Daily Current Affairs 04 July 2025 – IAS Current Affairs
Current Affairs 04 July 2025 focuses on the Prelims-Mains perspective. Major events are :
India Trinidad & Tobago Relations
Source: PIB
GS II: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests
Overview
- News in Brief
- What are the outcomes of the visit?
- India Trinidad & Tobago Relations
- Trinidad & Tobago Explained with Map
Why in the News?
Recently Prime Minister visited Trinidad & Tobago.
News in Brief
- Official Visit to the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago from 3 to 4 July 2025 at the invitation of the Honourable Kamla Persad-Bissessar, Prime Minister of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago.
- First bilateral visit by an Indian Prime Minister in 26 years.
- It has great significance as it coincided with the 180th anniversary of the arrival of Indian immigrants to Trinidad and Tobago in 1845.
- The two Prime Ministers held comprehensive discussions on a wide range of bilateral, regional and global issues of mutual interest.
What are the outcomes of the visit?
MoUs / Agreements signed
- MoU on Indian Pharmacopoeia
- Agreement on Indian Grant Assistance for Implementation of Quick Impact Projects (QIPs)
- Programme of Cultural Exchanges for the period 2025-2028
- MoU on Cooperation in Sports
- MoU on Co-operation in Diplomatic Training
- MoU on the re-establishment of two ICCR Chairs of Hindi and Indian Studies at the University of West Indies (UWI), Trinidad and Tobago
Announcements made by the Hon’ble PM
- Extension of OCI card facility up to 6th generation of Indian Diaspora members in Trinidad and Tobago (T&T): Earlier, this facility was available upto 4th generation of Indian Diaspora members in T&T
- Gifting of 2000 laptops to school students in T&T
- Formal handing over of agro-processing machinery (USD 1 million) to NAMDEVCO
- Holding of Artificial Limb Fitment Camp (poster-launch) in T&T for 50 days for 800 people
- Under the ‘Heal in India’ program, specialised medical treatment will be offered in India
- Gift of twenty (20) Hemodialysis Units and two (02) Sea ambulances to T&T to assist in the provision of healthcare
- Solarisation of the headquarters of T&T’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Caribbean Community by providing rooftop photovoltaic solar panels
- Celebration of Geeta Mahotsav at Mahatma Gandhi Institute for Cultural Cooperation in Port of Spain, coinciding with the Geeta Mahotsav celebrations in India
- Training of Pandits of T&T and the Caribbean region in India
India Trinidad & Tobago Relations
- India and Trinidad and Tobago established diplomatic relations on 31 August 1962 when they get independence.
- Trinidad and Tobago has a diplomatic Mission in India.
- Indian PM paid a State Visit to Trinidad and Tobago in February 1999.
Economic & Commercial Relations
- Trade Agreement was signed between India and T&T in January 1997, accords Most Favoured Nation (MFN).
- potential for growth of bilateral trades in IT and IT-Enabled Services, Pharmaceuticals, Agriculture and Agro-Biotechnology, Renewable Energy (Wind & Solar), Tourism (including Medical Tourism), Textiles and Garments, Higher Education, Automobiles, Ayurveda and Wellness and Films, Music, etc.
- Major items of India’s exports to Trinidad & Tobago are: Vehicles, Rolling Stock, Parts and Accessories; Iron and Steel; Pharmaceutical Products; Plastic and Articles, etc.
- Major items of India’s Imports from T&T are: Mineral Fuels, Mineral Oils and Products of their Distillation; Bituminous Substances; Mineral Waxes; Iron and Steel; Ores, Slag & Ash; Aluminium etc.
|
2020-21 |
2021-22 |
2022-23 |
2023-24 |
2024-25 |
|
|
India’s Exports |
74.79 |
93.27 |
104.93 |
109.06 |
120.65 |
|
India’s Imports |
189.36 |
112.20 |
91.26 |
259.90 |
220.96 |
|
Total Trade |
264.15 |
205.47 |
196.19 |
368.96 |
341.61 |
People-to-People Relations
- More than 250 members of Diaspora have visited India under the Know India Programme (KIP), including 41 during 2023-24 and 24 in 2024-25.
- The Mission has been engaged in active cultural diplomacy through its Cultural Wing, Mahatma Gandhi Institute for Cultural Cooperation (MGICC).
