Great deal of enthusiasm for EU deal; to be implemented this year, says Piyush Goyal


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


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Origin & Rationale: - Negotiations for a Broad-Based Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA) launched in 2007, following the EU–India Strategic Partnership of 2004 and a 2006 agreement to negotiate. [S4] - The EU is one of India's largest trading partners; strategic interest in reducing tariff and non-tariff barriers predates the WTO's Doha impasse.

Key Milestones (Chronological):

Year Milestone
2004 India–EU Strategic Partnership established
2006 Both sides agree to negotiate a BTIA
2007 BTIA negotiations formally launched
2013 Negotiations effectively suspended — stalled on tariffs, services, IPR, agriculture, investment
2013–2021 No active negotiations; both sides reassess strategies
May 2021 PM Modi + EU leaders agree to relaunch negotiations; three separate tracks proposed
17 June 2022 Formal relaunch of FTA negotiations; separate tracks for Investment Protection Agreement and GI Agreement also launched [S4]
Feb 2025 Modi–von der Leyen talks; target set to conclude by end-2025 [S2][S3]
Nov 2025 Negotiation round held in New Delhi (3–7 November 2025) [S3]
27 Jan 2026 FTA concluded — "mother of all trade deals" declared [S1]
31 Jan 2026 Goyal confirms implementation in 2026; AI translation discussed [S5]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative

Historical

Environmental


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. The India–EU FTA was concluded on 27 January 2026, after negotiations relaunched formally on 17 June 2022. [S1]
  2. The earlier negotiation framework was called the Broad-Based Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA), originally launched in 2007. [S4]
  3. BTIA negotiations were suspended in 2013 and remained dormant until 2021–22. [S4]
  4. Bilateral India–EU goods trade in 2024–25: USD 136.54 billion (₹11.5 lakh crore). [S1]
  5. The FTA provides market access for more than 99% of India's export by trade value. [S1]
  6. Duties are lowered/eliminated on over 90% of goods under the deal. [S4]
  7. The EU has 27 member states; ratification requires translation into 24 European languages. [S5]
  8. AI-assisted translation of the FTA text is being proposed to speed up ratification — stated by Piyush Goyal in January 2026. [S5]
  9. Three parallel negotiation tracks since 2022: (i) FTA, (ii) Investment Protection Agreement, (iii) GI Agreement. [S4]
  10. India's textile exports to EU: ~USD 7 billion vs Bangladesh's USD 30 billion (0% duty). [S5]
  11. Implementing ministry (India): Ministry of Commerce and Industry. [S5]
  12. France was cited as "at the forefront" of demanding quick operationalisation of the India–EU FTA. [S5]
  13. India exited RCEP in November 2019; Goyal in Jan 2026 called rejoining RCEP "the most harmful suggestion." [S5]
  14. The EU–Mercosur FTA (25+ years in negotiation) was cited by Goyal as the model India does NOT want to replicate. [S5]
  15. The India–EU Strategic Partnership was established in 2004; BTIA negotiations formally launched in 2007. [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II India's bilateral relations; International organisations; Trade agreements
GS-III Indian economy; Trade and balance of payments; Effects of liberalisation on the economy; Industrial growth

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The India–EU FTA concluded in January 2026 has been described as the 'mother of all trade deals.' Critically analyse its potential economic and strategic implications for India." (GS-III / GS-II)

  2. "India's decision to exit RCEP in 2019 and now conclude a comprehensive FTA with the EU reflects a fundamental shift in its trade diplomacy. Comment." (GS-II)

  3. "What were the key sticking points that stalled the India–EU BTIA between 2013 and 2022, and how were they resolved? What lessons does this offer for India's FTA strategy?" (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
RCEP (Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership) India's explicit rejection of RCEP is the counterpoint to the EU FTA strategy
India–UK FTA Negotiated in parallel; similar strategic rationale of western-market access
Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) EU's CBAM affects Indian exports in FTA-covered sectors; critical GS-III link
India–UAE CEPA India's first post-pandemic CEPA (2022); template for rapid FTA conclusion
WTO and Multilateral Trading System Context for why bilateral FTAs are proliferating; Doha Round collapse
Geographical Indications (GIs) in India A separate India–EU GI Agreement is part of the same negotiating package
Foreign Trade (Development and Regulation) Act, 1992 Statutory basis for India's trade agreements and tariff concessions
EU's Indo-Pacific Strategy Broader geopolitical context of deepening India–EU engagement

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. BTIA ≠ FTA (name confusion): The original 2007–2013 negotiation was called BTIA; the 2022–2026 relaunched deal is styled simply as the India–EU FTA. Do not conflate or use interchangeably in an exam answer.

  2. Wrong year for conclusion: Aspirants confuse the relaunch year (2022) with the conclusion year (2026). The deal was concluded on 27 January 2026, not in 2022 or 2025.

  3. Ministry confusion: The nodal ministry is Commerce and Industry (Piyush Goyal), not the Ministry of External Affairs (though MEA handles the diplomatic track).

  4. RCEP confusion: India was a negotiating member of RCEP but exited in November 2019 before it was signed. Some aspirants incorrectly state India never participated in RCEP talks.

  5. Ratification process misunderstood: In the EU, a comprehensive ("mixed") FTA covering investment requires ratification by all 27 national parliaments — not just the European Parliament. This is why ratification can take years, and why AI-translation is being urgently explored.

  6. Trade figures: Do not confuse the goods trade figure (USD 136.54 billion, 2024–25) with overall bilateral (goods + services) trade figures, which are higher.


11. Sources