910
2 months ago
EU, India clinch historic free trade deal

Summary
The deal between Brussels and New Delhi aims to forge a market of two billion people and nearly a quarter of global GDP, according to the European Commission.
This blog is now closed. Below is a roundup of the major developments during the EU-India summit in New Delhi on Tuesday, January 27, 2026:
The world's most populous country, India, and the 27-nation European Union announced on Tuesday that they have reached a free trade agreement to deepen economic and strategic ties.
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen described the deal as the "mother of all deals" that could affect as many as 2 billion people.
The deal is expected to double EU exports to India by 2032 by eliminating or reducing tariffs on 96.6% of EU goods entering the Asian nation, the European Commission said. The accord will bring down especially high import taxes for European wine and cars.
In turn, the EU will cut tariffs on 99.5% of goods imported from India over seven years. Provided that the EU Parliament ratifies the new trade deal, a formal signing of the document is expected later this year.
Here are some key moments on social media that caught our attention this morning:
When European Council President Antonio Costa said he has Overseas Indian Citizenship:
When European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced a new EU office to facilitate mobility for skilled Indian workers and students:
Indian media outlets widely took note of Ursula von der Leyen's Indo-Western outfit at the Republic Day parade yesterday:
India and the EU also agreed on a framework for deeper defense and security cooperation, and a separate pact aimed at easing mobility for skilled workers and students, signaling their partnership extends beyond commerce.
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said that the pact also established an annual security and defense dialogue, with the first meeting to take place this month.
"As the global order shifts, the EU will continue to deepen its diplomatic and economic ties across the world. Strong partnerships multiply our strength," she said.
The negotiations for the India-EU trade deal got a new impetus last year after US President Donald Trump put pressure on both India and the 27-member bloc with a string of ultimatums with the aim of achieving both trade and non-trade objectives.
The trade deal is expected to double EU goods exports to India by 2032 by eliminating or reducing tariffs on 96.6% of EU goods exports to India, according to a European Commission press release on Tuesday.
Here are some food products that stand to benefit:
India and the EU announced they had reached an agreement earlier today, but signing the deal would take place after legal vetting, expected to take about six months. The European Parliament will then ratify the deal.
Here's how the agreement stands to benefit the EU:
The friendship between top officials from both the Indian delegation and the EU delegation was apparent even before the bosses — European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, European Council President Antonio Costa and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi — arrived at the Kailash Hall in Hyderabad House.
EU's foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas was seen sharing a moment of laughter with Indian Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar and the familiarity appeared indicative of all the hard work and multiple rounds of negotiations that they have held over the course of the last year, a year where it became clear that there was a need for urgency. The chemistry in the room was unmistakable.
I was struck by Ursula von der Leyen's deep knowledge of Indian culture — evident in her reference to auspicious Hindu festivals such as Makar Sankranti and Uttarayan.
She said, "It is the beginning of Uttarayan, the sun's northward journey. From darkness to light. From stillness to growth. From what was to what can be. That is what makes our Summit so unique and timely. The time is ripe for renewal. For fresh momentum. And for opening a new chapter in EU-India friendship. And this is exactly what we have achieved today, together."
Also noteworthy was von der Leyen's choice of attire as she attended the Republic Day parade. She wore an Indo-Western attire called an achkan, a long buttoned coat, with golden brocade.
Modi invoked Antonio Costa's Indian heritage and told the room full of journalists and delegates that he is famously known as Lisbon's Gandhi. Antonio has Indian roots. His father's family comes from Goa in India. And that would have surely helped when the two sides were negotiating hard to make this deal a reality.
Calling the newly announced EU-India free trade agreement a "truly big moment," former Indian ambassador to Switzerland and Liechtenstein, Sanjay Bhattacharyya, said the deal marks a turning point in economic relations between the two sides after years of difficult negotiations.
"The history of talks was long and tough. There was a time when Europe was focused more on China and multilateral trade, and India didn’t have much leverage," he told DW.
"What has changed is the realization on both sides that India is now a large, fast-growing market, and China's economic attraction has clearly dipped."
"For India, market access has always been the missing piece in our relationship with Europe. This agreement finally corrects that."
Rather than pointing to a single winning sector, Bhattacharyya stressed the deal will create a dynamic economic environment.
"Today it may benefit textiles, pharmaceuticals or agriculture. Tomorrow it could be semiconductors and critical materials," he said.
He added that increased trade will naturally bring a wave of European investment into India. "Investment always follows trade," he said.
