Dubai Telegraph - New push for EU-South America trade deal despite French fury

EUR -
AED 3.875889
AFN 72.205181
ALL 98.1458
AMD 411.558537
ANG 1.916541
AOA 962.380548
ARS 1053.460617
AUD 1.629039
AWG 1.899436
AZN 1.796054
BAM 1.955128
BBD 2.147062
BDT 127.076321
BGN 1.955501
BHD 0.397691
BIF 3140.220626
BMD 1.055242
BND 1.421211
BOB 7.348474
BRL 6.127479
BSD 1.063429
BTN 89.681974
BWP 14.429177
BYN 3.480104
BYR 20682.748811
BZD 2.143463
CAD 1.477856
CDF 3023.268931
CHF 0.936037
CLF 0.037475
CLP 1034.042999
CNY 7.643435
CNH 7.656268
COP 4726.4302
CRC 543.013352
CUC 1.055242
CUP 27.963921
CVE 110.227112
CZK 25.29162
DJF 189.364013
DKK 7.458431
DOP 64.047985
DZD 141.595584
EGP 52.048878
ERN 15.828634
ETB 129.787589
FJD 2.400517
FKP 0.831939
GBP 0.831679
GEL 2.880533
GGP 0.831939
GHS 17.174097
GIP 0.831939
GMD 74.922181
GNF 9164.849807
GTQ 8.217176
GYD 222.483527
HKD 8.210793
HNL 26.847772
HRK 7.527398
HTG 139.82194
HUF 408.071164
IDR 16747.750325
ILS 3.961617
IMP 0.831939
INR 89.091464
IQD 1393.021183
IRR 44417.781293
ISK 147.301429
JEP 0.831939
JMD 168.352133
JOD 0.748277
JPY 164.528089
KES 136.65697
KGS 90.959327
KHR 4308.519052
KMF 492.111895
KPW 949.718351
KRW 1484.483078
KWD 0.324709
KYD 0.886195
KZT 524.13984
LAK 23353.972643
LBP 95227.167988
LKR 310.813166
LRD 200.4511
LSL 19.103234
LTL 3.115856
LVL 0.638305
LYD 5.152205
MAD 10.573666
MDL 19.162413
MGA 4962.294333
MKD 61.50386
MMK 3427.385783
MNT 3585.713011
MOP 8.520071
MRU 42.333449
MUR 49.480474
MVR 16.303257
MWK 1843.966182
MXN 21.714761
MYR 4.729581
MZN 67.429784
NAD 19.103234
NGN 1777.15508
NIO 39.136548
NOK 11.768911
NPR 143.490319
NZD 1.79792
OMR 0.406301
PAB 1.063434
PEN 4.030415
PGK 4.274531
PHP 62.083597
PKR 295.462042
PLN 4.341712
PYG 8299.108061
QAR 3.877067
RON 4.9761
RSD 116.986248
RUB 103.941388
RWF 1459.598299
SAR 3.965
SBD 8.846682
SCR 14.372691
SDG 634.721198
SEK 11.604083
SGD 1.419443
SHP 0.831939
SLE 24.075373
SLL 22127.897695
SOS 607.691121
SRD 37.228328
STD 21841.3848
SVC 9.304802
SYP 2651.327542
SZL 19.109251
THB 36.955598
TJS 11.330505
TMT 3.7039
TND 3.34705
TOP 2.471482
TRY 36.253371
TTD 7.226516
TWD 34.38931
TZS 2806.944247
UAH 43.932499
UGX 3902.658556
USD 1.055242
UYU 44.834589
UZS 13604.323846
VES 47.482416
VND 26792.601648
VUV 125.280461
WST 2.949681
XAF 655.731608
XAG 0.035015
XAU 0.000412
XCD 2.851845
XDR 0.801125
XOF 655.728502
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.600634
ZAR 19.280301
ZMK 9498.447256
ZMW 29.089001
ZWL 339.787586
  • CMSC

