India-EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA)

Syllabus: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests.

Context and Significance

  • India and the European Union concluded their largest-ever Free Trade Agreement after negotiations launched in 2007.
  • The agreement was revived in 2022 and finalised amid global trade uncertainty and U.S. tariff pressures.
  • Leaders highlighted the pact’s role in strengthening strategic autonomy, stability, and cooperation in a multipolar world.

Core Economic Commitments

  • The EU will eliminate or reduce tariffs on 99.5% of Indian exports to its 27-member bloc.
  • 90.7% of Indian exports will enter the EU at zero duty from day one.
  • Another 2.9% of exports will see phased elimination over three to five years.
  • India will remove or reduce duties on 97.5% of EU imports, covering 92.1% of tariff lines.
  • 49.6% of EU tariff lines will receive immediate duty elimination after entry into force.

Sectoral Gains for India

  • Labour-intensive sectors gain zero-duty access, including textiles, apparel, leather, footwear, tea, spices, and toys.
  • Duties removed on marine products, chemicals, base metals, gems, jewellery, furniture, and rubber items.
  • The EU committed to market access across 144 services sub-sectors, including IT, education, and professional services.
  • India secured a 1.6 million tonne duty-free steel export quota into the European market.

Concessions to the European Union

  • India offers duty-free entry for machinery, pharmaceuticals, aircraft, medical equipment, and motor vehicles.
  • Car tariffs fall from 110% to 10% under a 250,000 vehicle quota system.
  • Wine duties drop from 150% to 20–30%, expanding access for European producers.
  • Zero tariffs apply to Airbus aircraft, processed food, most machinery, and pharmaceutical products.

Strategic and Political Dimensions

  • Both sides announced a Security and Defence Partnership, shifting from buyer-seller to co-producers.
  • Talks began on a Security of Information Agreement to enable classified data sharing.
  • The EU urged India to press Russia for peace in Ukraine during summit-level discussions.
  • Joint statements supported UN Resolution 2803 (2025) and reaffirmed the two-state solution for Gaza.

India-EU Nuclear and Research Cooperation

  • EU and India reaffirm collaboration on peaceful nuclear energy uses under the India–Euratom R&D agreement signed in July 2020.
  • Cooperation covers nuclear science research, radiation safety, nuclear security, radio-pharmaceuticals, and ITER participation.
  • Both sides will deepen research ties through Horizon Europe, including energy, semiconductors, biotech, and advanced materials.

Exclusions and Safeguards

  • India protected agriculture and dairy, while the EU retained tariffs on beef, rice, chicken, sugar, and ethanol.
  • No agreement reached on government procurement in energy and raw materials.
  • India rejected a binding “sustainable development” chapter in the final text.

Implementation and Economic Outlook

  • The agreement will undergo legal scrubbing, translation, and European Parliament ratification.
  • The EU estimates €4 billion annual tariff savings for exporters after implementation.
  • Business groups expect deeper integration into global value chains and stronger supply chain resilience.

Conclusion

  • The India-EU FTA combines market access, strategic cooperation, and geopolitical signalling.
  • The partnership positions both economies as indispensable democratic anchors in a divided global order.

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