Council of the European Union announces approval of trade agreement with Mercosur

Friday, 9 January 2026RSS
Council of the European Union announces approval of trade agreement with Mercosur

The Council of the European Union announced on Friday the approval of a trade agreement with four Mercosur countries, which is to be signed on 17 January by the President of the European Commission in Paraguay.

Context & Explainers

Mercosur

Mercosur (Mercado Comum do Sul) is South America's largest trade bloc, comprising Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay as full members. It has been negotiating a landmark free trade agreement with the European Union for over two decades.

The EU-Mercosur deal matters for Portugal because of the country's deep historical, cultural, and economic ties with Brazil — Portugal's largest non-EU trading partner and home to the biggest Portuguese diaspora community. A deal would reduce tariffs on European exports (including Portuguese wine, olive oil, and textiles) while opening EU markets to South American agricultural products (beef, soy, sugar, ethanol).

Portuguese farmers, particularly in the beef and dairy sectors, have expressed concern about competition from lower-cost South American producers. Environmental groups have criticized the deal over deforestation risks in the Amazon. The agreement requires ratification by all EU member states and the European Parliament, making its passage politically complex.

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