The Lisboeta

Farm group says Mercosur optimism is premature

Monday, 12 January 2026AI summary
Farm group says Mercosur optimism is premature

Confagri — the confederation representing Portuguese agriculture interests — told media the government's upbeat stance on the EU‑Mercosur agreement is premature and urged more public and private investment in the agri‑food sector to protect producers. Observador and RTP report Confagri wants safeguards and support so domestic farmers can compete if the trade deal advances. For expats in agri‑business or rural areas: watch later announcements on subsidies, market access and support programmes which can affect regional economies and local services.

Context & Explainers

What is Mercosur?

Mercosur is the South American trade bloc (Southern Common Market) whose main founding members are Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. An EU–Mercosur trade agreement — which the story says may be approved and signed soon — would reduce tariffs and open markets on both sides, affecting agricultural and industrial trade flows and therefore prices and business opportunities relevant to residents and companies in Portugal.

Confagri is the national confederation that represents agricultural cooperatives in Portugal, acting as a trade association and lobby for producers in policy, investment and trade discussions. Its caution about the EU–Mercosur agreement matters because Confagri speaks for cooperatives that produce food and export goods—its calls for more investment or safeguards can influence government responses, funding priorities and market rules that affect prices and rural jobs.

What is RTP?

RTP (Rádio e Televisão de Portugal) is Portugal's state-owned public service broadcaster, operating since 1935 (radio) and 1957 (television). It runs 8 television channels (including RTP1, RTP2, RTP3) and 7 radio stations (Antena 1, 2, 3), plus international services reaching Portuguese diaspora worldwide. Funded by a broadcasting tax on electricity bills and advertising revenue, RTP serves as Portugal's cultural reference, providing quality news, education, and entertainment. Its archive represents "irreplaceable heritage in Portuguese collective memory", and it pioneered online streaming with RTP Play in 2011. RTP connects "Portugal and the Portuguese to themselves, to each other, and to the world"

Sources (3)

Continue reading