Boosted by the comprehensive economic partnership agreement, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) expects trade with India to cross $100 billion-mark over the next 2-3 years. In FY 2021-22, the Indo-UAE trade stood at $73 billion, which got a major fillip since the two nations signed the comprehensive economic partnership agreement (CEPA) on May 1, 2022. The overall trade rose 68 per cent to $73 billion, between FY21 and FY22, after declining for two years. But the trend has reversed since the signing of CEPA. The bilateral trade has increased markedly with total value of non-oil trade at USD 29.5 billion in first six months of 2022, growing 22 per cent over the same period in 2021. Apart from this, the non-oil exports too rose 31 per cent with total value reaching $2.7 billion between May and June, junior foreign trade minister of the UAE Thani Bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi said at the Indo-UAE economic forum organized by industry lobby CII.
“Though we've set a five-year deadline to take the UAE-India bilateral trade to $100 billion from what it is now, going by the way trade has been growing since the signing of the CEPA, I am confident that we'll achieve the target much earlier, say over the next two-three years," Zeyoudi said. Though the trade is still dominated by oil, which constitutes 62 per cent of the overall trade value and only 38 per cent are non-oil trade now, said Zeyoudi, expressing hope that CEPA will change this over the years. The minister also said while non-oil trade balance is still in favour of India by a whisker, overall India has a trade deficit of $17 billion in FY22, led vastly by large oil imports. In the first half of 2022, , bilateral non-oil trade grew 22 per cent to $29.5 billion, the minister said, adding, his country's cumulative investments in India is over $20 billion, of which $14.4 billion are FDI, making the UAE the eighth largest FDI source for India. The FDI flows into the country from the UAE stood at $2.14 billion between April-June this year. Zeyoudi also said his country is open to invest in the now-stalled West Coast Refinery if India revives the 60-million tonne refinery involving over ₹3 lakh crore investment. Addressing another session at the same forum, joint secretary in the commerce ministry Srikar Reddy said, since the CEPA, overall exports from the country to the UAE rose 16 per cent to $10.46 billion from $9 billion between May and August, which is commendable given the decline in overall global trade during the period.
Reddy also said exports under the CEPA have been outpacing the country's overall exports by 5:1. On the other hand, non-oil exports to the UAE grew 14 per cent. Reddy said non-oil trade is still dominated by gems & jewellery which constitutes around a third of the total trade, which has grown by 33 per cent to $1.4 billion. Companies from the UAE that have invested in India are Mubadala, DP World, Sharaf Group, Lulu Group, Emaar Properties, RAK Ceramics. Companies from India that have invested in the UAE are ONGC & PetroResources, Tata Motors, Larsen & Tourbo Middle East, Oberoi Group, Zuari Agro Chemicals, Essar Steel Manufacturing Company.