The EU has negotiated a trade agreement with the four founding member countries of Mercosur – Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. Here you can find out what is in it, what impact it will have, and how we will reach a final deal.
Mercosur is a big market for EU exports and it was until now the only major trading partner in Latin America with which the EU does not have a preferential trade agreement. EU firms exported to the four founding countries of Mercosur*:
Mercosur's economies are highly protected and European firms face many trade barriers when exporting there, which makes it hard for them to compete under fair conditions. These include:
So there is huge potential for EU firms to export even more to this large market of over 260 million people.
The EU already has trade deals in place with nearly all other countries in Latin America. Securing an agreement with the Mercosur countries allows us to extend preferential access to EU exporters still further and strengthens our political ties with all Latin American countries.
The more Europe exports, the more jobs it can safeguard and create.
The EU's trade agreement with Mercosur will:
*The four countries are Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay.
Mercosur is the world's fifth largest economy outside the EU. With a population of over 260 million, its annual output is over €2.2 trillion.
EU firms export over €45bn in goods and €23bn in services to Mercosur. Today, more than 855,000 jobs in the EU relate to exports to Brazil alone. Over 60,000 EU companies are already exporting there.
EU companies are also major investors in Mercosur and Mercosur companies are increasingly investing in the EU. Companies from Mercosur countries employ more than 30,000 people in the EU.
Yet both exporters and potential investors face significant barriers to trading in this important market. EU firms could increase exports to and invest more in Mercosur if it were easier to do so.
Over 20% of Mercosur's trade is with the EU, making it the region's most important trading partner. The EU is also the largest foreign investor in the region.
The Mercosur market is large, but highly protected. European firms often find it difficult to export there, due to:
The EU wants the trade agreement with Mercosur to tackle unnecessary and discriminatory obstacles to European exports so that European firms can sell more goods and services to Mercosur.
It will become easier for Mercosur to export to the EU, as far as they respect the EU high standards.
The deal will also help integrate Mercosur industries into the EU’s highly innovative value chains. This in turn will help them become more competitive. Mercosur countries want to rely less on exports of commodities and to diversify their economies by producing higher value goods and services. The agreement will help them do so.
The trade deal will give more opportunities for Mercosur citizens to be able to provide their services in the EU, including on a temporary basis through their physical presence in EU countries, including through business contracts or as independent professionals.
With the agreement, governments in Mercosur are committing to make it easier and simpler to do business in their countries by improving the business climate. They will do so via more predictable and transparent procedures and regulations and by providing enhanced access to their market. This will help them attract more investment from Europe, as well as the rest of the world.
Both the EU and Mercosur want to:
1. Get rid of tariffs
High Mercosur tariffs make European products in Mercosur more expensive. Mercosur imposes high tariffs on imports of European products such as:
By removing these tariffs, the trade deal with Mercosur will make it easier for European firms to export to Mercosur countries.
2. Promote trade in other ways
The agreement aims to boost EU exports to Mercosur with provisions on:
3. Show the world that the EU and Mercosur reject protectionism
At a time when protectionist pressures are growing, a trade agreement between the EU and Mercosur sends a clear signal to the world that two of its largest economies:
4. Pursue a value-based trade agenda
Under the agreement, the EU and Mercosur agree to:
The EU wants Mercosur to abolish import tariffs on European goods. It also wants Mercosur to remove obstacles to EU exports, such as:
Making it easier to export to Mercosur should benefit EU firms making and selling:
The more Europe exports, the more jobs it can safeguard and create.
The agreement will make it easier for EU firms to sell their services to Mercosur, both through local establishment and on a cross-border basis.
A wide range of services and manufacturing sectors should benefit, including:
The agreement will reduce and eliminate discrimination and expand opportunities for EU and Mercosur service providers and investors.
The agreement will not:
For both foreign and domestic services suppliers, the agreement will not affect the capacity of regulators to develop and impose non-discriminatory rules and standards:
Today, more than 850,000 jobs in the EU relate to exports to Brazil alone. Companies from Mercosur countries employ more than 30,000 people in the EU. Over 60,000 EU companies export to Mercosur. If we make trade and investment with Mercosur easier, these figures could be higher.
