Eastern Eye (UK)

EU and India set to ‘open new chapter in trade ties’

TALKS TO RESOLVE TARIFFS, PATENTS AND WORK ACCESS TO EUROPE FOR INDIANS

-

THE EU and India agreed last Saturday (8) to relaunch long-stalled trade talks in a major push to boost ties at a video summit held in the shadow of the Covid-19 surge battering the south Asian giant.

“The EU and India are opening a new important chapter in our relationsh­ip. We are the world’s two largest democracie­s. We are natural partners,” European Council chief Charles Michel said.

The devastatin­g wave of infections sweeping India forced prime minister Narendra Modi to scrap plans to fly to Portugal to see his European counterpar­ts.

Past EU-India summits have involved only the Indian prime minister and the EU’s chief executive and chairman.

“We agreed to resume negotiatio­ns for a ... trade agreement which would respond to the current challenges,” EU and Indian leaders said in a statement after the talks, adding that for a deal to be reached, both sides had to solve market access issues.

The 27-nation bloc and the world’s largest democracy remain determined to capitalise on growing momentum for closer relations fuelled by shared concerns over the rising might of China.

The European Commission chief, Ursula von der Leyen, hailed the decision to restart trade talks after an eight-year break as a “landmark moment”.

EU countries have sent medical equipment and drugs worth an estimated €100 million (£85.89m) to India as part of internatio­nal efforts to help it fight against the flood of Covid-19 cases.

Von der Leyen insisted that the bloc “stands firmly at the side of India in this most challengin­g time” and pledged that “further assistance will follow”.

A top official at India’s External Affairs Ministry said Modi had pushed the EU to support an Indian and South African proposal to suspend Covid-19 vaccine patents after US president Joe Biden threw his weight behind the plan.

EU leaders have expressed scepticism about the initiative, insisting the first move is for countries to agree to exporting doses.

“We will be watching the evolving EU position on this particular issue,” senior Indian official Vikas Swarup said.

The two vaccine-producing powerhouse­s agreed to work together to make sure global supplies are maintained and the world is better prepared for future pandemics.

“We agreed that defeating the Covid-19 pandemic through global cooperatio­n and solidarity remains our priority, and underlined our commitment to work together to ensure a better, safer, sustainabl­e and inclusive recovery,” a joint statement said.

While the pandemic cast a dark cloud over the summit, the key announceme­nt was the restarting of talks for a wide-ranging free trade deal that have been suspended since 2013 over difference­s including tariff reductions, patent protection, data security and the right of Indian profession­als to work in Europe.

In parallel, EU and India will start talks on a separate investment protection deal and an accord on geographic­al indication­s – famous brand names often linked to the places they are made, from France’s champagne to India’s Darjeeling tea.

They also signed off on a “connectivi­ty” partnershi­p to reinforce infrastruc­ture links and said they would push to cooperate more on developing cutting-edge technology like Artificial Intelligen­ce.

Both sides pledged cooperatio­n to limit climate change. The statement said the EU and India would hold meetings to collaborat­e in renewable energy, energy storage technology and modernisin­g power grids.

The negotiatio­ns on the trade deal were halted after getting stuck on issues such as cutting tariffs and access for Indian workers to Europe.

An Indian official said there was no timetable for when the fresh talks would begin.

It remains to be seen if India is now willing to drop an approach viewed as deeply protection­ist by the EU to seal a deal this time round.

But growing tensions with China could create a new impetus for talks, with one diplomat calling Beijing “the elephant in the room”.

For the EU, the push comes as efforts to ratify an investment deal agreed with China have hit the buffers after relations soured over tit-for-tat sanctions.

Britain’s departure from the bloc has also created another rival for Brussels as London makes its own play to bolster trade with India.

The British government said last Tuesday (4) it would start formal free talks with India later this year after the two sides agreed an initial package to boost trade and investment.

A 2020 study by the European Parliament put the benefits of a trade deal for the EU with India at up to €8.5 billion (£7.3bn), although the estimate was made before Britain’s departure from the bloc.

 ??  ?? CHANGING STATUS QUO: Ursula von der Leyen
CHANGING STATUS QUO: Ursula von der Leyen

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom