EU approves Mercosur trade deal despite protests, following safeguards agreement

Building on December's agricultural safeguards amid opposition from France and others, EU states approved the long-stalled Mercosur trade deal in Brussels on Friday, despite farmer protests. The pact protects European designations like Champagne and Feta, includes quotas and emergency brakes for EU agriculture, and strengthens Europe's geopolitical stance in Latin America after 25 years of talks.

EU member states greenlit the landmark trade agreement with Mercosur (Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay) in Brussels, advancing past the safeguards compromise reached in Strasbourg last December. Those measures—covering beef, poultry, ethanol and more, with triggers for import surges—addressed fears of cheap South American imports flooding the market.

Farmer protests persisted, with blockades and clashes in capitals, but the deal includes robust protections: geographical indications for products like Champagne, Feta, and Parmesan now extend to Mercosur markets, alongside quotas and emergency mechanisms.

The agreement opens markets for over 700 million people, diversifies EU supply chains, and counters China's growing influence in Latin America amid US protectionism. It signals Europe's commitment to open trade while prioritizing domestic agriculture, overcoming years of lobbying resistance.

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Brazil's Senate approved the EU-Mercosul free trade agreement on Wednesday (4), completing congressional proceedings and sending the text for presidential sanction. The treaty is expected to take provisional effect in May after notification to the EU. Negotiated since 1999, it links markets with a combined GDP of $22 trillion and will eliminate tariffs on 91% of bilateral trade.

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Following Brazil's congressional ratification, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signed the decree promulgating the EU-Mercosur free trade agreement on April 28, 2026, paving the way for provisional effect from May 1. At the ceremony, Lula highlighted multilateralism amid global tensions and announced submission of Mercosur-Singapore and Mercosur-EFTA deals to Congress.

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