Speaking about the situation, the Commerce Secretary
said, “There are
logistical challenges that are being faced. Air cargo is also facing certain
challenges because of some destruction in flights.” He
added that the disruptions could affect trade flows between India and the
region.
“It will have some impact. Their imports from India
will also suffer because they are also dependent on India for multiple
categories,” Agrawal said.
However, he emphasised that both sides are working to
address the issues and keep trade channels functional. “Both
sides are very engaged in finding solutions which can address some of these
challenges. It may have some impact, but it will not be completely wiped out,”
he said.
Agrawal also said the government has set up a
mechanism to monitor the situation and respond quickly.
“There are certain
collaborations, certain work that we are doing by forming an interministerial
group under DGFT, which meets everyday morning,” he added, referring to the
Directorate General of Foreign Trade.
Meanwhile,
government trade data for February also showed continued action on trade
remedies and facilitation measures. The Directorate
General of Trade Remedies (DGTR) initiated a countervailing duty
investigation on imports of “PVC Suspension” from China.
The data indicated, “DGTR
has initiated one Countervailing duty investigation concerning imports of ‘PVC
Suspension’ from China PR.”
It also noted that “DGTR
has issued two final findings in the month of February, 2026” concerning
anti-dumping investigations related to “Monoisopropylamine (MIPA)” and “Methyl
Acetoacetate” imports from China PR, while
“DGTR has not issued any Preliminary findings in the month of February, 2026.”
The Commerce
Secretary’s press conference further highlighted measures aimed at improving
the ease of doing business in foreign trade.
According to the
information provided,
“Exporter bank accounts are automatically verified via NPCI, linked with PAN
and matched with IEC details,” a move that “reduces manual
intervention, improves compliance speed, and enhances trade facilitation.”
The government also
extended support to exporters through reforms in duty exemption schemes. It
said the “export
obligation fulfilment period extended till 31 Aug 2026 to address disruptions
due to the West Asia crisis.”
In addition, a
nationwide drive conducted from “2-12
March 2026 issued 3,796 EODCs to clear long-pending cases,” which
helps “release bank
guarantees/bonds, reduce compliance burden, improve liquidity, and strengthen
trade facilitation.