India, Iceland Boost Ties, Focus on EFTA Trade Pact & Clean Energy

Secretary (West) Sibi George met Iceland's Foreign Minister Thorgerdur Katrin Gunnarsdottir to discuss bilateral, regional, and multilateral issues. The talks highlighted positive progress in sectors like geothermal energy, fisheries, and clean energy. The implementation of the India-European Free Trade Association Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement was a key focus. The agreement, now in its implementation phase, aims to boost trade, investment, and technology collaboration between India and the EFTA states.

Key Points: India-Iceland Talks on Bilateral Ties & EFTA Trade Pact

  • Bilateral talks on trade & energy
  • Implementation of India-EFTA pact
  • Focus on geothermal & fisheries sectors
  • $100 billion investment pathway
3 min read

Secretary (West) George calls on Iceland FM to discuss bilateral ties, implementation of India-EFTA TEPA

Officials discuss geothermal, fisheries, clean energy cooperation and implementation of the India-EFTA Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement.

"India-EFTA TEPA is an agreement with a long-term economic purpose. - Piyush Goyal"

New Delhi, March 22

Secretary, Ambassador Sibi George, on Sunday called on Iceland Foreign Minister Thorgerdur Katrin Gunnarsdottir to discuss issues of bilateral, regional and multilateral interest and the implementation of India-European Free Trade Association Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement, according to the Ministry of External Affairs.

In a post on X, MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said, "Secretary (West) @AmbSibiGeorge called on Foreign Minister of Iceland, Thorgerdur Katrin Gunnarsdottir. They discussed issues of bilateral, regional and multilateral interest, also the positive progress made in bilateral engagement in recent years, especially in sectors such as geothermal, fisheries and clean energy. The implementation of India-EFTA TEPA was also discussed."

The post said that both officials discussed issues of bilateral, regional and multilateral interest and also the positive progress made in bilateral engagement of India and Iceland in recent years. The discussion was based especially in sectors such as geothermal, fisheries and clean energy.

Earlier on March 10, the India-EFTA Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA) completed two years, continuing to strengthen cooperation between India and the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) in areas such as trade, investment, and technology collaboration.

The agreement between India and the member States of the European Free Trade Association, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland, the partnership has moved from negotiation to implementation with effect from October 1, 2025.

According to a statement released by the Ministry of Commerce & Industry, "The Agreement brings together India and a group of advanced European economies in a framework that supports trade, investment, services, technology collaboration and long-term industrial growth."

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has said: "Over the last few years, we have built a strategic and purposeful network of Free Trade Agreements. We now have FTAs with 38 partner nations."

"This gives our manufacturers and producers enough diversity and depth to sell our products across many markets. These FTAs have opened up the markets of major economies to India's manufactured products," he added.

On the 2nd Anniversary, Union Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal stated, "India-EFTA TEPA is an agreement with a long-term economic purpose. It gives Indian exporters access to high-income markets, creates an investment pathway of USD 100 billion over 15 years."

The India-EFTA TEPA is one of India's most significant trade arrangements with a group of high-income and innovation-driven economies. Along with India's other trade agreements and ongoing trade negotiations, it forms part of a wider effort to expand opportunities for farmers, fishermen, MSMEs and start-ups, while supporting investment and job creation across sectors.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good to see our diplomats actively engaging. The fisheries sector mention is interesting. Can we learn sustainable deep-sea fishing practices from them? Our coastal communities need such modern knowledge.
R
Rohit P
$100 billion investment pathway sounds impressive on paper. But the real test is implementation. We need to ensure these deals actually create jobs here and don't just become avenues for imports. Cautiously optimistic.
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Sarah B
As someone working in the clean tech space, this is very encouraging. Partnerships with innovation-driven economies like Iceland can accelerate our green transition. Hope the bureaucratic hurdles are minimal.
V
Vikram M
FTAs with 38 nations is a big achievement. It shows India is serious about integrating with global value chains. Access to high-income markets for our manufacturers is key for 'Make in India' to succeed globally.
K
Karthik V
While the strategic intent is good, I hope our negotiation teams were tough on protecting our farmers and fishermen. Sometimes in these deals, the small players get squeezed. The benefits must be widespread, not just for big industry.
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Nikhil C
Geothermal energy is an untapped potential for us, especially in the Himalayan region. If Iceland helps us set up pilot projects, it could be a game-changer for remote, off-grid villages. Forward

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