Elections to the European Parliament and in India this year are holding up talks for the India-EU Bilateral Trade and Investment Agreement, Ireland’s Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment, indicating that unlike the India European Free Trade Association (EFTA) Free Trade Agreement (FTA) signed last week, the EU agreement will take at least another year to be finalised. Speaking about his talks in New Delhi this week in an interview with The Hindu, the Minister explained Ireland’s tough stance on the war in Gaza, where he said Israel is behaving “like a rogue state”.
I think in truth, there are elections coming up in India, and in the EU, and when you lead into elections, it’s difficult to find compromise-positions. I hope when there’s a new European Commission in place in the late summer, and of course, when there’s political stability, post elections here in India, there will be an opportunity in the autumn of this year for the EU and India to try to accelerate progress on an FTA.
This negotiation will be managed primarily by the European Commission. We have a pretty intense debate within the EU, and then the European Commission gets its negotiating mandate. We do have to make compromises in some areas that matter for India, but we also expect India to compromise in some areas that matter to the EU too. Given the global tensions and disruption to international trade that we’ve seen over the last number of years, from COVID, to conflict in Ukraine, in the Middle East, and in parts of Africa, the European Union is focussed on the importance of trade as a stabiliser for good international relations. And we see India as a friend in this part of the world.