On 29 November 2024, the EFTA States (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland) and Thailand met online to conclude negotiations towards an ambitious and broad-based free trade agreement (FTA). 

Karin Büchel, Head of the Free Trade Agreements/EFTA Division at the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs, acted as the EFTA spokesperson, while Director-General Chotima Iemsawasdikul from the Department of Trade Negotiations in the Ministry of Commerce of Thailand headed the Thai delegation. 

As an ambitious and broad-based free trade agreement, the EFTA–Thailand FTA covers trade in goods and services, investment, intellectual property rights, competition, government procurement, trade and sustainable development, and legal and horizontal provisions and contains chapters on small and medium-sized enterprises and on cooperation and capacity building.   

Negotiations towards an FTA between the EFTA States and Thailand were launched by EFTA Ministers and Thailand’s Deputy Prime Minister during EFTA’s Ministerial meeting in June 2022 in Borgarnes, Iceland. Since then, ten rounds of negotiations have taken place in Bangkok, Geneva and Oslo. 

Economic relations between the EFTA States and Thailand 

In 2023, bilateral EFTA–Thailand merchandise trade exceeded EUR 3.2 billion. Clocks and watches, fish and crustaceans, pharmaceutical products, electrical machinery, and mechanical appliances were the primary exports from EFTA to Thailand, while electrical machinery, mechanical appliances, clocks and watch parts, vehicles, and iron structures were the primary imports from Thailand. 

Read more about merchandise trade between EFTA and Thailand here. 

Factsheet: Chapter by Chapter

EFTA-Thailand

Details

Related Category
Related Section
Free Trade

Contacts

Markus Schlagenhof

Trade Relations Division
Deputy Secretary-General
Image of Markus Schlagenhof

Thomas Kräuchi

Trade Relations Division
Officer
Image of Thomas Kräuchi

Request more information

Questions about trade and our free trade agreements?
The EFTA Secretariat is here to answer your questions on trade matters
Email us