EU foreign ministers agreed, on 23 April 2007, to open negotiations on free-trade agreements (FTAs) with India, Korea and the ten countries of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN), in a move to increase its competitiveness vis-à-vis Japan and the US in these regions, which represent just under 10% of the bloc's total trade with the world.
Member states stressed that concluding the so-called Doha Round of global trade talks in the World Trade Organization remained the EU's number one trade priority but added that, with multilateral talks stalled since last July, bilateral agreements "should be taken forward rapidly to improve the external competitiveness and market access conditions of European industries on these important markets vis-à-vis global competitors".
The Commission says the agreements will boost EU exports to ASEAN by 24.2%, to India by 56.8% and to Korea by 47.8%, adding more than €40 billion to exporters' revenues annually.



