(Reuters) -The central banks of India and the European Union have agreed ​to start the initial phase of linking domestic payments ‌systems, the Reserve Bank of India said on Friday.

The ‌interlinking will aim to facilitate cross-border remittances between India and the euro zone, the RBI said.

The Reserve Bank of India has been actively pursuing interlinking of its ⁠locally developed Unified ‌Payments Interface (UPI) with fast payment systems of other jurisdictions to promote cross-‍border payments.

“The decision is part of the Euro system’s overall efforts to make it easier for businesses and consumers ​in Europe to send and receive payments to and ‌from other countries, including remittances,” the European Central Bank said in a statement dated Thursday.

India is among the top ten recipients of euro area remittances, the ECB said.

This comes at a ⁠time when New Delhi and Brussels ​are holding talks to finalise ​a long-pending trade deal they aim to conclude by end of 2025.

Separately, India ‍is also in ⁠talks with countries in Africa and South America to help them build a digital payments system using ⁠UPI as a blueprint, Reuters reported earlier this year.

‌(Reporting by Hritam Mukherjee in Bengaluru; ‌Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri)