The
European Union is set to formally sign its long-negotiated trade agreement with
the MERCOSUR bloc, marking a turning point for global agricultural trade. The
deal carries direct implications for livestock production, feed raw materials
and animal-based products, while intensifying debates over competition,
standards and market safeguards within Europe.
The European Union is preparing to sign a comprehensive trade agreement with the MERCOSUR countries, Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay, following political approval by a qualified majority of EU member states. The signing, expected in mid-January in Paraguay, would conclude more than 25 years of negotiations and create one of the world’s largest free-trade areas, covering close to 700 million people.
Under the agreement, the EU would grant preferential, quota-based market access for a range of agricultural products, including beef, poultry, sugar, ethanol and selected dairy items, while MERCOSUR countries would further open their markets to European industrial and value-added goods. For feed and livestock value chains, the deal is particularly relevant given MERCOSUR’s dominant role in global soy and corn production, key inputs for animal nutrition.

European institutions stress that all agri-food imports under the agreement must comply fully with EU sanitary, environmental and animal-welfare standards, and that safeguard mechanisms would allow tariffs to be reintroduced if imports disrupt domestic markets. Nevertheless, farmer organizations in several EU countries argue that increased access for South American livestock products could pressure prices and margins, especially in the beef and poultry sectors, triggering widespread protests in recent weeks.