April 30, 2026
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European Union, India reach landmark trade deal after twenty years of intermittent talks

Tayari News

After two decades of intermittent talks, the European Union and India have reached a landmark trade deal as a way of deepening ties amid strains with the United States.

“We did it, we delivered the mother of all deals,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said at a media briefing in Delhi. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi called the pact “historic”.

The new deal gives a head way for free trade of goods between the bloc of 27 European states and India, which is the world’s most populous country, which together make up nearly 25% of global gross domestic product and a market of two billion people.

The deal will see a number of huge tariff cuts across a range of goods and services, and a joint security partnership.

The agreement took effect when Von der Leyen and European Council President António Costa are in Delhi, where they met Modi at a two-pronged summit.

According to the European Commission, the deal would remove tariffs on most exports of chemicals, machinery and electrical equipment, as well as aircraft and spacecraft, following phased reductions. Significantly, duties on motor vehicles, currently as high as 110%, would be cut to 10% under a quota of 250,000 vehicles. That is six times larger than the 37,000-unit quota India granted to the UK in a deal signed last July, Bloomberg reported.

India will also cut tariffs on wine, beer and olive oil from the EU. Authorities in Brussels, said the agreement would support investment flows, improve access to European markets and deepen supply-chain integration.

According to India, almost all of its exports will get “preferential access” into the EU, with textiles, leather, marine products, handicrafts, gems and jewellery set to see a reduction or elimination of tariffs.

While commodities such as tea, coffee, spices and processed foods will benefit from the agreement, India “has prudently safeguarded sensitive sectors, including dairy, cereals, poultry, soy meal, certain fruits and vegetables, balancing export growth with domestic priorities”, it said.

Delhi and Brussels have also agreed on a mobility framework that eases restrictions for professionals to travel between India and the EU in the short term.

“This is India’s biggest free trade agreement,” Modi said. “It will make access to European markets easier for India’s farmers and small business. It will also boost manufacturing and services sectors. It will boost innovative partnerships.”

The trade deal comes as both India and the EU contend with economic and geopolitical pressure from the US.

Delhi is grappling with 50% tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump last year amid talks aimed at securing a trade deal between India and the US that are still dragging on.

Last week, Trump threatened to escalate his trade war with European allies for opposing a US takeover of Greenland, before backing off. That larger geopolitical context was evident in statements made by leaders.

On Tuesday, von der Leyen said: “This is the tale of two giants – the world’s second and fourth largest economies. Two giants which chose partnership in a true win-win fashion.

A strong message that co-operation is the best answer to global challenges.”

But some analysts also predict challenges – especially when it comes to compliance with EU regulations and standards. “The EU has very strict regulations, for instance, on environment. It is one of the leaders when it comes to carbon offsetting mechanisms,” says economist Mitali Nikore.

She says India’s manufacturing sector “might not be fully prepared” for this and that it is critical that it takes steps to fix this.

“It is an opportunity more than a challenge,” she says.

For the EU, the deal is aimed at providing some certainty, even security, in a time of economic coercion and global turbulence.

Germany and France are projected to be among the biggest beneficiaries even if this isn’t the “super maximally ambitious” version of a trade deal once envisioned, says Andrew Small, Asia director at the European Council on Foreign Relations.

The two sides are working on a draft security and defence partnership covering areas such as maritime security, cyber threats and defence dialogue, Reuters news agency reported.

The EU is India’s largest trading partner in goods, with bilateral merchandise trade reaching $136bn (£99.4bn) in 2024-25, nearly doubling over a decade.

Talks for a deal started in 2007 but stalled in 2013 over roadblocks in market access and regulatory demands. Discussions were formally restarted in July 2022.

-BBC-

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