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India signals openness to extending tariff-free deal on e-commerce, two diplomats say

By Thomson Reuters Mar 27, 2026 | 8:29 PM

By Olivia Le Poidevin

YAOUNDE, March 28 (Reuters) – India has signalled it may drop its opposition to the extension of a global agreement to not impose tariffs on electronic transmissions such as digital downloads and streaming, ​two senior diplomats said.

India’s Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal had on Thursday ‌cast doubt on U.S. efforts to permanently extend the moratorium – which is set to expire this month – during a World Trade Organization meeting in Cameroon this week, saying it warranted “careful reconsideration.”

However, India late on Friday night indicated to WTO members it would agree to an extension ‌of ​two years, two senior diplomatic sources said, in the ⁠first sign of an opening ⁠in its position, ahead of the WTO meeting on the matter on Saturday.

It is unclear, however, if a short-term extension would be satisfactory to the U.S. The U.S. trade Representative Jamieson Greer said on Thursday Washington was ​not interested in a temporary extension to the ban, only a permanent one.

Business leaders say an extension is critical to guarantee predictability, fearing duties could be ⁠introduced if the agreement lapses.

Two senior diplomats said ⁠U.S. and Indian positions were still far apart.

A third senior ​diplomat said that members are trying to forge a middle path of extending the ​moratorium beyond the next ministerial meeting – between five and 10 years. ‌It was uncertain if the U.S. or India would accept a middle ground, they added.

The extension of the e-commerce moratorium during the WTO meeting in Yaounde is being seen as a key test for the global watchdog’s relevancy, following a ⁠year of tariff-fuelled trade turmoil and major disruption to shipping, energy prices and supply chains due to the Middle East conflict.

“I think for some countries it’s actually quite ⁠existential to prolong the moratorium ‌for a significant time,” Norwegian Foreign Minister Espen Barth ⁠Eide said, adding it would help demonstrate that ministers were ​able ‌to deliver something concrete at the meeting in Yaounde.

For nearly ​three decades ⁠the e-commerce moratorium has been continually extended until the next ministerial conference. The U.S. wants major American tech businesses such as Amazon, Microsoft and Apple to have a stable regulatory environment without the fear and costs of countries introducing duties that could impact cross-border digital trade.

(Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin in Yaounde; Editing by David ​Gregorio and Lincoln Feast.)