India-UK CETA Talks: Goyal, Peter Kyle Discuss Boosting Trade Ties

Union Minister Piyush Goyal and UK's Peter Kyle held a virtual meeting to discuss strengthening trade under the India-UK CETA. The discussions focused on enhancing economic cooperation and leveraging opportunities from the agreement. The pact provides duty-free access for 99% of India's exports to the UK. PM Modi has set a target to double bilateral trade before 2030.

Key Points: India-UK CETA: Goyal, Kyle Discuss Trade Boost

  • Goyal and Kyle discussed boosting trade under CETA
  • Focus on enhancing market access and investments
  • Agreement provides duty-free access for 99% of India's exports
  • PM Modi targets doubling bilateral trade to $56 billion before 2030
2 min read

Piyush Goyal, UK's Peter Kyle discuss boosting trade under India-UK CETA

Piyush Goyal and UK's Peter Kyle discuss strengthening trade under the India-UK CETA, focusing on market access, investments, and economic cooperation.

Piyush Goyal, UK's Peter Kyle discuss boosting trade under India-UK CETA
"CETA is not just a trade agreement, but a roadmap for shared progress and shared prosperity. - Narendra Modi"

New Delhi, May 1

Union Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal on Friday held a virtual interaction with UK Secretary of State for Business and Trade Peter Kyle to explore ways to further strengthen bilateral trade and investment ties, with a focus on fully leveraging opportunities under the India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement.

Sharing details of the interaction, Goyal said on X that the discussions centred on enhancing economic cooperation and deepening engagement between the two countries across sectors. "We explored ways to further enhance our trade & investment ties while fully leveraging the opportunities under the India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA)," he noted.

The engagement reflects continued efforts by both countries to operationalise and expand the benefits of the trade pact, aimed at improving market access, boosting investments and strengthening economic linkages.

The latest interaction builds on earlier high-level engagements between India and the United Kingdom, where both sides have outlined ambitious targets for expanding bilateral trade. Speaking at the India-UK CEO Forum last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had expressed confidence that India and the UK would double bilateral trade from around USD 56 billion before the 2030 target.

PM Modi had described CETA as "not just a trade agreement, but a roadmap for shared progress and shared prosperity," highlighting its role in strengthening ties between the two economies. He had also emphasised that the agreement would improve market access, support MSMEs, and create new employment opportunities.

The agreement, signed in July last year, provides duty-free access for 99 per cent of India's exports to the UK, covering a wide range of sectors including textiles, marine products, leather, footwear, engineering goods and chemicals.

The recent dialogue between Goyal and his UK counterpart indicates a continued push to translate the framework of CETA into tangible trade and investment outcomes, amid a broader effort to scale up economic engagement between the two countries.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Siddharth J
Great for big industries, but I hope the MSMEs actually benefit on ground level. Many small exporters still struggle with compliance and logistics. The government needs to ensure the benefits trickle down, not just stay with the big players.
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Priya S
Finally some good news! Our marine products and chemicals will get a big boost. But I wonder what we are giving in return? These agreements are always a two-way street. Hope our dairy and agriculture sector isn't compromised. 🤞
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Aman W
Good diplomacy. The UK is looking for reliable partners post-Brexit and India is perfectly positioned. Goyal sahab and the team deserve credit for moving this forward. Let's hope the bureaucratic hurdles don't slow down actual implementation.
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Rohit L
Honestly, these 'virtual interactions' and CEO forums have been happening for years. Show me the actual trade numbers going up, not just the promises. Our exporters need faster clearances and simpler procedures, not more photo-ops. 🙄
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Tanya I
This is wonderful! As someone working in the textile export sector, I can tell you this is a game-changer. Duty-free access to UK means we can compete with Bangladesh and Vietnam. Just hope the quality standards are maintained. 👌
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