EU seals Mercosur agreement despite opposition from farming sector

The free trade pact is signed in Paraguay after 25 years of negotiations, while the European Parliament debates taking it to the CJEU.

Representació genèrica d'una signatura d'acord comercial internacional en una taula de conferències.

Representació genèrica d'una signatura d'acord comercial internacional en una taula de conferències.

The European Union and the Mercosur bloc (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay) seal the free trade agreement today, Saturday, in Asunción (Paraguay), concluding a quarter-century of negotiations.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President António Costa lead the signing ceremony at 4 PM (Catalan time) in Asunción. The agreement provides for the gradual elimination of tariffs on 91% of EU exports to Mercosur and 92% of Mercosur exports to the EU.

"Everyone benefits from this."

Ursula von der Leyen · President of the European Commission
The European agricultural sector, including Catalan farmers, fears competition from cheaper South American products and warns that the pact could be "devastating." They demand "mirror clauses" so that imported goods meet the same standards as EU products.
The European Parliament could obstruct the pact's entry into force if it votes on Wednesday to refer it to the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). Nevertheless, the Commission has not ruled out applying it provisionally without the Parliament's approval.
To ease concerns, Brussels has introduced changes, such as limitations on the import of "sensitive" products (beef, sugar) and safeguard clauses allowing investigations if import prices or volumes drop or increase significantly.
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