EU clinches agricultural safeguards for Mercosur deal amid signing push

Building on recent calls for delays from France and others, the EU has secured additional safeguard clauses for agriculture to advance the long-stalled free trade agreement with Mercosur. Brazil presses for swift approval ahead of the planned Saturday signing, as reservations persist among member states.

Following opposition from countries like France—where farmers fear competition from lower-standard South American imports—the EU's member states and European Parliament reached a compromise in Strasbourg on enhanced protections for European agriculture. These safeguards allow temporary suspension of tariff benefits if Mercosur imports (from Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay) surge harmfully or cause excessive price drops for EU producers. An investigation triggers if volumes exceed eight percent annual growth.

Key monitored products include beef, poultry, rice, honey, eggs, garlic, ethanol, citrus, and sugar. The Danish EU Council Presidency announced bi-annual impact reports. Proponents see this enabling the Saturday signing in Brazil, requiring approval from at least 15 of 27 member states (65% of EU population).

France and Italy remain cautious, with Poland and Austria already opposing. Italy's stance may prove decisive. Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva warned Wednesday: "If we don't do it now, Brazil won't make a deal while I'm president" after 26 years of talks.

The deal promises a free trade zone for over 700 million people, countering protectionism. Critics highlight risks to EU farmers and South American deforestation. SPD's Bernd Lange hailed it: "Open trade and strong protection for European agriculture are not mutually exclusive." Formal acceptance is expected next.

Artigos relacionados

EU diplomats shake hands with Mercosur representatives in front of the European Council, flags waving, amid subtle protests symbolizing trade deal approval despite opposition.
Imagem gerada por IA

União europeia endossa acordo comercial com mercosul em meio a resistências

Reportado por IA Imagem gerada por IA

O Conselho Europeu aprovou nesta sexta-feira (9) o acordo de livre comércio entre a União Europeia e o Mercosul, com apoio de 21 dos 27 países-membros, após negociações iniciadas em 1999. Apesar do avanço, obstáculos persistem, incluindo aprovação do Parlamento Europeu e possíveis contestações judiciais de nações como a França. A assinatura está prevista para 17 de janeiro em Assunção, no Paraguai.

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.

Reportado por IA

Ursula von der Leyen announced to EU leaders the postponement to January of the Mercosur trade agreement signing, originally set for Brazil this weekend, after failing to secure a majority due to French and Italian opposition for stronger farmer safeguards—following earlier EU proposals and amid massive Brussels protests.

After 26 years of negotiations since 1999, the European Union and Mercosur (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Bolivia) signed a landmark free trade agreement on January 17, 2026, in Asunción, Paraguay. The deal creates one of the world's largest free trade zones, spanning about 720 million people and 20% of global GDP, by eliminating tariffs on over 90% of bilateral trade and promoting sustainable development amid rising protectionism.

Reportado por IA

Following initial French demands for a delay, President Emmanuel Macron has personally asked EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to postpone Mercosur free trade agreement deadlines, citing unmet protections for farmers. France pushes for safeguard clauses and mirror measures ahead of a December 20 summit in Brazil.

O primeiro-ministro francês, Sébastien Lecornu, anunciou a suspensão da importação de frutas da América do Sul que contenham resíduos de substâncias químicas proibidas na Europa, como medida para proteger agricultores locais. A decisão complica as negociações do acordo comercial entre a União Europeia e o Mercosul, previsto para ser assinado em 12 de janeiro. Produtos como abacates, mangas e uvas estão entre os afetados.

Reportado por IA

Após o adiamento anunciado pela UE — como informado anteriormente —, a cúpula do Mercosur em Foz do Iguaçu terminou em 20 de dezembro sem a assinatura do pacto comercial. O Brasil passou a presidência pró-tempore ao Paraguai em meio à frustração de Lula, enquanto líderes avaliam alternativas com China, Canadá e outros. Chanceleres, incluindo o argentino Pablo Quirno, permanecem otimistas quanto a uma assinatura com a UE em breve.

quarta-feira, 21 de janeiro de 2026, 19:12h

European parliament seizes court over Mercosur agreement

terça-feira, 13 de janeiro de 2026, 06:43h

French farmers protest against Mercosur in Paris

sexta-feira, 09 de janeiro de 2026, 07:36h

UE aprova acordo comercial com o Mercosul após décadas de negociações

quinta-feira, 08 de janeiro de 2026, 06:22h

Farmers block highways ahead of EU vote on Mercosur deal

sexta-feira, 19 de dezembro de 2025, 19:14h

EU eyes January 12 in Paraguay for Mercosur deal after summit delay, as protests persist

quinta-feira, 18 de dezembro de 2025, 16:05h

UE propõe adiamento para janeiro no acordo Mercosur em meio à oposição francesa e italiana

quinta-feira, 18 de dezembro de 2025, 15:03h

Ue adia assinatura de acordo com Mercosul e frustra cúpula em Foz do Iguaçu

quinta-feira, 18 de dezembro de 2025, 09:33h

Assinatura do acordo de livre-comércio UE-Mercosul adiada para janeiro

quinta-feira, 18 de dezembro de 2025, 08:08h

EU-Mercosur trade deal signing must be postponed

domingo, 14 de dezembro de 2025, 06:42h

France seeks to halt signing of EU-Mercosur agreement

 

 

 

Este site usa cookies

Usamos cookies para análise para melhorar nosso site. Leia nossa política de privacidade para mais informações.
Recusar