Exclusive: UK-India energy partnership strengthens as Miliband backs clean transition
On a visit to India this week, Miliband highlighted India’s ambitious renewable energy targets and its commitment to achieving net zero by 2070.
Miliband said his meetings with Indian officials reinforced the commitment to work together in key areas, including grid modernisation, offshore wind, and industrial decarbonisation.
Vivek Mishra works as an Assistant Editor with Eastern Eye and has over 13 years of experience in journalism. His areas of interest include politics, international affairs, current events, and sports. With a background in newsroom operations and editorial planning, he has reported and edited stories on major national and global developments.
BRITAIN sees India as a “crucial partner” as both countries aim to deepen their cooperation on clean energy, with a focus on renewables and climate action, UK secretary of state for energy security and net zero, Ed Miliband, said.
On a visit to India this week, Miliband highlighted India’s ambitious renewable energy targets and its commitment to achieving net zero by 2070.
In an interview with Eastern Eye on Tuesday (11), Miliband said, “I come away with a real sense of India’s ambition, and also a broader sense that some people in the UK ask, ‘Is Britain the only country pursuing this clean energy transition?’ Well, the answer is no, because I have just come to India and seen the real endeavour there is here to make this clean energy transition happen because of a belief that it can really work for India.”
At the Fourth India-UK Energy Dialogue, held in New Delhi on Monday (10), India's minister of power and housing and urban affairs, Manohar Lal Khattar, and Miliband announced the launch of phase-2 of the Accelerating Smart Power and Renewable Energy in India (ASPIRE) programme.
The global clean energy transition is unstoppable.
That's why I'm in India, to strengthen 🇬🇧 🇮🇳 partnership and cooperation.
Clean energy is the route to economic growth, energy security, good jobs and investment in the UK. pic.twitter.com/68vZURDZRf — Ed Miliband (@Ed_Miliband) February 11, 2025
It aims to enhance energy security through technical support for round-the-clock power supply, expansion of renewable energy projects, and advancements in industrial energy efficiency and decarbonisation.
The initiative has been developed in collaboration with India’s Ministry of Power (MOP) and Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE).
Miliband told Eastern Eye he was “really struck by the shared vision there is around the clean energy transition, the shared vision around energy security, around growth and tackling the climate crisis.”
He said his meetings with Indian officials reinforced the commitment to work together in key areas, including grid modernisation, offshore wind, and industrial decarbonisation.
“We’ve agreed to work together on grids, because that is a big issue, and we’ve agreed to deepen and strengthen our partnership because in all these respects, climate change is an issue that crosses borders, and it’s in all of our interests to work together on it,” the secretary of state said.
नई दिल्ली स्थित निर्माण भवन में यूके के ऊर्जा सुरक्षा एवं नेट जीरो सचिव, श्री @Ed_Miliband के साथ चौथे भारत-यूके ऊर्जा संवाद की अध्यक्षता की।
बैठक में बिजली वितरण,औद्योगिक ऊर्जा दक्षता, डीकार्बोनाइजेशन और इलेक्ट्रिक गतिशीलता में हुई प्रगति पर विस्तृत एवं सार्थक चर्चा हुई तथा… pic.twitter.com/moL2Oxa2y2 — Manohar Lal (@mlkhattar) February 10, 2025
The UK is supporting India in offshore wind energy, and Miliband noted Britain’s expertise in the sector.
He also pointed to the role of UK businesses in India’s energy transition.
“I met a whole range of UK businesses at the UK pavilion at India Energy Week. It’s remarkable, actually, the different areas of businesses I saw - on mobility, around batteries and electric vehicles, offshore wind and how it can work with the government of India and the private sector in India. There are huge opportunities for British businesses here.”
Both the UK and India also share challenges in reducing dependence on fossil fuels, he said.
“The UK cost of living crisis that we’ve seen, and continue to see, is caused by our exposure to fossil fuels which are priced on the international market, and that’s what led to prices spiking so much, and prices being high, bills being high, at the moment.
“The more we drive to clean energy, the more we have clean, home-grown power that we control,” Miliband said.
He noted that India’s approach aligns with this view. “I’m really struck being here that, you know, that narrative, that argument is also being made here. Prime minister (Narendra) Modi talks of net zero being a net positive for India, and wanting India to be a country that is the first to urbanise and industrialise through clean energy.”
On the proposed UK-India Free Trade Agreement (FTA) and its impact on renewable energy cooperation, Miliband said the negotiations, set to begin in the coming weeks, would be important, but did not discuss specifics. “The more we can do on trade, the better it can be for both countries,” he said.
Miliband stressed, however, that clean energy collaboration would continue regardless of the FTA talks. “Even while negotiations continue, we can work together on clean energy. The message from the Indian government and businesses is a clear desire for UK firms to be involved, bringing their expertise to work with Indian partners.”
He also linked the collaboration to global climate negotiations. “This is really, really important also for the international negotiations, the COP negotiations that will be taking place in Brazil later on this year.”
India plays a key role in UK foreign and trade policy, Miliband said, adding, the country “is really of great importance to the UK. We can build a really fruitful partnership on a whole range of issues.”
He noted the flurry of high-level diplomatic engagement between the two countries. “Prime minister Modi and Keir Starmer met last year. David Lammy came here just after becoming the foreign secretary. I’m here for this visit, and so I think there is really fruitful cooperation we can do together.”
India and the UK have been strengthening their energy partnership through joint initiatives and investments. The UK-India Roadmap 2030 outlines commitments on climate action and clean energy transition, with both countries aiming to expand cooperation in offshore wind, solar energy, and green hydrogen.
The UK has supported India’s energy transition through technical expertise and private sector collaboration. Ministers have highlighted the importance of ensuring energy security and sustainable development and expanding cooperation in power distribution, sector reforms, industrial energy efficiency and decarbonisation, and electric mobility sectors.
Emerging areas such as energy storage, green data centres, and offshore wind - especially with a focus on small and medium enterprises (SMEs) - were highlighted as key priorities for future collaboration.
India has set a target of 500 GW of non-fossil fuel capacity by 2030 and aims to generate 50 per cent of its electricity from renewable sources.
The UK has pledged to work with India on policy frameworks, investment facilitation, and knowledge-sharing to support this transition.
PRIME MINISTER Sir Keir Starmer has promised to help British Asian businesses get the maximum benefit from the free trade agreement (FTA) he formally agreed with the visiting Indian prime minister Narendra Modi at Chequers on Thursday (24).
He made the pledge in an interview with Eastern Eye and Garavi Gujarat at the British prime minister’s country residence in Buckinghamshire.
He said: “I think for British Indian businesses, for British Asian businesses, this is the most significant deal since we left the EU. It is the best terms of any deal anyone’s ever had with India. And you heard the ambition from prime minister Modi that this is more than just a piece of paper.
“It’s a way our two countries need to work together. And there are some obviously impacted sectors, or enhanced sectors, whether that’s pharmaceuticals, whether that’s whisky, whether that’s manufacturing, but there are many other and there’ll be a real appetite now for increasing business.
“So it’s huge opportunity for businesses in the UK for dealing with and doing business with India. And I’m very much looking forward to taking this (further).”
“I mean prime minister Modi and I sat down at the G20 last year, and had a discussion about our ambition for our business communities,” he went on, “and we both agreed that we wanted to take it to another level, and that’s what we’ve done today. So it’s a very good day for business. I wanted to make it easier for our businesses to do business, to trade, and that’s what we’ve delivered today. And I would simply say to them, ‘Take full advantage now of this deal, we will work with you. We will back you. We will make it as easy as possible for you to enhance your business opportunities. And there are going to be many coming out of this.’ ”
Starmer was asked about his remark in a speech on immigration that the UK risked becoming an “island of strangers”, for which he has since apologised.
Keir Starmer (left) and Narendra Modi
He commented: “I mean, look, the British Asian community have brought huge amounts to this country and are a valuable part of this country. And I don’t just mean on business, I mean in culture, in terms of who we are as a country, and that is why we’ve always welcomed the community, rely on the community, and want to work with the community. In a sense, this deal is about enhancing the opportunities of British Asian businesses as much as anything else. So, we thank them for their incredible contribution to being part of our society. And to be really clear, we are always welcoming of talent, of contribution into our society from around the world. That isn’t inconsistent with also saying we need to have proper control of our immigration framework. I think the two go together, but we’ve always been welcoming of our British Asian community, and quite right, too. And I think today, in a sense, is good evidence of how important that is to us as a country.”
He stressed: “Look, we’ve got a multicultural, diverse society, and it’s what makes us a great country. Always have been, always will be, and it is part of the very makeup of who we are, and that is both welcome and cherished by people across the country.”
The prime minister came across as relaxed and confident in his interview.
Starmer (L) and Modi at Chequers
But he was pressed on how he would stem the exodus of wealthy entrepreneurs who had decamped to Dubai and other friendlier tax regimes because of harsh fiscal rules on inheritance and non-dom status imposed by the chancellor Rachel Reeves (she turned up at Chequers, incidentally, on Thursday).
“We want to attract and retain wealthy individuals and businesses in the United Kingdom,” Starmer insisted. “It is important that whatever system we have in place for tax is up to date, modern and fit for purpose now and in the future – and we had an out of date system. But I want to be really clear, we want to attract that talent. We want to retain the talent and the wealth that we have got. And I think the more we can do with our business communities, the more we can do with deals like the deal that we’ve done today, the better the environment we create for people to know that the UK is the place to be.
“And I would also say that we’re living in an unstable world now, whether that’s defence and security and conflict, whether it’s on the trade and economic side, where equally – it’s probably more and a more uncertain world than it's been for many years – the UK is becoming a real beacon of stability, a beacon of focus on growth and pragmatism.
“And, of course, in 12 months, we’ve done three trade deals, which is evidence, I think, of the role the UK now has, and why it’s is a beacon for common sense and pragmatism: the India deal formally signed today; obviously, we’ve got a deal with the US; and a deal with the EU as well, which has got a number of strands sitting underneath it. And I think that is a very good news story for the United Kingdom after one year of this Labour government.”
Asked whether he saw a rising India playing a more prominent role on the world stage, he responded: “Yes, it is undoubtedly an emerging power, both in terms of economic power, but also global influence more generally. And I think there’s real significance in the words that both I and prime minister Modi said today, which was about seeing this as more than simply a trade deal, but it is a good trade deal on its own terms, but more as a statement of intent about how our two countries, fifth and sixth largest economies in the world, can work together.
“And that is about our values of democracy and freedom, deeply embedded values. And so today is very future looking in terms of the role of India. It is an emerging, increasingly powerful and important country in the world. And today is to be seen in that context, in my view. And I think it’s clear from the word used by both of us, that we both see it in that context, that in a more uncertain world, it is really important that key allies with long shared, rich histories, but also a real vision for the future, that ‘Vision 2035’ (which India and the UK have also agreed upon) is really important to both of us. So that’s a long way of saying yes.”
The Modi government felt comfortable dealing with the Tories during their 14 years in power. But the transition under Starmer has been much smoother than many expected, possibly because he has not allowed his Pakistani origin MPs to make Kashmir an issue, for example.
Modi and Starmer during the discussion
Starmer appeared to understand the point because he said: “I think what that shows is that the approach that I’ve taken, which is serious, pragmatic, respectful and focused on our national interest as the United Kingdom, but avoiding performative politics, avoiding rushing to the media every five minutes to complain about our allies, and actually just calmly working with leaders that I respect is a far better way of doing diplomacy than the rather noisy way in which some of my predecessors failed, frankly, in diplomacy, because these are examples.
“The India deal – for many, many years, successive governments, successive prime ministers, have been trying to get an India deal – by approaching it in a calm, serious, respectful way, we’ve managed to get that deal.
“And that’s because we created the conditions in which both countries could see it was to their advantage to have this deal at the moment, and it’s not in isolation. The same with the US. Again, there was an attempt to get a US deal for many years by my predecessors. And, of course, in best part of 10 years, we haven’t got as close in the relationship with the EU as we did in the EU-UK Summit. And I think that reflects a sort of quiet, serious, pragmatic diplomacy foregoing the theatrics, the performance and the constant running to the media of my predecessors.”
He agreed he had established a good personal rapport with Modi, though people are often reminded that Lord Palmerston, statesman and prime minister, told the Commons on 1 march 1948: “We have no eternal allies, and we have no perpetual enemies. Our interests are eternal and perpetual, and those interests it is our duty to follow.”
“Yes, very good, we get on very well,” said Starmer about his dealings with the Indian prime minister. “We’ve met each other a number of times. We’ve spoken a number of times, and I think and hope you can see there’s a mutual respect and warmth between us, and if anything, it would be nice to spend more time together. We had our tête-à-tête pencilled in for a period of time. We doubled that sitting in these two chairs, talking privately together. And I think you’ll be seeing more of that.”
At Chequers, Modi renewed his invitation to Starmer to visit India.
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At Chequers, Starmer and Modi interacted with players from Buckinghamshire Street Cricket Hubs. (Photo: X/@narendramodi)
INDIAN prime minister Narendra Modi used a cricketing reference to describe India’s ties with the UK during his meeting with British prime minister Keir Starmer on Thursday.
“There may be a swing and a miss at times, but we always play with a straight bat!” Modi said in a media statement after the talks, referring to the India-UK relationship.
He added that both countries are committed to building a strong and productive partnership. “For both of us, cricket is not just a game, but a passion. And also, a great metaphor for our partnership. There may be a swing and a miss at times, but we always play with a straight bat! We are committed to building a high-scoring, solid partnership.”
Modi said the agreements concluded on Thursday, along with the Vision 2035 roadmap, were important steps in that direction.
India and the UK signed a landmark free trade agreement during the bilateral meeting.
Modi and Starmer also met players from the Buckinghamshire Street Cricket Hub at Chequers in London. “India and the UK are connected by a shared passion for cricket. At Chequers, PM Keir Starmer and I interacted with players from Buckinghamshire Street Cricket Hubs. Great to see sport fostering people-to-people ties between our nations,” Modi wrote on X.
Modi also presented the players with a cricket bat signed by the Indian team that won the T20 World Cup.
Cricket, which originated in the UK, is the most followed sport in India.
The Indian cricket team, led by captain Shubman Gill, is currently touring England for a five-match Test series. The fourth Test is being played in Manchester.
(With inputs from PTI)
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Britain's prime minister Keir Starmer and prime minister Narendra Modi of India, have a cup of tea during a business showcase event at Chequers near Aylesbury, England.
AS AKHIL PATEL handed over a cup of masala chai to Narendra Modi in the grounds of Chequers on Thursday (24), he cheekily told the Indian prime minister: “From one chaiwalla to another!”
That quip produced one of the lighter moments on an “historic” day when Modi and the British prime minister, Sir Keir Starmer, formally agreed a free trade agreement (FTA) between India and the UK.
Taking an hour off from their talks on trade and business, they toured a number of businesses – Norton Motorcycles, Sainsbury’s, Purejewels, Agratas (a Tata enterprise), the Premier League, Oxford Nanopore Technologies, Spice Kitchen, and Beauty and Wellness products at Kama Ayurveda, for example – who had set up inside a tent and were displaying their wares to the two prime ministers.
They also watched children playing cricket (Modi asked if they knew the location of the world’s largest cricket stadium and told that it was in Ahmedabad and housed 125,000).
Prominent personalities from the UK and India hovered in the background as Modi and Starmer did their tour of the tent. They included Sunil Mittal (Bharti Enterprises); Ajay Piramal (Piramal Group); Sharan Pasricha (Ennismore); Anish Shah (Mahindra & Mahindra); TS Anil (Monzo); Bill Winters (Standard Chartered); Baroness Shriti Vadera (Prudential), Sharon Hague (Pearson), Parminder Kholi (Shell), Nik Jhangiani (Diageo); Anil Agarwal (Vedanta); John Harrison (Airbus), Chandrajit Banerjee, director-general of the Confederation of Indian Industry; and peers Jitesh Gadhia and Karan Bilimoria.
First stop, though, was Amala Chai, which 31-year-old Patel later told Eastern Eye he had setup six and a half years ago and which he now ran from stalls in London in King’s Cross and Hackney.
Modi certainly appeared to relish the masala chai.
Legend has it that Modi has an instinctive understanding of the common man because instead of being educated an at elite institution, he began life by serving chai as a youth at a train station in his native state of Gujarat.
Patel said: “I am Gujarati and I was born in London.”
A cup of masala chai would normally cost £3.85.
The tea comes from farms in Assam, the spices that go into the chai – cardamom, ginger, nutmeg and black pepper– from Kerala. Patel offers the option of cow’s or oat milk.
How come he was picked to pitch to Modi and Starmer alongside much bigger businesses?
Patel wasn’t quite sure but it seems officials at 10, Downing Street and in the Foreign Office did a bit of background research on Modi’s origins.
He didn’t think the FTA would affect him very much but the quip from the cheeky chappie has certainly gone viral.
He claimed: “It just came out.”
His website tells of how he came to set up Amala Chai in his own words: “Back in 2018, a trip to the Indian Himalayas, Ladakh, changed everything.
“I’d grown up drinking masala chai at home — it was always part of our family life. But on this trip, I saw it in a new light — not just a drink, but a ritual. A space where people from all walks of life came together.
“It didn’t matter whether it was poured by a streetside chaiwalla or shared at a family gathering — each cup carried warmth, community, and care. And of course, it tasted absolutely delicious.
“Back in London, I searched everywhere for a proper cup of real masala chai. But all I found were sugary syrups and watered-down versions — a far cry from the chai I’d grown up with. So, fuelled by my grandma’s age-old recipes, I opened a small stall on Brick Lane. We brewed every cup fresh, on the stove — just as it should be. That first stall created a real buzz. It was clear tea lovers here were craving something more: authentic, traditional masala chai. And so, Amala Chai was born.
Starmer and Modi at Amala Chai stall
“As Amala Chai grew, I knew sourcing mattered just as much as brewing. I returned to India, travelling through Assam and Kerala to meet farmers and understand their world.
“I discovered a supply chain that was stacked against them — driven by middlemen, low prices, and unsustainable practices. But I also found farmers who cared deeply about their land, their craft, and their communities.
“We built direct relationships with these small-scale farms, paying fairly, investing in organic practices, and supporting a system that puts people and planet first.
“Today, when you sip Amala Chai, you’re part of that story. A supply chain built on fairness and transparency. A brewing method that honours the real tradition of chai. And a simple mission — to bring the rich flavour, warmth, and community of masala chai to every tea drinker.”
Patel certainly talks a good talk but so far as one can tell, he is not thinking of replacing Sir Keir Starmer, just yet.
Back in India, the veteran Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyar has said he never dismissed Modi as an uneducated “chaiwalla” a few years ago and that his strong belief that the BJP leader was unsuited for the prime minister’s post was not based on his tea-selling past. But Modi cleverly turned the remark by Aiyar – a contemporary of the late Rajiv Gandhi at Cambridge University – to his advantage by depicting the Congress leader as an entitled brat.
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The strike comes despite junior doctors having accepted a pay offer of 22.3 per cent over two years in September, shortly after prime minister Keir Starmer's Labour government came to power. (Photo: Reuters)
THOUSANDS of junior doctors across the UK began a five-day strike on Friday after talks with the Labour government failed to reach a new agreement on pay.
Doctors were seen on picket lines outside hospitals early in the morning, following negotiations that continued late into Thursday night but ended without a deal.
The strike comes despite junior doctors having accepted a pay offer of 22.3 per cent over two years in September, shortly after prime minister Keir Starmer's Labour government came to power.
Junior doctors — those below consultant level — said they felt they had "no choice" but to walk out again in an effort to address what they call "pay erosion" since 2008.
Starmer urged the doctors to reconsider, warning that the strike would put patients at risk and worsen pressure on the National Health Service (NHS).
"Launching a strike will mean everyone loses," Starmer wrote in The Times. He added that the action would place further strain on the NHS and appealed to doctors not to follow the British Medical Association (BMA) "down this damaging road. Our NHS and your patients need you."
"Lives will be blighted by this decision," Starmer said.
The junior doctors argue that their pay has declined in real terms by over 21 per cent in the past two decades.
"We're not working 21 per cent less hard so why should our pay suffer?" said Melissa Ryan and Ross Nieuwoudt, co-chairs of the BMA’s junior doctors committee, in a statement.
Last year’s strikes by doctors led to the cancellation of tens of thousands of appointments and delays in treatment. These were part of a wave of public and private sector strikes over pay and working conditions amid high inflation.
Health minister Wes Streeting also urged doctors to reconsider, stating in a letter published in The Telegraph that the government "cannot afford to go further on pay this year".
The previous Conservative government had rejected the BMA’s call for a 35 per cent pay restoration to account for inflation over the past decade.
Since taking office, Labour has settled several public sector disputes, including reaching pay deals with teachers and train drivers. One of these was a 15 per cent pay agreement over three years for train drivers, which was criticised by the Conservative opposition.
(With inputs from agencies)
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David Lammy and Narendra Modi. (Photo: X/@narendramodi)
IN A wide-ranging interview with Eastern Eye, UK foreign secretary David Lammy has underlined the central role of British Indians and Asian-owned businesses in unlocking the full potential of the UK-India free trade agreement (FTA), expected to boost bilateral trade by £25.5 billion annually and double overall trade by 2030.
The eagerly awaited FTA will be signedbe signed during prime minister Narendra Modi’s UK visit on Thursday (24), marking a significant step forward in bilateral ties. But, as Lammy makes clear, this is not a deal that will be left to run on autopilot.
“We are not just signing this deal and hoping for the best,” he said, stressing that a network of working groups and implementation committees will ensure both sides meet their targets. These bodies will closely monitor progress, address hurdles, and ensure timely action where needed.
British Asians, who own and run thousands of small and medium-sized businesses across the UK, are expected to be among the biggest beneficiaries of the FTA. Lammy described these entrepreneurs as “a driving force in our economy,” and said the agreement includes specific measures to support them—from simplified customs procedures and digital trade facilitation to the creation of a dedicated SME chapter. This includes points of contact, support for certification, and ongoing cooperation.
A landmark inclusion is also India’s first-ever trade and gender equality chapter, aimed at supporting women-owned businesses through trade missions and access to finance and skills.
The foreign secretary was also keen to frame the agreement in the wider context of the UK’s Indo-Pacific strategy, where India is described as a “vital partner” for ensuring peace, security and shared prosperity in the region. The upcoming launch of India-UK Vision 2035 is expected to guide this broader partnership, spanning five key areas: growth, security, technology, climate and education.
With India fast becoming a global leader in technology and innovation, the UK is looking to deepen its ties through joint investments in artificial intelligence, green tech, and future telecoms. Lammy noted that projects under the UK-India Technology and Security Initiative are already bearing fruit, including a £7 million fund for future telecoms research and growing cooperation in semiconductors and quantum tech.
Prime minister Narendra Modi being welcomed by members of the Indian community upon his arrival in UK, Wednesday, July 23, 2025. (@PMOIndia/X via PTI Photo)
Lammy also addressed concerns around migration, student access, and worker mobility—longstanding issues for communities on both sides. He stressed the importance of managing these flows responsibly, using existing frameworks like the Young Professionals Scheme and the Migration and Mobility Partnership, while maintaining strong people-to-people links that form what he called the “Living Bridge” between the two nations.
The minister also made a direct appeal to British Indians: “You are at the heart of the UK-India relationship,” he said, calling on them to continue leading the way in business, education, culture, and diplomacy.
Full text of the interview:
Q. The FTA is projected to boost bilateral trade by £25.5bn annually and double total trade by 2030. What mechanisms are in place to ensure both sides achieve these ambitious targets, and what are the short-term benchmarks for success?
Lammy: We are not just signing this deal and hoping for the best. To ensure we deliver on the opportunities this deal unlocks, we’ve built in a range of mechanisms across the agreement, such as dedicated working groups and implementation committees. These groups and committees will monitor progress and ensure commitments are fully realised. They will help both sides stay on track and adapt quickly to any challenges.
We will also be working hand-in-hand with UK businesses to help them seize the new opportunities this deal creates. This aligns with the UK’s recent Industrial and Trade Strategies, with the deal supporting the sectors that drive the most growth for the economy. For example, the UK’s large and varied manufacturing sectors will benefit from tariff reductions on aerospace (from 11 per cent to 0 per cent), automotives (over 100 per cent down to 10 per cent under a quota), and electrical machinery (22 per cent down to 0 per cent).
From simplifying customs procedures to improving digital trade infrastructure, we’re focused on making it easier, faster, and more cost-effective to trade with India.
(The ambition to double trade by 2030 was part of the UK-India 2030 Roadmap, not a direct outcome of the FTA)
Q. As you know, the British Asian community own and operate many successful SME businesses in the UK. How will they access new opportunities under the India FTA? What support will the UK Government give these companies to trade with India?
Lammy: British Asian entrepreneurs are a driving force in our economy, and this deal is designed with them—and all SMEs—in mind. India is the world’s most populous country, the fifth-largest economy, and one of the fastest-growing. But it has also been a challenging market to access, especially for smaller businesses. This agreement changes that. We’re breaking down long-standing barriers and opening the door for SMEs to trade more easily and affordably.
We’ve simplified customs processes, promoted digital contracts, and committed to making trade information more accessible and user-friendly. We’re also working to ensure UK assessment bodies can gain recognition in India—so products can be tested and certified here in the UK, saving time and money.
We’ve secured a dedicated SME chapter in the agreement. This sets up contact points, encourages best practice sharing, and creates a framework for ongoing cooperation to support small businesses.
This deal also champions women in business. We’ve secured India’s first-ever chapter on trade and gender equality, establishing a Working Group to promote women’s access to markets, skills, and finance. We’ll also explore initiatives such as trade missions for women entrepreneurs and support for women-owned SMEs.
Q. With global power dynamics shifting, what role does the UK envision for India in its broader Indo-Pacific strategy, and how does that align with mutual security interests in the region?
Lammy: India is central to the UK’s Indo-Pacific strategy. As the world’s most populous democracy, the fastest growing economy in the G20, and a rising global power, India is a vital partner in promoting a free, open, and secure Indo-Pacific. Prime minister Narendra Modi is in the UK this week, and his visit will mark the launch of India-UK Vision 2035—a refresh of our bilateral Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (CSP) that sets out a bold, future-facing agenda. This vision outlines shared goals across five key pillars: Growth, defence and security, technology and innovation, climate and clean energy, and education.
The UK sees India as a trusted partner in tackling shared security challenges—from terrorism and cyber threats to maritime stability. Our defence cooperation is growing significantly under the India-UK Vision 2035. We are doing this through joint capability development, industrial collaboration, and expanding cooperation with our armed forces. Together, we’re working on strategic alignment for peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific and beyond.
Q. India is emerging as a leading tech and innovation hub. How is the UK leveraging this growth within the Vision 2035, particularly in areas like AI, green technology, and digital infrastructure?
Lammy: The UK and India are working together to harness the rapid growth of frontier technologies and drive innovation through India-UK Vision 2035 and the UK-India Technology and Security Initiative (TSI). This collaboration is future-facing—focused on joint research, innovation hubs, and building resilient supply chains in critical areas like AI, future telecoms, semiconductors, and health tech.
We’re already seeing results. Under the TSI—which I launched almost a year ago—we’ve initiated a new Future Telecoms Partnership with up to £7 million in joint R&D funding, and we’re deepening cooperation on critical minerals, semiconductors, and quantum technologies. In AI, we’re promoting safe and responsible governance frameworks, and working together in global forums like the G20 and the UN.
On climate and clean energy, one of the crucial challenges of our time, we’re partnering to scale up green technologies such as off-shore wind farms, mobilise climate finance, and protect forests—supporting both countries’ net zero and nature goals. Given concerns over mobility and visa regimes on both sides, especially for skilled workers and students, how is the UK balancing immigration policy with its strategic ambition to deepen economic and cultural ties with India?
With 1.9 million people of Indian origin in the UK, our "Living Bridge" connects our countries across culture, education, business, food, sport, and more. The UK wants to encourage this continued exchange, while preventing exploitation by organised criminal organisations. Through India-UK Vision 2035, we are supporting managed mobility through existing schemes like the Young Professionals Scheme and the Study India Programme, which benefit young people in both countries.
The agreement includes a renewed commitment to curb irregular migration, prevent exploitation, and safeguard the UK-India Living Bridge, through full implementation of the Migration and Mobility Partnership. We are reinforcing this partnership by ensuring safe, legal migration routes while preventing exploitation and supporting the integrity of the UK-India Living Bridge.
Q. What role would you like the British Indian community to play to strengthen and develop ties between the UK and India?
Lammy: The British Indian community is at the heart of the UK-India relationship. They are a powerful force for UK economic growth and prosperity, and play a key role in deepening understanding and driving collaboration.
India is already the top nationality for UK skilled worker, health and care, sponsored study, and visitor visas—highlighting the scale of people-to-people links. We see the British Indian community playing a vital role in strengthening these ties: as cultural ambassadors, business leaders, innovators, and educators who can help shape the next chapter of our bilateral relationship. Their lived experience and deep connections to both countries make them uniquely positioned to foster trust, unlock opportunities, and champion the shared values that underpin our partnership.