Bhattacharyya also framed the agreement as part of a broader geopolitical realignment.
"This isn’t just about commerce, it’s about connectivity," he said, pointing to initiatives linking India, the Middle East and Europe, as well as growing EU engagement in the Indo-Pacific.
"When two billion people and nearly a quarter of global GDP come together, it has its own strategic momentum," he said.
With global trade negotiations at the WTO largely frozen, Bhattacharyya said bilateral and regional deals have become essential.
"Multilateralism is in crisis, the WTO is practically in a coma," he said, adding, "So India and the EU have turned to bilateral deals to ensure growth, development and supply-chain resilience."
He argues that Europe’s economic slowdown and India's need for expanding markets make such partnerships increasingly necessary.
The India-EU accord announced earlier this morning would open up India's vast and highly guarded market, with New Delhi slashing tariffs on cars to 10% over five years from as high as 110%, according to an EU statement.
European carmakers like Volkswagen, Renault, and Stellantis, as well as luxury players Mercedes-Benz and BMW, are set to benefit because they'll be able to sell imported cars for a cheaper price.
But the automakers still face a tough market dominated by homegrown firms and compact Japanese "kei" cars — pint-sized, affordable vehicles smaller than a Mini Cooper.
"It's a start. When we talk about exports from Europe, it's only about premium cars. For the volume sector it is difficult," said Stefan Bratzel of German auto research group CAM, who said Suzuki and Hyundai had better understood the market.
India is the world's third-largest car market by sales after US and China, but its domestic auto industry has been one of the most protected.
New Delhi currently levies tariffs of 70% and 110% on imported cars, a level often criticized by executives, including Tesla chief Elon Musk.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on social media that India and the EU have "concluded the mother of all deals."
"We have created a free trade zone of two billion people, with both sides set to benefit," she said in New Delhi.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the agreement would strengthen India's manufacturing and services sector and boost investor confidence in the country.
Germany's finance minister said on Tuesday that the trade deal reached by the European Union and India could accelerate economic growth and deepen strategic ties.
"This agreement creates new opportunities for growth and good jobs — in Europe and India alike — while deepening the strategic partnership with the world's largest democracy," Vice Chancellor and Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil said in a statement.
The European Union (EU) and India have agreed upon a landmark free trade agreement which will cut or eliminate tariffs on almost 97 percent of European exports, saving up to 4 billion euros ($4.75 billion) annually in duties, the 27-nation bloc said.
Under the agreement, India will grant the EU tariff reductions no other trading partner has received. It also addressed climate action, environmental protection, labor rights and women’s empowerment.
Here are some more details of the deal, which is expected to be formally signed later this year after legal vetting:
As global geopolitics shift rapidly, the EU is looking beyond traditional partners, with Commission President Ursula von der Leyen set to sign a landmark trade deal with India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday.
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
The partnership between India and the European Union (EU) is increasingly driven by global trade uncertainty, linked to US tariff policies, and shifting power dynamics, an expert told DW.
Biswajit Dhar, Distinguished Professor at the Council for Social Development in New Delhi, said the past year of disruption in international commerce has underscored the need for predictable and stable trading partners.
"Global trade rules have been thrown up into the air," Dhar said, adding, "in this scenario it became important for India and the EU to turn to each other, not only to safeguard bilateral trade, but to expand it."
He urged New Delhi and Brussels to take a leadership role in reviving multilateral institutions such as the World Trade Organization.
Further, emphasizing cooperation with other like-minded countries, he said, "the multilateral system still offers the best long-term guarantee for fair and predictable trade".
The EU is already India's largest trading partner and offers a more consistent policy environment than Washington, where shifting tariff decisions have raised costs and risks.
"Pressure from the US has effectively pushed countries into these kinds of agreements, Dhar explained. "Trading with the US has become unpredictable and difficult, which is why India and the EU finally moved faster after years of stalled negotiations."
The two sides had been in talks for nearly two decades before recent progress.
And despite the political differences, especially India’s relationship with Russia, Dhar says, "India and EU have not targeted each other and tried to extract short-term benefits. In fact, these geopolitical issues are a matter of long-term strategy of different countries."
He said that Europe understands where India is coming from. And so, the EU would ultimately want India to decrease its dependence on Russia. But India would need time to do that, if at all.
Dhar finds that the EU has adopted a tolerant approach to all these issues compared to the US, which, according to him, "has been actually hammering away all the time".
While optimistic about the agreement’s potential, Dhar cautioned that future disagreements could emerge over environmental standards and EU’s carbon border tax (CBAM), which may affect some Indian industries.
