- Registration date2026-05-26
- Attached file
The Office of the Minister for Trade at the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources (MOTIR, Minister JK Kim) announced that Korea and India will hold negotiations in New Delhi from May 25 to 27, 2026, to upgrade the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA). The talks will be the first formal round since the two countries agreed at their April 2026 summit to resume the upgrade negotiations.
After the CEPA took effect in 2010, Korea and India launched upgrade negotiations in 2016 to update the agreement in line with changes in the trade environment and build closer economic ties. The talks, however, had been effectively suspended since 2022, as they were unable to narrow their differences on major issues. Following consultations earlier in 2026, Korea and India issued a joint statement in April setting out their agreement to resume the negotiations.
Around 60 delegates from the two countries will take part in the talks. Korea’s delegation will be led by Park Keunoh, Director General for Trade Agreement Policy at MOTIR, and India’s by Kapil Chaudhary, Joint Secretary for Foreign Trade (North East Asia) at the Department of Commerce, Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
During the 12th round of upgrade negotiations, the two sides will hold intensive discussions across seven areas, including goods, services, rules of origin and emerging trade rules. They will seek to narrow their differences and work toward substantive results by the end of 2026 or in the first half of 2027.
“We will work to modernize the CEPA to create a more business-friendly trade environment for Korean companies operating in India. The upgraded agreement will also cover emerging trade issues, including digital trade and supply chain cooperation,” said Park Geun-oh, Director General for Trade Agreement Policy at MOTIR.