What Happened
- Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal held a series of bilateral meetings with trade ministers from the UK, EU, New Zealand, and Canada on the sidelines of the 14th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14) in Yaounde, Cameroon (March 26–29, 2026).
- In his meeting with UK Secretary of State for Business and Trade Peter Kyle, both sides reviewed progress on the entry into force of the India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), which has completed UK parliamentary approval. Both sides agreed to push outreach to ensure businesses across India can access CETA benefits.
- With EU Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic, the ministers reviewed preparations for the signing of the recently concluded India-EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA) — a landmark agreement covering 97% of EU exports and eliminating/reducing tariffs on 90%+ of traded goods — concluded in January 2026 after nearly two decades of negotiations.
- On New Zealand, discussions focused on key deliverables ahead of Prime Minister Modi's proposed visit, with trade relations earmarked as a priority.
- For India-Canada, both sides agreed to expedite Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) negotiations, with Goyal invited to lead a major business delegation to Canada in May 2026.
Static Topic Bridges
India-EU Free Trade Agreement: A Landmark Concluded
The India-EU FTA, concluded on January 27, 2026, is considered one of the most significant trade agreements either party has signed. Negotiations began in 2007, stalled in 2013 over differences on automobiles, wines, spirits, and public procurement, and were relaunched in 2022 amid geopolitical realignment following the Russia-Ukraine war.
- Bilateral trade between India and the EU was approximately €120 billion in goods and services (2024), making the EU India's largest trading partner as a bloc.
- The agreement eliminates or reduces tariffs on over 90% of goods traded between the parties, with the EU saving up to €4 billion annually in duties on its exports.
- It covers goods, services, investment, intellectual property, and sustainable development chapters — making it a "comprehensive" rather than a simple tariff-reduction pact.
- Before entry into force, it requires Council of the European Union approval, European Parliament consent, and Indian Union Cabinet ratification — expected by early 2027.
Connection to this news: The MC14 bilateral was a platform to accelerate domestic ratification steps on both sides — the EU side is navigating a 27-member Council approval process while India's Cabinet approval process is underway.
India-UK CETA: Post-Brexit Trade Architecture
The India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement represents the most significant trade deal concluded by the UK since Brexit. Negotiations began in January 2022 and were concluded in 2025. The UK Parliament has completed its legislative approval, and both sides are now working on entry-into-force processes.
- The UK is India's 5th largest trading partner; bilateral trade stood at approximately £40 billion (2024).
- Key gains for India include reduced tariffs on textiles, gems and jewellery, engineering goods, and processed foods; the UK benefits from lower duties on Scotch whisky, automobiles, and financial services access.
- The deal includes a temporary mobility chapter allowing easier movement of Indian professionals to the UK — a key Indian demand.
- Post-Brexit, the UK has prioritised FTAs with fast-growing economies; the India deal is one of its most strategically significant.
Connection to this news: The MC14 meeting marked a key milestone in operationalising CETA — with business outreach plans now being developed to ensure that MSME exporters and service providers in India are aware of and can utilise the agreement's provisions.
World Trade Organization Ministerial Conferences
The WTO Ministerial Conference is the organisation's highest decision-making body, meeting every two years. It brings together trade ministers from all 166 WTO members to set policy direction, launch or conclude negotiations, and adopt declarations. MC14 in Yaounde, Cameroon (March 2026) is the 14th such conference.
- WTO has 166 members accounting for over 98% of global trade.
- The Ministerial Conference operates by consensus — any member can block outcomes, giving smaller economies a formal veto.
- Previous MCs have produced landmark agreements: the Trade Facilitation Agreement (MC9, Bali, 2013), Fisheries Subsidies Agreement (MC12, Geneva, 2022).
- MC13 (Abu Dhabi, 2024) produced mixed results; MC14 is seen as a test of WTO's relevance amid US tariff escalation and digital trade disputes.
- India has led developing country coalitions at multiple MCs, particularly on agricultural subsidies (food security) and the e-commerce moratorium.
Connection to this news: The WTO Ministerial Conference sidelines are a key diplomatic venue for advancing bilateral FTAs — India's use of MC14 margins for UK, EU, NZ, and Canada meetings reflects a strategy of parallel-tracking multilateral and bilateral trade agendas.
Key Facts & Data
- India-EU FTA: concluded January 27, 2026; covers 97% of EU exports, reduces tariffs on 90%+ of traded goods
- India-EU bilateral trade: ~€120 billion (2024)
- India-UK CETA: UK Parliamentary approval complete; entry into force pending
- India-UK bilateral trade: ~£40 billion (2024)
- India-Canada CEPA: expedited negotiations underway; Goyal invited to Canada in May 2026
- WTO MC14: held March 26–29, 2026, Yaounde, Cameroon (14th Ministerial Conference)
- WTO membership: 166 countries, accounting for >98% of world trade