India-Australia Trade Pact Turns 4: Exports Double to $8.5 Billion

The India-Australia Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (ECTA) has completed four years, significantly boosting bilateral economic ties. India's exports to Australia have more than doubled, reaching $8.5 billion in FY 2024-25, while total bilateral trade stood at $24.1 billion. The agreement provides India with immediate duty-free access on 98.3% of Australian tariff lines, supporting exports in textiles, pharmaceuticals, and agriculture. Both nations have also signed a Mutual Recognition Arrangement for organic products, further streamlining trade and strengthening supply chains.

Key Points: India-Australia ECTA: Exports Double in 4 Years

  • Exports doubled to $8.5B
  • Bilateral trade hit $24.1B
  • 98.3% Australian tariffs duty-free
  • Organic products MRA signed
  • Broad-based sectoral growth
3 min read

India-Australia ECTA completes four years, India's exports to Australia more than double: Commerce Ministry

India's exports to Australia more than doubled to $8.5B under the 4-year-old trade pact, with bilateral trade hitting $24.1B. Key gains in textiles, pharma.

"India's exports to Australia have more than doubled, rising from USD 4 billion in FY 2020-21 to USD 8.5 billion in FY 2024-25. - Commerce Ministry"

New Delhi, April 2

The India-Australia Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement completes four years since its signing today, marking an important milestone in the evolving economic partnership between India and Australia, stated the Ministry of Commerce & Industry.

Since its signing on April 2 2022, the Agreement has played a pivotal role in enhancing trade flows, fostering industry linkages, and creating new opportunities for businesses, entrepreneurs, and employment in both countries.

Over the past four years, the Agreement has continued to strengthen bilateral economic engagement, with both sides benefiting from improved market access and reduced trade barriers. India's exports to Australia have more than doubled, rising from USD 4 billion in FY 2020-21 to USD 8.5 billion in FY 2024-25.

During 2024-25, total bilateral trade stood at USD 24.1 billion, while India's exports to Australia recorded an 8 per cent growth over the previous year. In FY 2025-26 (up to February), India's total trade with Australia stood at USD 19.3 billion.

Under the India-Australia ECTA, India granted preferential market access on 70.3 per cent of its tariff lines, covering 90.6 per cent of trade value, while Australia granted preferential market access on 100 per cent of its tariff lines, corresponding to 100 per cent of imports from India.

Of this, 98.3 per cent of tariff lines became duty-free immediately upon implementation, while the remaining 1.7 per cent (113 tariff lines) are being phased out over five years. From 1 January 2026, all Indian exports are eligible for zero-duty market access into Australia.

Sectoral gains under the ECTA have become more broad-based, with notable growth in exports across textiles, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, and agricultural products.

On the import side, the Agreement continues to facilitate access to essential raw materials such as base metals, raw cotton, chemicals and fertilisers, and pulses, which are critical for India's manufacturing and industrial sectors.

This complementary trade structure has strengthened supply chain resilience and supported domestic value addition.

A major milestone in bilateral cooperation was achieved with the signing of the Mutual Recognition Arrangement (MRA) on Organic Products between India and Australia on September 24, 2025. The MRA facilitates seamless trade in organic products by recognising each other's certification systems, thereby reducing duplication, cost, and time for exporters.

This step has strengthened cooperation in the organic sector and enhanced transparency and trust in organic trade practices.

The Agreement has emerged as a key pillar of bilateral engagement, delivering tangible benefits for businesses, MSMEs, workers, and consumers in both countries.

As India and Australia commemorate four years of the Ind-Aus ECTA, both sides reaffirm their commitment to expanding trade, strengthening supply chains, promoting investment partnerships, and advancing the shared objective of taking the bilateral economic partnership to even greater heights.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Great to see tangible results. The MRA on organic products is a smart move – it cuts red tape for our farmers. However, I hope we are also focusing on quality control to maintain our reputation in the long run.
R
Rohit P
$8.5 billion exports! 🚀 But the article says Australia gets 100% duty-free access while we gave 70%. Is that a balanced deal? We need to ensure our domestic industries are protected too.
S
Sarah B
As someone working in trade logistics, the simplified certification for organic products is a game-changer. Less paperwork means faster turnaround and happier clients on both sides. Well done!
V
Vikram M
Strong partnerships like these are key for a $5 trillion economy. Access to raw materials like cotton and pulses from Australia helps our manufacturing. It's a classic win-win. More such FTAs please!
K
Karthik V
The growth is impressive, but let's not just celebrate the numbers. We need to see if this is creating more high-quality jobs here, especially in sectors beyond just textiles. The real test is employment generation.

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