India-EU FTA Ignites Textile Boom: Surat Hubs Eye Global Export Surge

The India-European Union Free Trade Agreement is generating strong optimism across India's textile sector, seen as a catalyst for modernization and export-led growth. Industry leaders in hubs like Surat highlight that access to advanced European machinery will lower production costs and improve quality for global markets. The deal directly addresses long-standing challenges of high tariffs and limited technology that restricted competitiveness. With access to over 450 million European consumers, the FTA is viewed as a structural reset to position India as a high-quality textile supplier.

Key Points: India-EU FTA: Textile Sector Hails Export & Modernization Game-Changer

  • Cuts machinery costs
  • Opens 27 EU markets
  • Improves fabric quality
  • Modernizes production
3 min read

India-EU FTA emerges as game-changer for textile manufacturing and exports

India-EU Free Trade Agreement sparks optimism in textile manufacturing, promising modern machinery, cost efficiency, and access to a 450-million consumer market.

"The machinery from Europe... will help us manufacture clothes to export to other countries. - Ravi Sahani"

New Delhi, January 28

The India-European Union Free Trade Agreement has sparked strong optimism across India's textile sector, particularly in major manufacturing hubs such as Surat, where industry leaders view the pact as a long-awaited catalyst for modernisation, cost efficiency, and export-led growth.

For decades, Indian textile manufacturers have grappled with high machinery costs and limited access to advanced technology, factors that restricted their ability to compete in premium global markets. The new FTA is now seen as a strategic opening that connects Indian producers directly with European machinery manufacturers, enabling a shift toward higher production standards.

Ravi Sahani, a prominent textile businessman from Surat, welcomed the agreement and highlighted its significance for competitiveness and exports. "I welcome the move as it will benefit the business. The machinery from Europe that will come will help us manufacture clothes to export to other countries. And our clothes will go to 27 EU countries. Earlier, we used to purchase machinery from China; now we have Europe to purchase the machinery, and we can take advantage of that," said Sahani.

The positive sentiment extends to the saree and weaving segments, which have long struggled with tariff-related pressures that limited overseas demand. Krishan Aroda, who operates in the saree business, noted that the deal has already changed business outlooks across the sector.

"The India-EU deal that has happened has made Indian businessmen very happy, and going forward, a growth in business activities is expected. The tariff impacted our business, but with this deal, business will increase. That is what is expected," Aroda stated.

Beyond trade access, industry stakeholders believe the agreement will help improve overall fabric quality and production processes. Santosh Sharma, another textile businessman, underlined how lower-cost European machinery could help bridge long-standing gaps in export readiness.

"Under Modi's regime, the country is growing. If I talk about weaving, the process improved, but the process standard was not very good, and the fabric was not up to the mark for exports because of high product costs due to high machinery costs. But with this deal, we can expect to raise our standards. We can expect good quality manufacturing due to less costly machines, and this will ultimately help us grow in the export sector," Sharma explained.

With access to a European consumer base of more than 450 million people, the textile industry now sees the FTA as more than a trade agreement; it is being viewed as a structural reset that could reposition India as a reliable supplier of high-quality textiles in global value chains.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone who works in international trade, this is a very strategic move. Access to the EU market of 450 million consumers is huge. The key will be ensuring our SMEs can navigate the compliance and quality standards required by European buyers.
P
Priyanka N
Great for exports, but what about the domestic market? I hope the focus on exports doesn't make traditional handloom and sarees more expensive for us here in India. We need to preserve our heritage while growing globally.
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Aman W
Finally! We've been talking about modernizing our textile sector for decades. Cheaper European machinery means lower production costs and better quality fabric. This can create so many jobs if implemented well. Kudos to the negotiators.
K
Kavya N
I have a small tailoring unit. While this sounds promising for big manufacturers, I wonder how it will help micro-enterprises like mine. Will there be any subsidies or support to adopt this new technology? The article doesn't mention that.
M
Michael C
A very positive development. From a European perspective, having a reliable, high-quality alternative supplier in the textile value chain is beneficial. It diversifies sourcing and strengthens economic ties. Win-win.
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Vikram M
The optimism is good, but let

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