DAVOS :
THE European Union is on the
cusp of signing a historic trade
agreement with India that is
being called ‘the mother of all
deals’, European Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen
announced on Tuesday, asserting it will create a market for 2
billion people or about onefourth of the global GDP.
In a special address here at
the World Economic Forum
Annual Meeting, she said the real
would crucially provide a firstmover advantage for Europe
with one of the world’s fastestgrowing and most dynamic continents.
“Right after Davos, I will travel to India. There is still work to
do. But we are on the cusp of a
historic trade agreement. Some
call it the mother of all deals,”
she said.
“Europe wants to do business
with the growth centres of today
and the economic powerhouses of this century.
“From Latin America to the
Indo-Pacific and far beyond,
Europe will always choose the
world. And the world is ready
to choose Europe,” she said.
President of the European
Council, Antonio Costa and von
der Leyen will be in India from
January 25 to 27 to grace the
Republic Day celebrations as
chief guests and hold summit
talks with Prime Minister
Narendra Modi.
The two sides are set to
announce the conclusion of
negotiations on the much awaited free trade agreement at
the India-EU summit on January
27. European Commission
President said the EU is also
working on a new free trade
agreement with Australia.
“We are also advancing with
the Philippines, Thailand,
Malaysia, the UAE – and more,”
she added.
She also said Europe will
always stand with Ukraine until
there is a just and lasting peace.
The European Union is India’s
biggest trade partner, with bilateral trade in goods recording
USD 135 billion in the financial
year 2023-24. The free trade
agreement is expected to significantly enhance trade ties.
The proposed agreement is
expected to bring a qualitative
change in deepening the overall bilateral ties in a range of
sectors, as well as at a time when
the world is witnessing trade
disruptions in view of Washington’s tariff policy.
Besides firming up the free
trade agreement, the two sides
are likely to unveil a defence
framework pact and a strategic
agenda at the summit.
India and the European
Union have been strategic partners since 2004.
The ambitious FTA is being
firmed up at a time amid
increasing concerns over
Washington’s trade and tariff
policies, which have impacted
both India and the 27-nation
EU.
India and the EU are also
expected to unveil a joint comprehensive strategic vision that
will govern their relationship
for the period 2026-2030.
The EU and India had first
launched negotiations for the
free trade agreement in 2007,
before the talks were suspended in 2013 due to a gap in
ambition. The negotiations were
relaunched in June 2022.
The proposed Security and
Defence Partnership (SDP) will
facilitate deeper defence and
security cooperation between
the two sides.
TOP EU OFFICIAL QUESTIONS TRUMP’S TRUSTWORTHINESS OVER
GREENLAND TARIFF
THREAT: THE European
Union’s top official on Tuesday
described US President Donald
Trump’s planned new tariffs
over Greenland as “a mistake
especially between long-standing allies” and called into question Trump’s trustworthiness,
saying that he had agreed last
year not to impose more tariffs on members of the bloc.
European Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen
was responding to Trump’s
announcement that starting
February, a 10 per cent import
tax will be imposed on goods
from eight European nations
that have rallied around
Denmark in the wake of his
stepped up calls for the United
States to take over the semiautonomous Danish territory
of Greenland.
“The European Union and
the United States have agreed
to a trade deal last July,” Von
der Leyen said at the World
Economic Forum in Davos,
Switzerland.