"Market access will improve on both sides," he said, "but how measures on carbon emissions, labor standards and sustainability are implemented will determine how smoothly this partnership develops."
Indian Prime Minster Narendra Modi announced the finalization of a landmark free trade agreement on Tuesday with the EU, saying it will being major opportunities to billions of people in India.
"Yesterday, a big agreement was signed between the European Union and India," Modi said. "People around the world are calling this the mother of all deals. This agreement will bring major opportunities for the 1.4 billion people of India and the millions of people in Europe," he said.
The free trade agreement came after nearly two decades of negotiations as both sides seek to hedge against rising global trade tensions.
Modi and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen are expected to make a joint announcement along with the details of the deal, later on Tuesday.
The deal is expected to be formally signed later this year by other EU bodies.
After nearly two decades of stalled negotiations, the India-EU free trade agreement has gained fresh momentum, driven as much by shifting geopolitics as by policy compromises on both sides, according to Gulshan Sachdeva, professor and Jean Monnet Chair at the Centre for European Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University.
"The sudden geopolitical circumstances have clearly facilitated the push to conclude the deal now," Sachdeva said.
Talks began in 2007, stalled in 2013 over differing ambitions, and did not resume until 2022. The EU pushed for a deep, comprehensive agreement, while India preferred a gradual approach, he said.
Sachdeva said recent trade deals India signed with countries such as the UK and Australia created templates that made compromise easier, particularly on sensitive issues such as labor standards, sustainability, and environmental clauses.
"Earlier India was quite allergic to these issues," Sachdeva said. "Now they've learned how to accommodate them without taking strict legal commitments."
He added that the timing carries strong political symbolism as global trade norms come under strain, especially with the US pushing for a different kind of trading regime around the world.
"When the global trading system is almost in serious trouble, a deal between the EU and a large growing economy like India sends a message that there are still countries that believe in rules-based trade," he said. "It also signals there are alternatives beyond the US."
On domestic concerns in India, Sachdeva said there may be some worry about opening the automobile sector. At the same time, he noted that Indian companies want more opportunities in the financial sector and IT services, which would support mobility and other areas. "So overall, I think it has to be balanced," Sachdeva told DW.
This blog is now closed. Below is a roundup of the major developments during the EU-India summit in New Delhi on Tuesday, January 27, 2026:
The world's most populous country, India, and the 27-nation European Union announced on Tuesday that they have reached a free trade agreement to deepen economic and strategic ties.
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen described the deal as the "mother of all deals" that could affect as many as 2 billion people.
The deal is expected to double EU exports to India by 2032 by eliminating or reducing tariffs on 96.6% of EU goods entering the Asian nation, the European Commission said. The accord will bring down especially high import taxes for European wine and cars.
In turn, the EU will cut tariffs on 99.5% of goods imported from India over seven years. Provided that the EU Parliament ratifies the new trade deal, a formal signing of the document is expected later this year.
Here are some key moments on social media that caught our attention this morning:
When European Council President Antonio Costa said he has Overseas Indian Citizenship:
When European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced a new EU office to facilitate mobility for skilled Indian workers and students:
Indian media outlets widely took note of Ursula von der Leyen's Indo-Western outfit at the Republic Day parade yesterday:
India and the EU also agreed on a framework for deeper defense and security cooperation, and a separate pact aimed at easing mobility for skilled workers and students, signaling their partnership extends beyond commerce.
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said that the pact also established an annual security and defense dialogue, with the first meeting to take place this month.
"As the global order shifts, the EU will continue to deepen its diplomatic and economic ties across the world. Strong partnerships multiply our strength," she said.
The negotiations for the India-EU trade deal got a new impetus last year after US President Donald Trump put pressure on both India and the 27-member bloc with a string of ultimatums with the aim of achieving both trade and non-trade objectives.
The trade deal is expected to double EU goods exports to India by 2032 by eliminating or reducing tariffs on 96.6% of EU goods exports to India, according to a European Commission press release on Tuesday.
Here are some food products that stand to benefit:
India and the EU announced they had reached an agreement earlier today, but signing the deal would take place after legal vetting, expected to take about six months. The European Parliament will then ratify the deal.
Here's how the agreement stands to benefit the EU:
The friendship between top officials from both the Indian delegation and the EU delegation was apparent even before the bosses — European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, European Council President Antonio Costa and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi — arrived at the Kailash Hall in Hyderabad House.
