India-EU FTA Opens "Limitless" Trade Growth, Says Irish Minister

Irish Minister Jack Chambers has hailed the finalized India-EU Free Trade Agreement, describing a "limitless" potential for growth between the two major trading blocs. He revealed that trade between Ireland and India alone has surged by 90% over the past ten years, with expectations for EU-India trade to double within the next seven. The agreement provides India with zero-duty access for most exports to the EU, significantly benefiting sectors like agriculture, marine products, and labour-intensive goods. While opening vast opportunities, the pact also includes protections for sensitive domestic industries such as dairy and cereals.

Key Points: India-EU Free Trade Agreement Hailed for Limitless Opportunity

  • FTA eliminates tariffs on over 90% of goods
  • India-Ireland trade grew 90% in a decade
  • Deal to double India-EU trade in 7 years
  • Key gains for agriculture, marine, and labour sectors
  • Safeguards for sensitive sectors like dairy
3 min read

"Limitless level of opportunity for trade growth": Irish Minister Jack Chambers hails India-EU FTA

Irish Minister Jack Chambers praises the India-EU FTA, forecasting doubled trade in 7 years and highlighting benefits for key Indian export sectors.

"There's a limitless level of opportunity for growth between businesses and amongst our two countries. - Jack Chambers"

New Delhi, February 17

The Irish Minister for Public Expenditure, Jack Chambers, hailed the Free Trade Agreement between India and the European Union, noting the "limitless level" of growth of business opportunities between the two "big trading blocs."

Speaking to ANI on Monday, the Irish minister said that both parties in the deal will have reciprocal trade benefits.

Highlighting strong India-Ireland trade ties, he mentioned that business between the two countries has grown by 90 per cent in the last 10 years.

Jack Chamber said, "There are huge opportunities in the future, before the free trade agreement between the European Union and India. Trade between Ireland and India grew by 90 per cent in the last 10 years. We expect trade between the European Union and India to double in the next seven years. So there's a limitless level of opportunity for growth between businesses and amongst our two countries."

"I'm really excited about the free trade agreement that's been agreed, and it's only positive for the future. We have strong people-to-people links, very much pro-enterprise policies across our two countries, and I really look forward to seeing what will come from this, and part of my visit over the next number of days is really trying to leverage that and show how both businesses in both countries can really drive opportunities to increase their market share," he added.

Further, Chambers said that the FTA, amid an uncertain global trade climate, will increase opportunities for citizens in India and Europe.

"It's a really positive free trade agreement. Ireland is an open, pro-enterprise economy that has built its growth and prosperity on trade deals and ensuring that we can have efficiency in the global supply chain. There are huge opportunities from the Indian market of one and a half billion people who live here, from the goods and services that you produce, but also to see the reciprocal benefits that European goods and services will bring right into India as well. So it's good for trade. We have a lot of global uncertainty and instability on trade over the last 12 months in particular and to see two big trading blocs agree on a deal, lowering tariffs, that only increases opportunity for citizens in both blocs," he said.

The India-EU Free Trade Agreement, which was finalised in January 2026 after long negotiations, eliminates tariffs on over 90 per cent of goods traded between the two sides.

According to a sectoral analysis by credit rating agency ICRA, the agreement grants India preferential zero-duty access on 97 per cent of EU tariff lines, covering nearly 99.5 per cent of the value of Indian exports, while India will cut or eliminate tariffs on 92 per cent of its tariff lines for EU imports.

Agricultural and processed food exports, such as tea, coffee, spices, fruits, vegetables, and marine products, will gain preferential access to the EU market. Marine exports are expected to benefit from tariff reductions of up to 26 per cent, supporting coastal employment and export growth.

Labour-intensive sectors such as leather, footwear, furniture, and rubber products are also expected to see gains. At the same time, sensitive sectors, including dairy, cereals, and poultry, have been safeguarded to protect farmers and MSMEs.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone working in the leather goods export sector, this FTA is a huge relief. The tariff reductions will make us much more competitive. It's good to see sensitive sectors like dairy were protected too. A balanced deal.
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Priya S
"Limitless opportunity" sounds great, but implementation is key. We've signed many agreements before. The government must ensure our MSMEs have the support and information to actually use these provisions. Fingers crossed!
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Rohit P
Doubling trade in 7 years is an ambitious target. Hope it creates more jobs here, especially in manufacturing. The focus on coastal employment through marine exports is a smart move.
M
Michael C
A respectful criticism: While the deal looks good on paper, we must be cautious about the influx of EU goods. Our domestic industries, even outside the 'sensitive' list, need a level playing field and time to adapt.
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Kavya N
This is a win for 'Make in India'. Easier access for our furniture, footwear, and agricultural produce. Now our challenge is to ensure quality meets global standards consistently. Jai Hind!

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