EU and CPTPP Agree to Progress With ‘Historic’ Digital Trade Deal, Canada’s International Trade Minister Says

YAOUNDE, March ⁠27 (Reuters) – ⁠The European Union and ⁠the parties to the Comprehensive and Progressive ​Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership agreed on Friday to move forward ‌with reaching a “historic” digital ‌trade agreement between both trading blocs, Canada’s trade ⁠minister said.

“The ⁠concrete resolution from today’s conversation was: let’s move forward ​on digital trade agreement,” Maninder Sidhu, Canada’s Minister of International Trade told Reuters.

The EU and parties to the CPTPP – a ​trade agreement which comprises 12 countries, including Japan, Britain, ⁠Canada, Mexico, ⁠Australia, Malaysia – met ⁠on ​the sidelines of the WTO ministerial conference in Cameroon on Friday.

“If ​this comes together, ⁠as it hopefully will, this will be historic. It will be the largest trading agreement in civilization,” Sidhu said.

He said the coming together of the two blocs ⁠which together represent 1.6 billion people and $35 trillion economies would ⁠be significant.

The EU said in a statement that this agreement could serve as a blueprint “for a region-to-region track of work” in digital trade.

“An EU-CPTPP Digital Trade Agreement would be an enormous success. We need to accelerate, as DTAs represent a future-proof layer of trade agreements,” said a EU spokesperson.

The deal ⁠would look at e-commerce, data flows and storage, the minister said, adding that ministers will continue to engage in further conversations on what the deal could ​look like.

(Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin in ​Yaounde; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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