EUDR and corporate sustainability norms, significantly increase compliance costs for Indian exporters.
  2. Non-tariff barriers: Regulations now operate as market-access barriers through traceability and disclosure requirements rather than product safety alone.
  3. MSME stress: Smaller exporters face higher relative costs in documentation, certification and traceability, limiting gains from tariff liberalisation.

How does CBAM shape the India-EU trade equation?

  1. Carbon cost exposure: CBAM imposes a carbon price on imports of steel, aluminium, cement, fertilisers, and electricity.
  2. Competitiveness risk: Indian producers face higher compliance costs due to coal-based energy.
  3. FTA as a buffer: The agreement offers India leverage to negotiate flexibility, transition timelines, and mutual recognition mechanisms.

What is the Most-Favoured-Nation (MFN)-Forward Clause on Climate-Linked Trade Measures?

MFN-forward clause: Under this any future relaxations, exemptions, transition periods, or flexibilities that the EU may grant to other trading partners on climate-linked trade measures, including instruments like CBAM, would automatically extend to India.

Why this matters

  1. No immediate CBAM relief: The clause does not dilute or suspend CBAM for India.
  2. Future-proofing mechanism: Ensures India is not placed at a relative disadvantage if the EU later moderates CBAM implementation for others.
  3. Indirect safeguard: Functions as the only CBAM-related protection within the FTA by preserving competitive parity, not preferential treatment.
  4. Strategic value: Provides negotiating leverage as EU climate policies evolve under global pressure and WTO scrutiny.
  5. Conditional, not guaranteed: The clause activates only if the EU offers concessions to another partner; it does not create an independent exemption for India.

Why did India-EU negotiations gain urgency now?

  1. US tariff uncertainty: Accelerating US tariff threats created trade diversion risks for both India and the EU, prompting faster convergence.
  2. Geo-economic shifts: Fragmentation of global value chains after the Ukraine war forced the EU to diversify partners.
  3. Regulatory overreach concerns: Expanding EU regulations raised fears of market exclusion for Indian exporters.

What makes the EU a critical trade partner for India?

  1. Trade volume dominance: The EU accounts for India’s largest share of goods trade among partners.
  2. Sectoral depth: Strong Indian exports in engineering goods, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, textiles, and refined petroleum.
  3. Services linkage: High potential in IT, professional services, and skilled mobility, though sensitive in negotiations.

Risks and Limitations of the India-EU FTA

  1. Regulatory asymmetry: EU retains greater rule-setting power in sustainability, labour, and climate standards.
  2. CBAM cost shock: Carbon-linked charges can offset tariff gains for steel, aluminium, cement, and fertilisers.
  3. MSME exclusion risk: Compliance-heavy norms may restrict smaller exporters’ effective market access.
  4. Limited mobility gains: Skilled movement and mutual recognition remain politically sensitive and constrained.
  5. Implementation lag: Phased tariff reductions delay short-term export gains for some sectors.
  6. Compliance substitution: Shift from tariff barriers to regulatory barriers reduces predictability of trade benefits.

Conclusion

The India-EU FTA marks a significant expansion of market access and services engagement, but its economic outcomes will be shaped as much by regulatory and climate-linked constraints as by tariff liberalisation. The agreement underscores a structural shift in global trade from tariffs to standards, requiring India to complement external trade gains with domestic regulatory preparedness and export competitiveness.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2024] Critically analyse India’s evolving diplomatic, economic and strategic relations with the Central Asian Republics (CARs) highlighting their increasing significance in regional and global geopolitics.

Linkage: This theme falls under GS Paper II (International Relations), covering India’s bilateral relations and regional groupings affecting its strategic and economic interests. Similar to India-EU engagement, India’s outreach to the Central Asian Republics reflects the use of economic connectivity, trade partnerships, and strategic cooperation to navigate shifting global geopolitics and reduce overdependence on any single power.

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