He was addressing the India Global Forum in London virtually from New Delhi.
Addressing the India Global Forum (IGF) in London virtually from New Delhi, Mr. Shringla noted that British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss visit to India, expected over two days starting from Friday, will add further momentum to the partnership as it coincides with the U.K.’s Carrier Strike Group (CSG) arriving in Mumbai for joint exercises.
“We are negotiating a Free Trade Agreement as things stand. We are also looking at an interim trade agreement,” said Mr. Shringla.
The Foreign Secretary noted that his counterpart, Sir Philip Barton, Permanent Under-Secretary in the U.K. Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO), is expected in India soon to take the trade talks forward.
“We should be very optimistic. Things have really accelerated, and we should be very excited,” said Mr. Barton, who also addressed the forum virtually.
“The real opportunity is with the U.K.’s place in the world. We have left the European Union and are in charge of our international trade and commercial policy and changed the way we approach migration to this country,” he said.
With reference to the sectors of India-U.K. cooperation, Mr. Shringla highlighted the financial markets, people-to-people ties through the new Migration and Mobility Partnership, a first-ever consular dialogue expected soon.
“Security and defence cooperation is high on the agenda, including maritime security, cyber security, health partnership, digital health, medical supply chains, alternative health and science and technology,” he noted.
“We did have a devastating [COVID-19] wave but since then we have done everything we can to insulate against the impact of the COVID pandemic… Today is a landmark for India’s vaccination programme, we have crossed a billion doses and that is the greatest insulation we have against the pandemic,” he said.
With reference to the U.K.-hosted United Nations COP26 climate summit in Glasgow next month, the Foreign Secretary said India will be participating with a strong message and also expect promises of predictable finance to meet ambitious climate targets.
He said: “We are perhaps the only G20 country to have fulfilled our NDCs [Nationally Determined Contributions] and outperformed them. Our Prime Minister has said that India will not only meet its targets but exceed them. And, he has spoken to Prime Minister Boris Johnson. We intend to go in with a strong message, with full commitment to COP26.”
“In order to meet these ambitious targets, developing countries will need access to climate financing, green technology. We need more than commitments, we need promises – predictable and consistent financing.” India Global Forum, being held at the Taj Hotel in London, is a day-long series of dialogues organised by U.K.-based India Inc. Group with experts across different fields to explore the theme of “quantum leap” in U.K.-India relations, as laid out by Prime Ministers Narendra Modi and Boris Johnson in the 2030 Roadmap for bilateral ties.
“Quantum leap is very relevant when you see what’s on the table in the UK-India partnership,” said Mr. Shringla.