India-UK CETA: Piyush Goyal urges businesses to convert pact into growth
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal on Saturday, 27 June called on Indian companies to deepen engagement with British counterparts and convert the opportunities unlocked by the India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) into tangible, sustained business growth. The appeal came from London, where Goyal addressed the India-UK: Partners in Progress Business Plenary, a high-level gathering of industry representatives from both nations.
What Goyal Said at the Plenary
Speaking at the plenary, Goyal described the landmark trade pact as a significant enabler for strengthening bilateral trade, investment, technology partnerships, innovation, and resilient supply chains, according to a Ministry of Commerce and Industry statement. Industry leaders from both countries welcomed the CETA as a transformative framework for expanding economic cooperation.
Key Industry Demands
During the discussions, business representatives flagged several priorities for effective implementation of the agreement. These included greater awareness of the CETA — particularly among micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) — simpler regulatory procedures and certification requirements, stronger industry-to-industry partnerships, and enhanced talent mobility to help businesses fully leverage the pact.
Knowledge Reports Launched
Goyal launched four knowledge reports at the event aimed at providing businesses with practical guidance to maximise CETA opportunities. These included FICCI's The Evolving India-UK Partnership, CII's Indian Roots, British Soil: Charting Indian Industry's Footprints in the UK 2026, the UKIBC-HSBC UK-India CETA Utilisation Manual, and CareEdge's Sovereign Ratings – A Fresh Perspective.
Sectoral Roundtable Recommendations
Industry representatives also presented recommendations from sectoral roundtable discussions spanning healthcare, advanced manufacturing, clean energy, science and technology, services, and consumer goods. The sessions highlighted pathways to deepen bilateral collaboration through innovation, investment, and stronger commercial partnerships.
'Made in India' Quality Responsibility
Concluding his two-day business engagement in the UK, Goyal held an interactive session with the Indian business delegation, during which participants shared key learnings and sectoral opportunities. Separately, in a post on X, the minister stressed that Indian entrepreneurs must be mindful that they represent the country when labelling a product 'Made in India', asserting that quality is a national responsibility. This comes amid growing global scrutiny of origin-labelling standards and India's push to raise export quality benchmarks ahead of broader CETA implementation.