India-UK trade deal moving forward, though steel issue may delay launch
Talks on a free trade deal between Britain and India are moving swiftly. Trade Minister Peter Kyle stated discussions are going well. While the deal itself will not be reopened, its implementation might occur later than initially planned. This is ...

Britain and India agreed a free trade deal in May 2025 and signed it two months later, to be implemented after each country ratified the deal, which was expected to happen within about a year.
But Indian officials have expressed concern about steel trade measures that Britain is due to introduce next month, and have suggested that aspects of the trade deal could be renegotiated as a result.
Also Read: India-UK FTA implementation stuck due to carbon tax on steel; Scotch duties may be rolled back to rebalance pact
Speaking after returning from talks in Delhi on Wednesday, Kyle played down the disagreement, citing comments by his Indian counterpart Piyush Goyal that discussions had gone well.

A British official has said talks on implementing the free trade agreement (FTA) were separate to the steel trade measures.
Asked if the deal could be reopened, Kyle said: "I'm not negotiating in public or via the media, but the FTA is what it is." He hinted that its implementation might come later in the year.
"If we implemented the deal in autumn this year, it would be the fastest implementation period of any trade deal that Britain has ever signed."
Also Read: India set to bargain hard in trade talks with US, UK this week
"(The) report vindicates our approach because they named the British legislation and put us in the highest category of any of their partner countries," Kyle said, adding a UK-U.S. trade deal agreed last year was not impacted.
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