India Pushes Ahead on FTAs with US, UK, EU, and Other Key Partners

India has signed or concluded negotiations for multiple FTAs, including with the UK, Oman, New Zealand, and the EU. Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal expects operationalization of some FTAs within two months, boosting export opportunities. Talks continue with the US, Canada, Israel, and Australia, while India engages with the US on Section 232 and 301 investigations. The government aims for a USD 1 trillion export target through data-driven support and global supply chain shifts.

Key Points: India Advances FTAs with US, UK, EU, and Others

  • India signs FTAs with UK, Oman, New Zealand
  • EU FTA negotiations concluded
  • Trade talks ongoing with US, Canada, Israel, Australia
  • Commerce Secretary highlights export opportunities and supply chain shifts
4 min read

India pushes ahead on FTAs as trade talks progress with US, EU, UK and other key partners

India signs FTAs with UK, Oman, New Zealand, and concludes EU talks. Trade negotiations also underway with US, Canada, Israel, and Australia.

"We are looking forward to operationalization of some of these FTAs in the next two months - Rajesh Agrawal"

New Delhi, May 15

India has signed or concluded negotiations for multiple major free trade agreements, including with the United Kingdom, Oman, New Zealand and the European Union, while negotiations are also underway with countries such as Canada, Israel, Australia, and Peru, as per the Union Commerce Ministry.

The Ministry shared a presentation during the release of April 2026 trade data on Friday.

Addressing a briefing, Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal said India is also moving towards operationalising some of the recently concluded FTAs in the coming months, which could create fresh export opportunities.

"We are looking forward to operationalization of some of these FTAs in the next two months, and as these FTAs get operationalized, that will also add more opportunities for our exporters," Agrawal said.

The ministry presentation showed that the India-UK Free Trade Agreement, the India-Oman Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) and the India-New Zealand FTA have been signed, while negotiations for the India-European Union FTA have been concluded.

On the trade agreement between India and the UK, Agrawal said both sides are close to operationalising the agreement, though some issues related to recent UK steel measures are still being worked out.

"We are very near to operationalizing that. There are a few sticking points. As you are aware, UK has come ahead with the steel measure recently, which was not factored in while negotiating the India UK FTA. We are working together to find a unique creative solution," the Commerce Secretary said.

The presentation also highlighted ongoing trade negotiations with several countries and regions. Talks for the India-Australia Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA) have completed 11 rounds so far, while negotiations for the India-Sri Lanka Economic and Technology Cooperation Agreement (ETCA) resumed in 2023 after being put on hold in 2018.

Negotiations are also underway for FTAs with Peru, Chile, the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Israel and Canada, according to the presentation.

On the proposed India-US Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA), Agrawal said discussions between the two sides are continuing, and the next round of talks is expected next month.

The Indian team had visited the US last month, and they had very good discussions. We expect US team to visit us soon. The dates for the same have not yet been finalized, but I expect it will happen soon, not in this month, but somewhere in the next month," he said.

He also said India has engaged with the United States on Section 232 and Section 301 investigations.

Section 232 is a provision under US trade law that allows Washington to investigate whether imports threaten its national security and impose tariffs or trade restrictions if required. Section 301, meanwhile, deals with investigations into alleged unfair trade practices or policies of other countries and can lead to retaliatory tariffs or other trade measures by the US government.

"We have engaged with the US on the Section 232 and 301 investigations. Submissions have been made in that direction. We have joined the consultations which took place yesterday in the US on these investigations," Agrawal said.

Talking about the trade data released by the ministry, the Commerce Secretary said India's export promotion efforts and new FTAs would play a key role in achieving the country's USD 1 trillion export target.

"Export promotional mission will play an important role. It is now a more data-driven and evidence-based support that we have provided to the export ecosystem," he said.

He added that shifting global supply chains amid global uncertainty could also create opportunities for Indian exporters.

Commenting on the recent hike in import duty on gold and silver, Agrawal said the move could reduce imports of the precious metals.

"There will be some impact in terms of lower import of gold and silver," he said.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The India-UK FTA is crucial, but the steel issue is a classic example of how developed countries play games. They want access to our markets but put barriers when it suits them. Hope our negotiators are tough and get a fair deal.
M
Kavya N
$1 trillion export target is ambitious but achievable with the right strategy. I just hope these FTAs don't lead to a flood of cheap imports that hurt our local industries. The gold duty hike is a good move to control imports though! 👏
R
Siddharth J
Good that we're also looking at smaller but strategic partners like Oman, Peru and Sri Lanka. Not just the big economies. Diversification of trade is smart. But the US Section 232 and 301 issues need careful handling - those can be tricky.
A
Amanda J
As someone working in the export sector, this is very encouraging. The data-driven approach and export promotion missions will really help small businesses like mine. But I wish they'd also focus on reducing red tape and logistics costs.
N
Nikhil C
Finally some concrete progress! We've been hearing about these FTAs for years. The EU deal is a big one - European markets are huge for Indian pharma, textiles and IT services. Let's hope the operationalization doesn't drag on forever.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50