India and South Korea plan $50 billion trade push with new deals


FILE PHOTO: South Korean President Lee Jae Myung listens to a reporter’s question during a press conference to mark the first anniversary of the December 3, 2024, martial law declaration by former President Yoon Suk Yeol, at the Blue House in Seoul, South Korea, December 3, 2025. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo

NEW DELHI/SEOUL, April 20 (Reuters) - India and South Korea ⁠said on Monday that they would boost their economic ties by expanding cooperation in energy, critical minerals, shipbuilding, semiconductors and steel ⁠as they seek to double their trade to $50 billion by 2030.

New Delhi and Seoul also agreed to resume and ‌step up negotiations to give new energy to their 2010 trade agreement as India wants their trade to be more balanced and South Korea wants greater market access to the world's fastest-growing major economy.

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung is in India for a three-day visit, the first South Korean presidential state visit to the country in ​eight years.

"We decided to upgrade the framework of economic cooperation between the two countries ⁠to create a new engine for shared growth," Lee ⁠told reporters after talks with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The two countries created a ministerial-level economic cooperation committee for the first time, Lee ⁠said, ‌adding that they would strengthen cooperation in areas such as nuclear power plants, clean energy as well as trade and investment.

With the Iran war squeezing global energy supplies, India and South Korea would also continue to cooperate to ensurethe stable supply of energy ⁠resources and key raw materials such as naphtha, Lee added.

Modi said Lee's visit was ​extremely significant and that the two countries ‌had taken important decisions to boost two-way trade to$50 billion by 2030 from around $27 billion at present.

"Today, we are laying ⁠the foundation for the success ​story of the next decade," Modi said, as he recalled strong civilisational ties between the two countries that go back several centuries.

BIG INVESTMENT IN INDIA'S STEEL SECTOR

Indian Trade Minister Piyush Goyal said he held talks with his South Korean counterpart, Yeo Han-koo, and discussed ways to resume and revamp the trade pact ⁠and explored opportunities to deepen cooperation in the areas of industry, green energy ​and digital trade.

Lee will attend a joint business forum conference later on Monday where some 250 South Korean participants are expected, including leaders of household names in India such as Samsung Electronics, Hyundai Motorand LG Group, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said.

The two sides also plan to sign a ⁠total of 20 private-sector memoranda of understanding on the sidelines of the forum, covering areas including shipbuilding, digital technology and energy, Yonhap said.

Separately, South Korea's POSCO Holdings said in a regulatory filing on Monday that its steelmaking unit plans to build a joint venture integrated steel plant with India's JSW in Odisha state. POSCO's investment until end-2031 is expected to be about $1.09 billion, the filing said.

The joint venture deal to set ​up a 6-million-ton-per-annum steel plant in Odisha was announced last week.

In a policy seminar at South ⁠Korea's parliament last week, Maeng Hyun-chul, a research fellow at Seoul National University's Asia Center, noted India's longstanding complaint of a widening trade deficit with ​South Korea and said that political ties had not kept pace with commercial ties.

South ‌Korea had a $12.8 billion trade surplus last year, with exports worth $19.2 billion ​and imports of $6.4 billion, according to Korea International Trade Association data.

Lee will be visiting Vietnam after India.

(Reporting by Joyce Lee in Seoul, YP Rajesh, Hritam Mukherjee and Manoj Kumar in New Delhi; Editing by Ed Davies, Edwina Gibbs and Sharon Singleton)

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