India, EU close in on FTA as negotiations conclude


India–EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA): Negotiations Concluded — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2004 India–EU Strategic Partnership launched
2006 Agreement to launch BTIA negotiations
28 June 2007 Formal BTIA negotiations begin in Brussels
2008–09 First Trade Sustainability Impact Assessment (SIA) carried out
2013 Negotiations suspended — divergences on automobiles, agriculture, pharma, services, public procurement
17 June 2022 Negotiations relaunched by EU; separate tracks launched for Investment Protection Agreement (IPA) and Geographical Indications (GI) Agreement [S5]
24–27 January 2026 Negotiations concluded; political announcement at India–EU Summit, New Delhi [S3][S4]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. India–EU FTA negotiations were formally concluded on 27 January 2026 — at the India–EU Summit in New Delhi. [S3]
  2. The original agreement was called BTIA (Broad-Based Trade and Investment Agreement), not "FTA", when first launched in 2007. [S4]
  3. BTIA negotiations were suspended in 2013 and relaunched on 17 June 2022. [S4][S5]
  4. India's nodal ministry for FTA negotiations: Ministry of Commerce & Industry (Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal announced conclusion). [S3]
  5. The FTA will reduce tariffs on 99% of Indian exports to the EU and 97%+ of EU exports to India. [S1]
  6. India's automobile import tariff on EU cars will be reduced from 110% to as low as 10% under the FTA. [S1]
  7. The India–EU FTA covers approximately 25% of world GDP and 2 billion consumers. [S1]
  8. Three separate tracks launched in 2022: FTA + Investment Protection Agreement (IPA) + GI Agreement. [S5]
  9. EU leaders attending Republic Day 2026: Ursula von der Leyen (Commission President) and Antonio Costa (Council President). [S3]
  10. Final text is pending "legal scrubbing" — formal signing expected by end of 2026. [S1][S3]
  11. The deal is informally called the "Mother of All Deals" in trade diplomacy circles. [S2]
  12. Negotiations took approximately 19 years (2007–2026) including the suspension period. [S4]
  13. India opted out of RCEP in 2019 — making the EU FTA India's most ambitious large-bloc trade deal. [S2]
  14. India–UAE CEPA (Feb 2022) and India–Australia ECTA (April 2022) were concluded before the EU FTA, representing India's FTA revival. [S2]
  15. The companion Security & Defence Partnership signed at the same summit signals the FTA is part of a broader strategic relationship. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

Parameter Detail
GS Paper GS-II (International Relations, Bilateral Agreements); GS-III (Indian Economy, Trade Policy)
Syllabus heading GS-II: Effect of policies and politics of developed countries on India's interests; Bilateral, regional and global groupings. GS-III: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment; Effects of liberalisation on the economy.

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The conclusion of the India–EU Free Trade Agreement (2026) marks a strategic inflection point in India's trade diplomacy. Critically analyse its potential benefits and challenges for India." (GS-II/III, 15 marks) 2. "India's refusal to join RCEP (2019) and its simultaneous pursuit of bilateral FTAs with UAE, Australia, and the EU reflect a calibrated trade strategy. Examine." (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "Discuss the significance of the Investment Protection Agreement (IPA) and GI Agreement concluded alongside the India–EU FTA, in light of India's revised model Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) framework." (GS-II/III, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
India–UAE CEPA (2022) India's first post-Covid FTA; benchmarks India's new FTA template
India–Australia ECTA (2022) Part of same FTA revival wave; compare tariff architecture
RCEP and India's exit (2019) Contrast with EU FTA approach; highlights India's FTA selectivity
India's Model BIT (2016) Governs IPA with EU; why India renegotiated all old BITs
WTO Most-Favoured-Nation (MFN) obligations FTAs are GATT Article XXIV exceptions; must cover "substantially all trade"
EU Strategic Autonomy / De-risking from China Geopolitical driver behind EU urgency to seal India FTA
India–EU Strategic Partnership (2004) Parent diplomatic framework within which FTA negotiations sit
Geographical Indications Act, 1999 Legal interface with GI Agreement component of the deal

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. BTIA ≠ FTA (terminology trap): The original 2007 agreement was called BTIA; it was relaunched in 2022 as an FTA. Do not conflate names or dates — the 2007 launch was BTIA, the 2022 relaunch used the FTA label.
  2. "Concluded" ≠ "Signed" ≠ "In Force": As of January 2026, the deal is only politically concluded; signing is expected by end-2026; entry into force requires full ratification (years away). Many aspirants conflate these stages.
  3. Wrong suspension year: BTIA was suspended in 2013, not 2015 or 2016 as sometimes stated in prep material.
  4. Nodal ministry confusion: FTA negotiations are handled by Ministry of Commerce & Industry, NOT the Ministry of External Affairs (though MEA coordinates the diplomatic track).
  5. RCEP confusion: India left RCEP negotiations in November 2019 (not signed); do not mix this with the EU FTA as if India is anti-FTA — India is selectively pro-FTA.
  6. Automobile tariff direction: EU cars face Indian tariff of 110% (being reduced); this is NOT an EU tariff on Indian goods — aspirants sometimes flip the direction.

11. Sources