Context:
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen stated that India and the EU offer an alternative model in a “fractured world,” as FTA negotiations near conclusion amid global geopolitical shifts.
Key Highlights:
- Trade & Economic Relations
- EU is India’s largest trading partner in goods.
- Bilateral trade crossed $136 billion last year.
- FTA negotiations reportedly in the final stages.
- Strategic Context
- Occurs amid EU–US transatlantic tensions.
- U.S. Defense Strategy 2026 reportedly downplays Europe ties and omits India.
- Areas of Cooperation
- Security and defence dialogue.
- Technology partnerships.
- Connectivity initiatives.
- Indo-Pacific cooperation.
- Discussions on Ukraine conflict and Middle East crisis.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Free Trade Agreement (FTA): Reduces/eliminates tariffs and trade barriers.
- EU is a 27-member bloc.
- India–EU Strategic Partnership established in 2004.
- BTIA (Broad-based Trade and Investment Agreement) negotiations began in 2007, revived in 2022.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Strategic Autonomy:
- India diversifying partnerships beyond U.S.-centric framework.
- EU seeks reliable Indo-Pacific partner.
- Economic Significance:
- FTA may improve market access for IT services, pharmaceuticals, textiles.
- Issues: agricultural subsidies, auto tariffs, carbon border tax (CBAM).
- Geopolitical Implications:
- Reinforces rules-based multilateral order.
- Aligns with India’s Indo-Pacific vision.
- Technology & Climate Cooperation:
- Green transition partnerships.
- Digital governance standards.
- Way Forward:
- Resolve sensitive tariff issues pragmatically.
- Enhance cooperation in semiconductors and green hydrogen.
- Institutionalize defence-industrial engagement.
UPSC Relevance:
• GS 2 – International Relations (India–EU ties, Indo-Pacific)
• GS 3 – Economy (FTA, Trade Policy)
