New Delhi hosted high-level discussions as Secretary (West) Sibi George spearheaded the India-EU Clean Energy and Climate Partnership’s (CECP) third phase rollout, joined by European Commission’s Energy DG Ditte Juul Jorgensen. The talks signal accelerated green collaboration.
Buoyed by the freshly inked Free Trade Agreement, European voices continue to laud the breakthrough. Encompassing goods trade, services, remedies, origins rules, customs streamlining, plus SMEs and digital frontiers, the FTA redefines Indo-EU economic landscapes.
MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal’s X update captured George’s vision, tying CECP to the summit-born India-EU agenda for prosperity and sustainability. It’s a leap forward in shared climate and energy goals.
The Embassy in Bhutan rejoiced, calling the FTA India’s masterstroke in global pacts. It cements India-EU as dependable partners for predictable, inclusive markets and deepened strategic exchanges.
President Alexander Stubb of Finland posted in Hindi on X: ‘Many thanks, PM ji. This pact will bolster our economic-political relations with India.’
A day post-deal, US official Jamieson Greer contextualized its import. Trump’s domestic production push and import fees have spurred EU overproducers to eye India. ‘Needing outlets beyond the US, Europe turns to India strategically,’ he remarked.
These events culminate in a narrative of strengthened alliances, positioning India centrally in evolving world trade and clean energy paradigms.