
Thoothukudi may get $10 billion LATAM investment amid growing trade ties
The investment is under negotiation and may be formalised through a memorandum of understanding by the end of the year, according to Rajkumar Sharma, President of the Indo Latin American Chamber of Commerce (ILACC). He declined to name the investing country or confirm whether the project is linked to the upcoming Kulasekharapatnam spaceport being developed near Thoothukudi. 'This is for national safety and security. I am not authorised to disclose further details,' Sharma said on the sidelines of the launch of ILACC's South India Chapter in Chennai.
He noted that bilateral trade between India and Latin America has grown from $2 billion in 2000 to $18 billion today. Lithium and rare earth imports through South Indian ports are emerging as a priority, aligned with India's energy security goals. The announcement coincides with a broader strategic push to position South India as a hub for LAC investments in sectors such as defence, infrastructure, logistics, ports, and renewable energy. Sharma said southern states have already attracted more than $40 million in investments from the region, with Tamil Nadu receiving the largest share.
The initiative was launched during Horizon 2025, a business conclave hosted by ILACC to mark the inauguration of its South India chapter. The event brought together diplomats, trade envoys, and business leaders from countries including Peru, Cuba, Chile, Venezuela, Argentina, and El Salvador.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
9 hours ago
- Time of India
'Walmart has already increased cost…': Madeleine Dean grills Trump's Commerce Secretary on bananas
US Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-PA): "What's the tariff on bananas? Americans love bananas." Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick: "Generally 10%." Dean: "Walmart has already increased the cost of bananas by 8%." Lutnick "If you build in will be no tariff." Dean: "We cannot build bananas in America." Show more Show less
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
10 hours ago
- Business Standard
Indian economy is robust: Arvind Panagariya counters Donald Trump's jibe
Dismissing US President Donald Trump's "dead economy" jibe, 16th Finance Commission Chairman Arvind Panagariya on Friday said the Indian economy is growing at 7 per cent, and more than that in dollar terms. Panagariya was speaking at the Business Today India@100 event. "You don't grow at 7 per cent plus (if the economy is dead), and actually in dollar terms we are growing at more than 7 per cent. I don't know what the definition (of dead economy) means. May be, dead bodies do move," he said when asked if India is a dead economy. Asked about India's trade protectionism, Panagariya said: "There may be protectionist measures... We are substantially open". Mounting a sharp attack on India, Trump had remarked that India is a "dead economy". "I don't care what India does with Russia. They can take their dead economies down together, for all I care," Trump had said in a social media post on July 31. Trump later imposed 50 per cent tariff on Indian goods imported to the US with a brief exemption list. Commerce & Industry Minister Piyush Goyal had last week asserted in Parliament that India is the world's fastest-growing major economy, contributing almost 16 per cent to the global growth and will soon become the third-largest economy in the world. "In just over a decade, India has rapidly transformed from being one of the Fragile 5 to the fastest-growing major economy in the world. We have risen from the 11th largest economy to one of the top 5 economies, driven by our reforms, the hard work of our farmers, MSMEs and entrepreneurs," Goyal had said in Parliament on July 31.


Indian Express
13 hours ago
- Indian Express
Why US will reimburse Japan for ‘wrongly collected' tariff
The US has agreed to revise an executive order to ensure that Japan is not charged more than the 15 per cent tariff agreed between both sides last month and reimburse all mistakenly collected duties, Japanese trade envoy Ryosei Akazawa told reporters on Thursday. Following his ninth round of engagement with Washington, Akazawa said the US expressed regret about the 'stacking' rule, wherein the 15 per cent reciprocal tariffs were being added to the existing tariffs. A table attached to Trump's July 31 executive order that addressed tariff rates for many trading partners showed a 'no stacking' condition applied to the European Union, while no such clarification was given for Japan, news agency Reuters reported. After meeting Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Thursday, Akazawa said now the US will not be adding the 15 per cent duty to existing tariffs but will instead treat it as something akin to a ceiling rate. Akazawa also said that US officials agreed to formalise the reduction in auto tariffs to 15 per cent, in line with the countries' trade agreement. With the auto sector employing roughly 8 per cent of the nation's workforce, according to Bloomberg, Japanese carmakers are struggling with 27.5 per cent tariffs – a combination of a previous 2.5 per cent rate and a new 25 per cent applied by Trump.