Jaishankar meets Flanders leaders, cites India-EU FTA gains
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union External Affairs Minister Dr. S. Jaishankar met Minister-President of Flanders Matthias Diependaele and Flemish Minister Annick De Ridder in Belgium on the evening of Tuesday, 14 July 2026, discussing trade and investment opportunities unlocked by the India-EU Free Trade Agreement.
Context
Thanking his hosts on X, Dr. Jaishankar wrote: 'The India-EU FTA has enabled a wide range of possibilities for India's cooperation with Belgium. Discussed opportunities for businesses and investments from the Flanders region.' The post, accompanied by three photographs from the evening engagement, underscored the diplomatic character of the meeting.
Flanders, the Dutch-speaking northern region of Belgium, is home to the Port of Antwerp — one of Europe's largest cargo hubs — along with significant logistics, technology and manufacturing clusters that make it a natural partner for Indian companies seeking European market access.
Policy Backdrop
The India-EU Broad-based Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA), whose negotiations were suspended in 2013, was formally relaunched in June 2022 with both sides committing to a balanced and comprehensive outcome. The FTA's revival has reinvigorated bilateral economic conversations at both the Brussels level and within individual EU member states.
India's external affairs establishment has increasingly pursued sub-national economic diplomacy across Europe — engaging German Länder, Dutch provinces and Flemish authorities — to accelerate trade and investment flows even as wider FTA negotiations continue. Belgium is already a longstanding Indian trade partner, with bilateral ties spanning diamonds, pharmaceuticals and chemicals.
Stakeholders and Impact
Minister-President Matthias Diependaele leads the Flemish regional government and has been an active proponent of attracting international investment into the region. Minister Annick De Ridder holds responsibilities covering economic and port-related affairs, making her a key interlocutor for discussions on logistics and trade facilitation.
Indian exporters and businesses eyeing European distribution networks stand to benefit from stronger Flanders ties, given the region's port infrastructure. Flemish investors, in turn, have shown interest in India's manufacturing, technology and infrastructure sectors — areas that have received fresh impetus under the FTA framework.
What's Next
Attention will now turn to the next round of India-EU BTIA negotiations and whether the Flanders engagement translates into formal investment-facilitation mechanisms between India and Belgium. Dr. Jaishankar's sub-national outreach signals that New Delhi intends to build economic density with European regions in parallel with the broader trade talks, ensuring that FTA gains are operationalised at the business level without waiting for the agreement's full conclusion.