‘Resolution of steel, CBAM sticking points in India-U.K. trade pact’


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2022 India–UK FTA negotiations formally launched (Jan); first round of talks
2024 Multiple rounds stall over immigration, whisky tariffs, professional services
24 Jul 2025 India–UK CETA signed — landmark agreement covering goods, services, investment, mobility
Jan 2026 Implementation preparations begin; steel safeguard and CBAM flagged as hurdles
1 Jul 2026 UK new steel safeguard quota regime takes effect (60% cut in tariff-free volumes)
Jan 2027 UK CBAM expected to formally come into force

4. Core Static Facts

India–UK CETA - Full name: Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement - Signed: 24 July 2025 - Scope: goods, services, investment, government procurement, mobility - Nodal ministry (India): Ministry of Commerce & Industry - Indian minister handling: Piyush Goyal

UK Steel Safeguard - From 1 July 2026: tariff-free quota volumes reduced by 60% - Over-quota tariff: 50% - Applies to steel products that can be manufactured domestically in the UK - Earlier mechanism: import quotas (less restrictive); new step reduces them sharply [S4]

UK CBAM - Sectors covered: iron, steel, aluminium, fertilisers, hydrogen, ceramics, glass, cement [S1] - Expected implementation: January 2027 - Tariff range: 14–24% of import value (upon full phase-out of free allowances under UK Emissions Trading System/ETS) [S1] - CETA text: no explicit CBAM carve-out or exemption for India [S2] - India–UK agreement: India retains "freedom to rebalance" trade concessions if CBAM negates FTA benefits [S3]

India's Trade Exposure - India's iron & steel exports to UK (2025-26): USD 893.4 million [S1] - Total India merchandise exports to UK (2025-26): ~USD 13.4 billion [S1] - Exports potentially impacted by UK CBAM: ~USD 775 million [S2]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India–UK CETA was signed on 24 July 2025.
  2. The agreement's full name is Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) — not "FTA" in official parlance.
  3. From 1 July 2026, UK will cut tariff-free steel import quotas by 60%; over-quota imports attract 50% tariff.
  4. UK CBAM covers: iron, steel, aluminium, fertilisers, hydrogen, ceramics, glass, cement.
  5. UK CBAM formal implementation is targeted for January 2027.
  6. UK is the second economy (after the EU) to implement a CBAM.
  7. UK CBAM levy range: 14–24% of import value upon full phase-out of ETS free allowances.
  8. India's iron & steel exports to the UK were valued at USD 893.4 million in 2025-26.
  9. Total India merchandise exports to UK (2025-26): approximately USD 13.4 billion.
  10. Exports potentially impacted by UK CBAM: ~USD 775 million.
  11. CETA text contains no explicit CBAM exemption or carve-out for India.
  12. India secured a "freedom to rebalance" clause if CBAM negates CETA benefits — not a hard exemption.
  13. UK Minister of State for Trade Policy who visited India on June 2, 2026: Chris Bryant.
  14. Indian minister counterpart: Piyush Goyal (Commerce & Industry).
  15. The UK's earlier steel safeguard mechanism consisted of import quotas — the 2026 revision sharply reduces these quotas.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping: - GS-II: India's foreign policy; bilateral trade agreements; international relations. - GS-III: Indian economy; external trade; industrial policy; environmental economics.

Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests. - GS-III: Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways; Investment models; Effects of liberalisation on the economy. - GS-III: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment (CBAM's climate rationale).

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The India–UK CETA has been signed but its implementation faces significant non-tariff barriers. Examine the issues of the UK's steel safeguard measure and Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) and their implications for India's trade interests." 2. "Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanisms (CBAMs) implemented by developed economies are often critiqued as 'green protectionism.' Analyse this contention with reference to the India–UK CETA and EU–India FTA negotiations." 3. "Evaluate India's trade negotiating strategy in light of the India–UK CETA, particularly its failure to secure a CBAM carve-out and the emerging steel safeguard dispute."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
EU CBAM (Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism) The EU precedent (Oct 2023 onwards) that the UK CBAM is modelled on; also relevant to India–EU FTA talks
India–EU Free Trade Agreement (negotiations) Parallel FTA where CBAM and steel/auto tariffs are similarly contested
WTO Agreement on Safeguards Legal framework governing UK's steel quota measure and India's right to rebalance
India's Perform Achieve and Trade (PAT) scheme / Carbon Market India's domestic carbon pricing framework, relevant to CBAM equivalence arguments
GATT Article XX (General Exceptions) WTO provision under which CBAM legality is debated
India's Steel Sector Structure, blast-furnace intensity, export profile — the industrial base facing the squeeze
UK Emissions Trading System (ETS) The domestic scheme whose free allowance phase-out drives CBAM escalation
India–Oman, India–GCC FTAs Part of India's concurrent FTA push in 2025; compare negotiating outcomes

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. CETA ≠ Canada's CETA: The acronym "CETA" is used for both the EU–Canada agreement and India's agreement with the UK. Do not conflate them — India's CETA is a bilateral pact with the United Kingdom, signed July 2025.
  2. CBAM operational date: The UK CBAM is targeted for January 2027 — not 2026. The 2026 event is the steel safeguard quota cut (effective 1 July 2026).
  3. "Freedom to rebalance" ≠ automatic tariff exemption: India did not obtain a CBAM exemption; it secured only a rebalancing right — a weaker protection.
  4. Ministry confusion: The nodal ministry for trade negotiations is Ministry of Commerce & Industry, not the Ministry of External Affairs (which handles diplomatic relations, not trade deals per se).
  5. 60% quota cut refers to the reduction in quota volumes, not a 60% tariff. The tariff imposed on above-quota imports is a separate 50% levy.

11. Sources