There has been a new turn in the relations between India and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). India and GCC have signed a Joint Statement to officially launch Free Trade Agreement (FTA) negotiations on 24 February 2026 in New Delhi. India’s Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal and GCC Secretary General Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi were present on this occasion. This dialogue, which was halted in 2011, has now been restarted after about 15 years, which is very significant for both the parties.
🚨: Ramadan 2030: Ramadan will come twice in the same year, such a coincidence is happening after 33 years.
What is the special focus in the agreement?
This conversation will no longer be limited to just oil and energy trade. It also includes goods, services, custom processes and digital trade. GCC Secretary General Albudaiwi described it as a “new phase of partnership”. This means that now both sides will work together in investment and technical areas also.
A major objective of this agreement is to increase investment between India and six GCC countries (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain). This new step will simplify the rules for people and companies doing business and bring stability to the market.
What will change for common people and migrants?
About 1 crore Indians live and work in Gulf countries, hence this agreement is very important. When trade rules between the two sides become easier, prices of goods like electronics and clothing may go down. Also, India will get security of supply for its energy needs.
Some important figures related to business:
Total Trade: $178.56 billion (FY 2024-25)
Exports from India: Engineering goods, rice, clothes, gems and jewellery.
Import from GCC: Crude Oil, LNG, Petrochemicals, Precious Metals.
present situation: There is no immediate change in tariffs or taxes, this is the beginning of negotiations.
The government hopes that this agreement will bring investment in sectors like infrastructure and food processing which will increase jobs.