- A series of Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR)-sponsored cultural troupes have visited T&T in recent times, giving performances across the country.
Trinidad & Tobago Explained with Map
- The southernmost island country in the Caribbean.
- The capital city is Port of Spain.
- Trinidad for centuries prior to Spanish colonisation.
- Trinidad and Tobago were ceded to Britain in 1802 under the Treaty of Amiens.
- Trinidad and Tobago obtained independence in 1962 and became a republic in 1976.
- Indians lasted from 1845 to 1917, during which time more than 147,000 Indians came to Trinidad to work on sugarcane plantations.

Chemical Industry: Powering India’s Participation in Global Value Chains
Source: PIB
GS II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation
Overview

- News in Brief
- Detailed Report
- Conslusion
Why in the News?
NITI Aayog released its report “Chemical Industry: Powering India’s Participation in Global Value Chains”.
News in Brief
- This report offers an extensive analysis of India’s chemical sector, highlighting both opportunities and challenges.
- Also, outlining a pathway for positioning India as a key player in global chemical markets.
- The global chemical industry is undergoing a major transformation, driven by shifting supply chains, demand for speciality and green chemicals, and heightened focus on innovation and sustainability.
- India’s chemical sector, while significant in size and GDP contribution, remains fragmented and constrained by infrastructure gaps, regulatory inefficiencies, and low R&D intensity.
Detailed Report
- India’s 3.5% share in global chemical value chains and its chemical trade deficit at USD 31 billion in 2023, underscore its high dependence on imported feedstock and speciality chemicals.
- However, targeted reforms encompassing a comprehensive range of fiscal and non-fiscal interventions will enable India to have a USD 1 trillion chemical sector and achieve 12% GVC share by 2040, thus becoming a global chemical powerhouse.
Challenges
- A key issue is the country’s heavy reliance on imported feedstock, which contributed to a USD 31 billion trade deficit in 2023, stemming from limited domestic backwards integration.
- Infrastructure gaps, outdated industrial clusters, and high logistics costs have created a cost disadvantage compared to global peers.
- Compounding this, India’s low investment in R&D, with only 0.7% of investment against the global average of 2.3%, hampers indigenous innovation in high-value chemicals.
- Regulatory delays, especially in environmental clearances, further stifle industrial agility.
- Additionally, the sector is hampered by a 30% shortfall in skilled professionals, particularly in emerging areas such as green chemistry, nanotechnology, and process safety.
Interventions for Growth
- Empowered committee at the Central level along with creation of a Chemical Fund under the empowered committee with a budgetary outlay for shared infrastructure development, VGF, etc.
- Composition of a Chemical Committee for ports to advise on and address infrastructural gaps in chemical trading at ports.
- Opex subsidy scheme :
- Incentivize incremental production of chemical based on import bill, export potential, single source country dependence, end-market criticality etc.
- The scheme proposes for incentives on incremental sales to selected participants for a fixed number of years
- Enhance self-sufficiency and foster innovation
- Disbursement of R&D funds to drive innovation with enhanced collaboration between industry and academia through creation of an interface agency in collaboration with DCPC and DST.
- Acquiring access to specific technologies available outside India through fostering MNC partnerships
- Fast-track environmental clearance
- Fast-track environmental clearance with transparency and accountability.
- Simplify and fast-track EC clearance process through setting up an audit committee under DPIIT to monitor timelines and compliance and publish periodic reports and give more autonomy to EAC.
- Talent and skill upgradation
Vision for 2030
- The vision for 2030 is for India to become a global chemical manufacturing powerhouse with a 5%-6% share of the global chemical value chain.
- The sector aims to double its current production levels and reduce the trade deficit significantly from USD 31 billion in 2023 to reach a Net Zero trade balance in Chemicals.
- The initiative will generate an additional export of USD 35-40 billion generating around 7 lakh skilled jobs.
- This growth will be supported by the development of world-class chemical clusters, advanced technology adoption, streamlined regulatory processes, and a highly skilled workforce, positioning India among the top global leaders in the chemical industry.
Conclusion
- India has significant potential to become a global leader in the chemical industry.
- Achieving this goal requires focused efforts from the central and state governments, as well as industry stakeholders.
- By addressing the existing challenges and leveraging the proposed interventions, India can enhance its competitiveness, attract investments, and build a robust chemical sector capable of leading the global value chain.
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