EU's foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas was seen sharing a moment of laughter with Indian Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar and the familiarity appeared indicative of all the hard work and multiple rounds of negotiations that they have held over the course of the last year, a year where it became clear that there was a need for urgency. The chemistry in the room was unmistakable.
I was struck by Ursula von der Leyen's deep knowledge of Indian culture — evident in her reference to auspicious Hindu festivals such as Makar Sankranti and Uttarayan.
She said, "It is the beginning of Uttarayan, the sun's northward journey. From darkness to light. From stillness to growth. From what was to what can be. That is what makes our Summit so unique and timely. The time is ripe for renewal. For fresh momentum. And for opening a new chapter in EU-India friendship. And this is exactly what we have achieved today, together."
Also noteworthy was von der Leyen's choice of attire as she attended the Republic Day parade. She wore an Indo-Western attire called an achkan, a long buttoned coat, with golden brocade.
Modi invoked Antonio Costa's Indian heritage and told the room full of journalists and delegates that he is famously known as Lisbon's Gandhi. Antonio has Indian roots. His father's family comes from Goa in India. And that would have surely helped when the two sides were negotiating hard to make this deal a reality.
Calling the newly announced EU-India free trade agreement a "truly big moment," former Indian ambassador to Switzerland and Liechtenstein, Sanjay Bhattacharyya, said the deal marks a turning point in economic relations between the two sides after years of difficult negotiations.
"The history of talks was long and tough. There was a time when Europe was focused more on China and multilateral trade, and India didn’t have much leverage," he told DW.
"What has changed is the realization on both sides that India is now a large, fast-growing market, and China's economic attraction has clearly dipped."
"For India, market access has always been the missing piece in our relationship with Europe. This agreement finally corrects that."
Rather than pointing to a single winning sector, Bhattacharyya stressed the deal will create a dynamic economic environment.
"Today it may benefit textiles, pharmaceuticals or agriculture. Tomorrow it could be semiconductors and critical materials," he said.
He added that increased trade will naturally bring a wave of European investment into India. "Investment always follows trade," he said.
Bhattacharyya also framed the agreement as part of a broader geopolitical realignment.
"This isn’t just about commerce, it’s about connectivity," he said, pointing to initiatives linking India, the Middle East and Europe, as well as growing EU engagement in the Indo-Pacific.
"When two billion people and nearly a quarter of global GDP come together, it has its own strategic momentum," he said.
With global trade negotiations at the WTO largely frozen, Bhattacharyya said bilateral and regional deals have become essential.
"Multilateralism is in crisis, the WTO is practically in a coma," he said, adding, "So India and the EU have turned to bilateral deals to ensure growth, development and supply-chain resilience."
He argues that Europe’s economic slowdown and India's need for expanding markets make such partnerships increasingly necessary.
The India-EU accord announced earlier this morning would open up India's vast and highly guarded market, with New Delhi slashing tariffs on cars to 10% over five years from as high as 110%, according to an EU statement.
European carmakers like Volkswagen, Renault, and Stellantis, as well as luxury players Mercedes-Benz and BMW, are set to benefit because they'll be able to sell imported cars for a cheaper price.
But the automakers still face a tough market dominated by homegrown firms and compact Japanese "kei" cars — pint-sized, affordable vehicles smaller than a Mini Cooper.
"It's a start. When we talk about exports from Europe, it's only about premium cars. For the volume sector it is difficult," said Stefan Bratzel of German auto research group CAM, who said Suzuki and Hyundai had better understood the market.
India is the world's third-largest car market by sales after US and China, but its domestic auto industry has been one of the most protected.
New Delhi currently levies tariffs of 70% and 110% on imported cars, a level often criticized by executives, including Tesla chief Elon Musk.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on social media that India and the EU have "concluded the mother of all deals."
"We have created a free trade zone of two billion people, with both sides set to benefit," she said in New Delhi.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the agreement would strengthen India's manufacturing and services sector and boost investor confidence in the country.
Germany's finance minister said on Tuesday that the trade deal reached by the European Union and India could accelerate economic growth and deepen strategic ties.
"This agreement creates new opportunities for growth and good jobs — in Europe and India alike — while deepening the strategic partnership with the world's largest democracy," Vice Chancellor and Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil said in a statement.
The European Union (EU) and India have agreed upon a landmark free trade agreement which will cut or eliminate tariffs on almost 97 percent of European exports, saving up to 4 billion euros ($4.75 billion) annually in duties, the 27-nation bloc said.