In the EU, the following sectors should benefit:
- in services and establishment:
The agreement will remove import duties on over 90% of EU goods exported to Mercosur. Duties for some products will be liberalised over longer staging periods to allow sufficient time for companies in Mercosur countries to adapt.
Examples of current Mercosur tariffs on such goods are:
Trade barriers disproportionately affect smaller businesses more than large companies, because small firms may not have the time and resources to overcome them. This is why the EU has requested a dedicated chapter for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in trade agreements to address the specific challenges of SMEs in international trade and investment activities.
The EU wants the agreement to:
These improvements will be especially helpful for small businesses.
The agreement will create the conditions for European consumers to choose from a wider and more affordable range of products and services.
EU farming communities stand to gain from easier access to the Mercosur market and more opportunities to sell their produce to Mercosur's over 260 million consumers.
Mercosur consumers like high-quality European products such as wines, cheese, chocolate and pork.
But Mercosur imposes high tariffs on imports of these and other European food and drink products.
The deal will remove these high tariffs and other trade barriers such as unclear rules and regulations or burdensome procedures, so it will be easier for European producers to export to Mercosur.
The EU is a major producer of distinctive high-quality regional food and drink products such as Prosciutto di Parma, Parmigiano Reggiano, Prosecco and Irish whiskey.
In the EU, these products enjoy protection under a special status called 'Geographical Indications' (GIs). GIs guarantee to consumers that the produce is the genuine article from the specific locality or region concerned. They also allow European producers to earn a premium price for the quality of their unique produce.
The deal will recognise some 350 European Geographical Indications, guaranteeing that only products with this status will be sold in Mercosur under the corresponding GI name.
This would make it illegal to sell imitations. This means that the use of a GI term for non-genuine GI products will be prohibited and expressions such as ‘kind’, ‘type’, ‘style’, ‘imitation’ or the like will not be allowed. Furthermore, the agreement grants protection from misleading use of symbols, flags or images suggesting a "false" geographical origin. For example no-one will be allowed to call cheese Roquefort unless it is the genuine cheese made in Roquefort, France, under specific production conditions.
The recognition and protection of EU GIs through the Agreement will:
The agreement will make it easier for European firms to bid for government contracts in Mercosur countries on equal terms with local companies. The agreement will make it easier for EU companies to tender for contracts in three ways. First, it will prevent discrimination by Mercosur governments against EU suppliers. Second, it will make the tendering process more transparent. Each Mercosur country has agreed to publish contract notices online at a single national point of access for procurement covered by the agreement. Third, the agreement also sets standards of fairness throughout the procurement process as well as for remedies available to bidding companies that feel they have been treated unfairly.
As with all the EU's trade agreements, the agreement with Mercosur will not change European standards, including standards for food, agricultural and fishery products. EU standards are not negotiable.
The agreement aims to protect the life and health of consumers, animals and plants. It will reinforce and strengthen cooperation with Mercosur countries in ensuring that these high standards are respected. Thanks to the agreement, the EU and Mercosur will work more closely with each other, and together in the international standard-setting bodies.
Under the Agreement, the EU and Mercosur will work together to fight one of the world major health threat: the Antimicrobial Resistance.
The agreement will address several aspects of sustainable farming:
The agreement opens up the EU market to goods from Mercosur, but limits imports from Mercosur of sensitive agricultural products such as beef, ethanol, pork, honey, sugar and poultry. This strikes the right balance: Mercosur exports will not put at risk the EU market through unlimited imports in sensitive sectors.
Under the agreement, the EU and Mercosur commit to effectively implementing the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Paris Agreement on climate change.
They also commit to promoting trade’s positive contribution to the fight against climate change.
Both the EU and Mercosur have strong laws protecting workers' rights. They have agreed that the trade deal between them must support existing rights and not reduce or dilute them.
The agreement prohibits either side from unduly encouraging trade and investment by:
The two sides have also agreed to ensure that core labour rights as defined by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) are respected. These concern:
They have also agreed commitments on labour inspection and on health and safety at work, in line with ILO standards.
The EU and Mercosur have agreed that the trade deal between them must support existing environmental standards and labour rights and not lower or dilute them. They have also agreed that each side has the right to regulate in order to protect the environment and workers’ rights.
The agreement prohibits either side from unduly encouraging trade and investment by:
The agreement also contains commitments on sustainable fisheries and sustainable forest management, among others.
Both sides have agreed to effectively implement the Paris Agreement on climate change.
The agreement will also open opportunities for supply chains of products that are produced in a way that helps conserve the environment, such as Brazil nuts from natural forests.
Yes. The commitments set out in the section on Trade and Sustainable Development will be enforceable through a dispute settlement mechanism that includes:
Yes. The agreement asserts the right of governments' to regulate on the basis of the precautionary principle.
The 'precautionary principle' means that governments have a legal right to act to protect human, animal or plant health, or the environment, in the face of a perceived risk even when scientific evidence is not conclusive.
This is expressly mentioned in the chapter on trade and sustainable development.
The agreement will not affect the right of the EU or Mercosur:
Like all EU trade deals, the EU-Mercosur Agreement leaves governments on both sides entirely free to manage water distribution or other essential services as they see fit. They continue to choose whether such services are part of the public or the private sector. The EU–Mercosur agreement is no different.
The agreement will enable the EU and Mercosur to work together on some regulatory issues – on a voluntary basis.
Cooperation will only apply to EU laws that affect trade or investment. It will not include EU Member States’ laws.
The negotiations were launched on 28 June 1999. Following a suspension of talks, negotiations restarted in 2010. The longstanding negotiations gained new impetus in 2016 when the EU and Mercosur each made new offers to cut tariffs. On 28 June 2019 the European Union and Mercosur reached a political agreement for an ambitious, balanced and comprehensive trade agreement. The new trade framework - part of a wider Association Agreement between the two regions – will consolidate a strategic political and economic partnership.
The European Commission negotiated on behalf of the EU in line with a mandate granted to it by the governments of the EU's 28 Member States.
The Commission has always ensured that the negotiation process is accountable to EU Member States and to the European Parliament.
The EU Commissioners concerned as well as the Commission negotiators and services:
The European Parliament also set up a special Monitoring Group to follow the negotiations. The Commission has regularly reported on the state of play of the negotiations to this group, as well as to the European Parliament Delegations responsible for relations with Mercosur and Brazil.
Throughout the negotiations, the Commission has regularly met, informed and shared information with:
On its website the Commission has published dedicated pages with links to:
The Commission also:
Since negotiations started, the Commission has conducted several studies on the potential impact of a trade agreement with Mercosur.
The Commission published a Trade Sustainability Impact Assessment (SIA) in 2009, an Economic Impact Assessment in 2011, and an impact assessment focusing on agriculture (also in 2011).
Work is currently underway on a new a Trade Sustainability Impact Assessment (SIA) evaluating the economic, social, environmental and human rights impact of a trade agreement between the EU and Mercosur. An independent contractor is carrying out the study.
A number of roundtable events and civil society dialogues have been held in Brussels and in Mercosur countries. The comments made in these discussions have into the work on the report and has informed the negotiation process.
The Commission regularly reports back to the governments of the EU's Member States and keeps the European Parliament informed of progress in the negotiations.
The European Commission has also held numerous meetings with representatives of many of the 460+ civil society organisations registered with its ongoing dialogue on trade policy.
These EU-based, not-for-profit organisations include:
These meetings enable a wide range of bodies to make their views heard and to comment on the negotiations. At the meetings, the Commission informs and updates civil society on the negotiations.
In 2015, the European Commission issued new guidelines for transparency. Since then, the Commission has made public all new negotiating papers tabled in the talks.
The European Commission's doors are open. Any organisation interested in the talks can meet officials to put forward their views and opinions.
In the EU, once the discussions have finished and the text of the agreement has been completed, the text of the agreement will be published on the European Commission website and it will also be: