
Climate envoys from EU discuss climate action with Indian officials
The Hindu
EU climate envoys meet Indian officials to strengthen cooperation amid US withdrawal from Paris Agreement, focusing on trade and investment.
Climate envoys representing Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, and the European External Action Service (EEAS) held a series of meetings in New Delhi earlier this week with officials from the Prime Minister’s Office, the Ministries of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, and New and Renewable Energy, as well as representatives from industry and research institutions.
The joint diplomatic mission aimed to reinforce EU-India cooperation on climate action, trade, and investment, particularly in the lead-up to future international climate negotiations. Organised in coordination with the European Commission (EC), the talks come in the wake of the recent visit by the College of Commissioners in February, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced plans to expedite the conclusion of the India-EU FTA by the end of the year.
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Speaking at a briefing on Friday (April 4, 2025), Prince Jaime de Bourbon de Parme, Climate Envoy for the Netherlands, highlighted the significance of the relationship. “India is an incredibly important trading partner. We are re-calibrating and refocusing on our partners. The EU is a stable partner in a very dynamic world. Following our meetings, we sense that India too is extremely receptive,” he stated.
The talks assume heightened significance following the United States’ decision, under the administration of President Donald Trump, to withdraw from the Paris Agreement for a second time in January 2025, and this week’s launch of trade tariff war.
Anthony Agotha, Special Envoy for Climate and Environment at the EEAS, emphasised the reliability of the European Union. “Coming from the EU, you [India] do not always have to like us. We do not have the monopoly on virtue but neither on vice. What you see is what you get. We fulfil our treaties. As Prime Minister Modi and the EC President have reiterated, we are big democracies, huge pluralist societies with an intent to uphold the multilateral order,” Mr. Agotha said.
The joint EU mission aimed not only to underline the bloc’s own steadfast commitment to its green transition but also to strategize with India on navigating the significant challenges the U.S. withdrawal presents to global climate governance and the goals of the Paris Agreement. This context looms large as nations prepare for COP30, scheduled for Belém, Brazil, in November 2025, where the absence of the U.S. will heavily impact negotiations.

The Socio Economic and Educational Survey (caste census) report, accepted by the Karnataka government on Friday, has proposed an increase in reservation to other backward classes (OBCs) from the existing 32% to 51 %. This would result in total reservation in the State going up to 85%, including 10% to the economically weaker sections (EWS) and 24% to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.