Under the agreement, India will grant the EU tariff reductions no other trading partner has received. It also addressed climate action, environmental protection, labor rights and women’s empowerment.
Here are some more details of the deal, which is expected to be formally signed later this year after legal vetting:
As global geopolitics shift rapidly, the EU is looking beyond traditional partners, with Commission President Ursula von der Leyen set to sign a landmark trade deal with India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday.
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
The partnership between India and the European Union (EU) is increasingly driven by global trade uncertainty, linked to US tariff policies, and shifting power dynamics, an expert told DW.
Biswajit Dhar, Distinguished Professor at the Council for Social Development in New Delhi, said the past year of disruption in international commerce has underscored the need for predictable and stable trading partners.
"Global trade rules have been thrown up into the air," Dhar said, adding, "in this scenario it became important for India and the EU to turn to each other, not only to safeguard bilateral trade, but to expand it."
He urged New Delhi and Brussels to take a leadership role in reviving multilateral institutions such as the World Trade Organization.
Further, emphasizing cooperation with other like-minded countries, he said, "the multilateral system still offers the best long-term guarantee for fair and predictable trade".
The EU is already India's largest trading partner and offers a more consistent policy environment than Washington, where shifting tariff decisions have raised costs and risks.
"Pressure from the US has effectively pushed countries into these kinds of agreements, Dhar explained. "Trading with the US has become unpredictable and difficult, which is why India and the EU finally moved faster after years of stalled negotiations."
The two sides had been in talks for nearly two decades before recent progress.
And despite the political differences, especially India’s relationship with Russia, Dhar says, "India and EU have not targeted each other and tried to extract short-term benefits. In fact, these geopolitical issues are a matter of long-term strategy of different countries."
He said that Europe understands where India is coming from. And so, the EU would ultimately want India to decrease its dependence on Russia. But India would need time to do that, if at all.
Dhar finds that the EU has adopted a tolerant approach to all these issues compared to the US, which, according to him, "has been actually hammering away all the time".
While optimistic about the agreement’s potential, Dhar cautioned that future disagreements could emerge over environmental standards and EU’s carbon border tax (CBAM), which may affect some Indian industries.
"Market access will improve on both sides," he said, "but how measures on carbon emissions, labor standards and sustainability are implemented will determine how smoothly this partnership develops."
Indian Prime Minster Narendra Modi announced the finalization of a landmark free trade agreement on Tuesday with the EU, saying it will being major opportunities to billions of people in India.
"Yesterday, a big agreement was signed between the European Union and India," Modi said. "People around the world are calling this the mother of all deals. This agreement will bring major opportunities for the 1.4 billion people of India and the millions of people in Europe," he said.
The free trade agreement came after nearly two decades of negotiations as both sides seek to hedge against rising global trade tensions.
Modi and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen are expected to make a joint announcement along with the details of the deal, later on Tuesday.
The deal is expected to be formally signed later this year by other EU bodies.
After nearly two decades of stalled negotiations, the India-EU free trade agreement has gained fresh momentum, driven as much by shifting geopolitics as by policy compromises on both sides, according to Gulshan Sachdeva, professor and Jean Monnet Chair at the Centre for European Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University.
"The sudden geopolitical circumstances have clearly facilitated the push to conclude the deal now," Sachdeva said.
Talks began in 2007, stalled in 2013 over differing ambitions, and did not resume until 2022. The EU pushed for a deep, comprehensive agreement, while India preferred a gradual approach, he said.
Sachdeva said recent trade deals India signed with countries such as the UK and Australia created templates that made compromise easier, particularly on sensitive issues such as labor standards, sustainability, and environmental clauses.
"Earlier India was quite allergic to these issues," Sachdeva said. "Now they've learned how to accommodate them without taking strict legal commitments."
He added that the timing carries strong political symbolism as global trade norms come under strain, especially with the US pushing for a different kind of trading regime around the world.
"When the global trading system is almost in serious trouble, a deal between the EU and a large growing economy like India sends a message that there are still countries that believe in rules-based trade," he said. "It also signals there are alternatives beyond the US."
On domestic concerns in India, Sachdeva said there may be some worry about opening the automobile sector. At the same time, he noted that Indian companies want more opportunities in the financial sector and IT services, which would support mobility and other areas. "So overall, I think it has to be balanced," Sachdeva told DW.
AI Description
The EU and India have finalized a historic free trade agreement aimed at creating a market encompassing two billion people and nearly a quarter of global GDP. This agreement signifies a major step in strengthening economic and strategic ties between the two entities.