    0.0700

    24.61

    +0.28%

  • RBGPF

    59.2500

    59.25

    +100%

  • NGG

    -0.7800

    62.12

    -1.26%

  • RELX

    -0.4700

    46.12

    -1.02%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    7.07

    -0.57%

  • AZN

    0.1000

    65.29

    +0.15%

  • GSK

    -0.4100

    35.11

    -1.17%

  • BTI

    0.1800

    35.42

    +0.51%

  • BP

    0.4100

    28.57

    +1.44%

  • CMSD

    -0.0200

    24.73

    -0.08%

  • RIO

    -0.5800

    60.62

    -0.96%

  • VOD

    0.2800

    8.75

    +3.2%

  • SCS

    -0.3000

    13.37

    -2.24%

  • BCC

    1.4200

    142.55

    +1%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.24

    +0.15%

  • BCE

    -0.4800

    27.21

    -1.76%

New push for EU-South America trade deal despite French fury
New push for EU-South America trade deal despite French fury / Photo: JOHN THYS - AFP/File

New push for EU-South America trade deal despite French fury

A controversial trade deal between the EU and South America's Mercosur bloc is back in the spotlight with rekindled optimism that the two sides could conclude an agreement before the year is over.

Text size:

The blockbuster trade pact between the 27-country European Union and Mercosur countries -- Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay -- has been 25 years in the making and would create the world's biggest free trade zone.

The contours of a deal were agreed in 2019 but some EU states blocked its ratification over environmental concerns.

Key opponent France is still trying to stop it in its tracks -- with angry farmers planning protests from Wednesday in Paris and Brussels against an accord they fear will flood the bloc with cheaper agricultural goods.

But officials point to a real push inside the European Commission, in charge of EU trade policy, to get a Mercosur deal over the line despite French opposition.

The agreement's biggest European supporters, including Spain and Germany, believe it can be struck before year end, and South American officials were also optimistic.

"I see that both blocs are very interested in completing the remaining parts of the agreement," said Argentina's international economic relations secretary, Marcelo Cima.

"I understand that there is still some work to do to be able to finish, but there is a very good atmosphere," Cima told AFP.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez pointed last month to two key meetings as a chance to move things forward: the G20 summit in Brazil on November 18-19, and a Mercosur gathering in Montevideo in December.

"We are very close to concluding this agreement," Sanchez said.

European officials and diplomats dismissed the likelihood of a deal at the G20 talks, calling it "premature" and "very hypothetical".

But German leader Olaf Scholz has also urged negotiations to "be finalised quickly".

- French resistance -

For many, the latest speculation will feel like deja vu.

In December last year, both sides wanted to put the final seal on the deal but it fell at the last hurdle over the EU's environmental demands.

Some member states, including France, were especially concerned about deforestation in the Amazon, and wanted commitments to ensure its protection.

France's President Emmanuel Macron reiterated following an EU summit in October that the "Mercosur deal, as it stands, is not acceptable" and that France sought stronger commitments including on the climate and protections for European farmers.

Still one of the biggest obstacles to any agreement, France is seeking to form a blocking minority -- requiring four member states under EU rules -- although its ability to do so is unclear.

The country's Agriculture Minister Annie Genevard said Paris was "actively working" to persuade "Belgium, Bulgaria, Austria, Ireland, maybe Italy" to use their veto against it.

But while some countries including Austria have in the past criticised the pact, others such as Ireland and the Netherlands want to judge the latest deal before taking any formal position.

- Farmers' beef -

The pact has provoked farmers' ire because they fear any agreement would open European markets to cheaper meat and produce that are not forced to adhere to strict rules on pesticides, hormones, land use and environmental measures.

Pan-European farmers' group Copa-Cogeca and other European agricultural organisations last week raised concerns about Brazil's "persistent issues in meeting European food safety standards" as they urged policymakers to reassess the agreement.

There was an attempt to appease farmers with talk of giving cash to those negatively impacted but that was given short shrift by the industry.

"For our sectors, this appears more like a fake quick fix rather than a genuine solution," different groups including Copa-Cogeca said in a separate joint statement.

On the South American side, one contentious issue was an EU anti-deforestation law that would ban importing goods such as beef and coffee produced on deforested land -- but the EU is delaying those rules for one year to give more time for preparation.

The difficulties getting the deal done have led to some calling for change over how the EU negotiates trade agreements, including Germany's Scholz.

"They must succeed more quickly and they must also be less dependent on individual member states," he said, in what appeared to be a dig at France.

In Brussels, meanwhile, the EU's designated top diplomat Kaja Kallas voiced support for the deal with Mercosur during her confirmation hearing on Tuesday, warning that unless the bloc goes ahead "this void will be really filled by China".

burs-raz/ec/db/tym

G.Koya--DT