Farmers’ body set to campaign against India-EU trade deal
India–EU Free Trade Agreement: Farmers' Opposition — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The India–EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA) was concluded in January 2026 after negotiations spanning over a decade, marking one of India's most significant bilateral trade pacts by economic scale. [S1]
- The Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM), the umbrella platform of farmers' organisations, termed the deal a "blueprint for economic colonisation" and announced active campaigns against it. [S4]
- The FTA directly implicates agriculture, processed food, dairy, and employment — all core GS-III themes — while also raising constitutional/parliamentary and geopolitical questions.
- Aspirants must understand this as a live case study in the trade policy vs. food security tension that UPSC has repeatedly probed.
2. Why in the News
- January 30–31, 2026: SKM announced campaigns against the India–EU FTA, characterising tariff concessions on olive oil, wine, spirits, sheep meat, processed food, and beer as catastrophic for small farmers. [S4]
- January 2026: PIB officially confirmed the conclusion of India–EU FTA negotiations, calling it a "strategic breakthrough." [S1]
- SKM also flagged that the deal was being debated in the European Parliament but was not placed before the Indian Parliament — raising questions of democratic accountability. [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
- 2007: India–EU FTA negotiations formally launched; stalled repeatedly over market access, data localisation, and IPR issues.
- June 2022: Negotiations relaunched during the India–EU Leaders' Meeting.
- 2024: Both sides reaffirmed commitment to conclude an "ambitious FTA by end-2025." [S2]
- Late 2025 – January 2026: Intensive negotiating rounds; EU negotiators arrived in New Delhi for final sprint. [S3]
- January 2026: Negotiations concluded; PIB announced conclusion of the India–EU Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA/FTA). [S1]
- Predecessor: The stalled Broad-based Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA) from 2007 was the earlier nomenclature for the same negotiation track.
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Agreement name | India–EU Free Trade Agreement (also referred to as BTIA) |
| Date of conclusion | January 2026 |
| Nodal ministry (India) | Ministry of Commerce and Industry |
| Key minister (India) | Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal [S4] |
| India–EU trade relationship | EU is one of India's largest trading partners |
| Indian export access | India secured market access for >99% of Indian exports by trade value to EU [S1] |
| Tariff lines eliminated (EU goods) | Elimination/reduction on 96.6% of EU goods entering India [S4] |
| Sensitive sectors protected (India) | Dairy, cereals, poultry, soymeal, certain fruits & vegetables [S1] |
| Agricultural exports gaining | Tea, coffee, spices, grapes, gherkins, dried onion, fresh vegetables, processed foods [S1] |
| Tariff concessions granted by India | Olive oil, margarine & vegetable oils → 0%; wine 150%→20–30%; spirits 150%→40%; beer 110%→50%; sausages 110%→50%; kiwi/pear 33%→10% [S4] |
| SPS standards | EU maintains expensive Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) barriers on Indian agri-exports; India alleged to have diluted own SPS standards [S4] |
| SKM full form | Samyukt Kisan Morcha — umbrella body of farmers' organisations |
| Parliamentary scrutiny | Agreement not placed before Indian Parliament (SKM objection); being debated in European Parliament [S4] |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- India gains preferential access for >99% of exports by value to the EU — one of the world's largest single markets (~$17 trillion GDP). [S1]
- Tariff elimination on 96.6% of EU goods entering India exposes domestic manufacturers and small farmers to European corporate competition. [S4]
- SKM warns of price crashes in domestic agricultural markets, citing precedent of the pulses and edible oils crises triggered by earlier import liberalisation. [S4]
- Concessions on processed food (wine, beer, spirits, pasta, chocolate, biscuits) threaten value-added agro-processing industries that employ rural labour.
Social
- Small and marginal farmers — India's agrarian majority — face income erosion if imported processed foods displace domestic equivalents. [S4]
- SKM draws parallel with 2020–21 farm laws agitation, signalling potential mass mobilisation; farmer identity politics remains a significant electoral force.
- Employment in agro-processing, dairy, poultry and food manufacturing — sectors employing millions of low-skill rural workers — faces structural disruption.
Geopolitical / Strategic
- India–EU relationship framed under the "Comprehensive Strategic Partnership" (2020) and the "Towards 2030: Joint India–EU Comprehensive Strategic Agenda". [S3]
- FTA is partly driven by de-risking supply chains post-COVID and post-Ukraine, with EU seeking to reduce dependence on China.
- India-US FTA discussions are running in parallel; SKM has warned of "bigger protests than 2020–21" if a US FTA is signed without parliamentary scrutiny. [S5]
- SPS asymmetry: EU's retention of high phytosanitary barriers while India reduces its own represents a structural trade imbalance favouring EU exports.
Legal / Constitutional
- India's FTAs are negotiated under executive authority (Article 53 / 73) and do not require ratification by Parliament — unlike the EU, which requires European Parliament approval.
- SKM's demand for parliamentary debate before ratification raises the question of whether FTAs should require legislative sanction — a recurring constitutional discourse.
- WTO compatibility: All tariff concessions must conform to GATT Article XXIV (requires substantially all trade to be covered). [S6]
Ethical / Governance
- Democratic deficit: Absence of parliamentary oversight on trade agreements that affect millions of farmers is a governance concern flagged by civil society.
- SPS double standard: India allegedly weakening its own food safety standards to ease EU market entry while EU retains barriers against Indian agricultural exports — asymmetric and arguably exploitative. [S4]
- Piyush Goyal described as having "yielded to EU pressure" on SPS — SKM frames this as failure of negotiating mandate. [S4]
Administrative
- Implementing challenge: Customs restructuring for thousands of tariff lines, retraining of food safety officials under revised SPS framework.
- State-level impact: States with significant olive oil substitutes (Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh — groundnut; Tamil Nadu — sesame) and wine (Maharashtra — grape) face distinct adjustment pressures.
- Monitoring of safeguard clauses (if any) and rules of origin will require inter-ministerial coordination between Commerce, Agriculture, and Food Processing Ministries.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 2024: India and EU reaffirm commitment to conclude "ambitious FTA by end of 2025." [S2]
- Late 2025: EU negotiating team arrives in New Delhi for intensive final-round talks. [S3]
- January 2026: India–EU FTA negotiations formally concluded; PIB announces "strategic breakthrough." [S1]
- January 30, 2026: SKM issues statement terming FTA a "blueprint for economic colonisation," announces nationwide campaign. [S4]
- January 31, 2026: News of SKM campaign campaign against India–EU FTA reported in national press. [S4]
- Ongoing (2026): SKM simultaneously warns Centre against India–US FTA, threatening protests larger than 2020–21 agitation. [S5]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- The India–EU FTA negotiations were formally concluded in January 2026, after being relaunched in June 2022. [S1]
- India's FTA with EU secures preferential access for more than 99% of Indian exports by trade value to the EU market. [S1]
- The agreement eliminates tariffs on 96.6% of EU goods entering India. [S4]
- Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM) is the umbrella body of Indian farmers' organisations that opposed the FTA. [S4]
- SKM termed the India–EU FTA a "blueprint for economic colonisation." [S4]
- India agreed to reduce wine import duty from 150% to 20–30% and spirits from 150% to 40% under the FTA. [S4]
- Beer import duty to be reduced from 110% to 50%; sausages/meat preparations from 110% to 50%. [S4]
- Olive oil, margarine, vegetable oils, fruit juices, and non-alcoholic beer — complete elimination of import duty agreed by India. [S4]
- Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) standards asymmetry: EU retains barriers on Indian agri-exports; India allegedly diluted own SPS standards. [S4]
- The India–EU FTA is being debated in the European Parliament but was not placed before the Indian Parliament (SKM objection). [S4]
- Sensitive sectors protected by India: Dairy, cereals, poultry, soymeal, certain fruits and vegetables. [S1]
- The original negotiation track (since 2007) was called the Broad-based Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA). [Background]
- Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal was named by SKM as having yielded to EU pressure in SPS negotiations. [S4]
- India–EU Comprehensive Strategic Partnership was established in 2020. [S3]
- GATT Article XXIV governs WTO-compatibility requirements for bilateral FTAs (requires "substantially all trade" coverage). [S6]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper(s): - GS-II: International Relations — India's bilateral/multilateral trade agreements; India–EU strategic partnership. - GS-III: Indian Economy — Trade policy, food security, agriculture, employment; impact of FTAs on domestic industry.
Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India's interests; WTO and related issues. - GS-III: Food security; effects of liberalisation on the economy; agriculture — issues and related constraints; changes in industrial policy and their effects on industrial growth.
Plausible Mains Questions:
-
"Free trade agreements, while expanding market access, often impose asymmetric costs on developing country agriculture. Critically examine this contention in the context of the India–EU Free Trade Agreement." (GS-III, 15 marks)
-
"India's trade agreements are concluded under executive authority without mandatory parliamentary ratification. Discuss the implications of this practice for democratic governance and farmers' rights." (GS-II, 10 marks)
-
"The Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) standards regime in bilateral trade agreements disproportionately disadvantages agricultural exporters from the Global South. Analyse with reference to India's negotiations with the EU." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
- WTO & SPS Agreement — The SPS Agreement under WTO governs the very standards asymmetry at the core of SKM's objection.
- India–UK FTA — Concluded in 2025 after similar long negotiations; useful comparative case on agriculture and whisky/dairy concessions.
- India–UAE CEPA (2022) — First major post-COVID FTA concluded by India; template for subsequent deals.
- Farm Laws (2020–21) & their Repeal — SKM's 2020–21 agitation is the direct predecessor movement; understanding it contextualises current mobilisation.
- Food Security in India (PDS, MSP, NFSA 2013) — FTA concessions on food imports interact directly with food security architecture.
- India's FTA History (ASEAN, SAFTA, RCEP withdrawal) — India withdrew from RCEP (2019) citing similar agriculture fears; establishes pattern of domestic political economy constraints on FTAs.
- India–EU Strategic Partnership & Connectivity — The FTA sits within the broader India–EU Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (2020) and the EU Indo-Pacific Strategy.
- GATT Article XXIV / WTO Compatibility of FTAs — Legal framework any UPSC aspirant must know for trade-related Mains answers.
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- BTIA vs. FTA naming confusion: The 2007-vintage negotiation was called the BTIA (Broad-based Trade and Investment Agreement); the 2026 concluded deal is referred to as the India–EU FTA/Trade and Investment Agreement — same track, new nomenclature. Do not treat them as separate agreements.
- Confusing "protected" vs. "opened" sectors: Government communications emphasise dairy, cereals, poultry as protected; SKM criticism focuses on processed food and edible oils as opened — both are true simultaneously. Aspirants often conflate one for the other.
- SPS direction: EU retains SPS barriers against Indian exports; India reduced its own SPS standards — not the reverse. A common inversion error.
- Parliamentary ratification: India does not require parliamentary ratification for FTAs (executive authority under Article 73); the EU does (European Parliament vote). Aspirants frequently assume India follows the same process.
- SKM ≠ SKM (Non-Political): The Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM) that led 2020–21 protests later split; one faction is SKM (Non-Political). The January 2026 FTA statement is from the original SKM umbrella body. Do not confuse factions in a question about institutional standing.
11. Sources
- [S1] India–EU Free Trade Agreement Concluded: A Strategic Breakthrough — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2219065 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] India and EU Reaffirm Commitment to Conclude Ambitious FTA by End of 2025 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2126025 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] India–EU FTA Discussions Intensify as EU Negotiators Arrive in New Delhi — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2186073 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] Farmers' Body Set to Campaign Against India–EU Trade Deal — The Hindu / The Hindu BusinessLine, January 31, 2026 (article excerpt supplied as primary source) — (Tier 4)
- [S5] SKM Warns Centre Against India–US FTA, Calls for Nationwide Protests — https://theprint.in/india/skm-warns-centre-against-india-us-fta-calls-for-nationwide-protests-if-pact-signed/2962767/ — (Tier 4)
- [S6] WTO — GATT Article XXIV (Regional Trade Agreements) — https://www.wto.org — (Tier 2, standard WTO framework reference)