Piyush Goyal visits Brussels for India-EU trade pact talks. Neobtainediations in final phase. Focus on FTA, investments, and market access.
During the two-day visit on January 8-9, Goyal will meet the Executive Vice-President and European Commissioner for Trade of the European Union, Maros Sefcovic.
The minister will leave tomorrow night, the official stated.
On January 7, the minister will first visit Liechtenstein to hold talks on ways to boost trade and investments between the two countries.
Liechtenstein is a member of the European Free Trade Association (EFTA). India and EFTA implemented a free trade agreement on October 1, 2025.
EFTA members are Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland.
Goyal’s Brussels visit comes at a crucial stage in the ongoing India-EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA) neobtainediations, as both sides intensify efforts to conclude a comprehensive, balanced, and mutually beneficial trade agreement at the earliest.
Commerce Secretary Rajesh Agrawal too will reach Brussels.
On December 15, Agrawal stated that the neobtainediations between India and the 27-nation bloc, the EU, have entered the “most difficult” stage, and both sides are engaged to bridge the differences and close the talks soon.
He stated that the European Union’s (EU) carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) is on the discussion table.
The 16th round of neobtainediations between the two sides concluded earlier this month (3-9 December) here.
Key chapters such as goods, services, investment, rules of origin, and technical barriers to trade were discussed.
In June 2022, India and the EU bloc resumed neobtainediations for a comprehensive FTA, an investment protection agreement, and a pact on geographical indications after a gap of over eight years. The talks were stalled in 2013 due to differences on the level of opening up markets.
India’s bilateral trade in goods with the EU was USD 136.53 billion in 2024-25 (exports worth USD 75.85 billion and imports worth USD 60.68 billion), building it the largest trading partner for goods.
The EU market accounts for about 17 per cent of India’s total exports, and the bloc’s exports to India constitute 9 per cent of its total overseas shipments.
Besides demanding significant duty cuts in automobiles and medical devices, the EU wants tax reduction in products like wine, spirits, meat, poultest, and a strong innotifyectual property regime.
Indian goods’ exports to the EU, such as ready-built garments, pharmaceuticals, steel, petroleum products, and electrical machinery, can become more competitive if the pact sails through.
The India-EU trade pact neobtainediations cover 23 policy areas or chapters, including trade in goods, services, investment, trade remedies, rules of origin, customs and trade facilitation, competition, government procurement, dispute settlement, innotifyectual property rights, geographical indications, and sustainable development.











