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EU fast-tracks trade deal with South America's Mercosur, to France's chagrin

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on February 27, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: April 2, 2026

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By Philip Blenkinsop BRUSSELS, Feb 27 (Reuters) - The European Union will provisionally apply a contentious free trade agreement with South American bloc Mercosur to ensure it secures first-mover

EU fast-tracks Mercosur trade deal, drawing anger from France

EU fast-tracks Mercosur deal amid legal challenge and French backlash

EU to provisionally apply Mercosur trade agreement

By Philip Blenkinsop

BRUSSELS, Feb 27 (Reuters) - The European Union will provisionally apply a contentious free trade agreement with South American bloc Mercosur to ensure it secures first-mover advantage, the European Commission said on Friday, in a move France called a "bad surprise".

The agreement can enter into force provisionally two months after an exchange of notifications with Mercosur members, the Commission said.

The EU normally waits for approval of its free trade agreements by EU governments and the European Parliament. But EU lawmakers, led by French deputies, voted last month to challenge the agreement in the bloc's top court, potentially delaying its full implementation by two years.

Approval by the EU assembly remains ultimately necessary, but the EU and Mercosur can begin reducing tariffs and applying other trade aspects of the agreement before then.

Potential delays from court challenge and parliamentary approval process

MACRON CALLS MOVE DISRESPECTFUL

France objects, citing agricultural impact and democratic process

France - the EU's largest agricultural producer - has been the most vocal opponent of the Mercosur deal, saying it would sharply increase imports of cheap beef, sugar and poultry and undercut domestic farmers who have staged repeated protests.

"For France, it's a surprise, a bad surprise, and for the European Parliament, it's disrespectful," French President Emmanuel Macron told reporters after meeting Slovenian Prime Minister Robert Golob at the Elysee Palace in Paris.

In a statement, French meat industry association Interbev called on French members of the European Parliament to act to "prevent the Commission from circumventing the democratic debate". 

Voting breakdown among EU countries

In a vote in January, 21 EU countries supported the agreement, while Austria, France, Hungary, Ireland and Poland voted against and Belgium abstained.

Economic stakes and supporter arguments for swift implementation

The EU deal with Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay, concluded in January after some 25 years of negotiations, could remove around 4 billion euros ($4.7 billion) of duties on EU goods exports, making it the bloc's biggest ever free trade agreement in terms of potential tariff reductions.

Germany and other supporters of the deal such as Spain say it is essential to offset business lost due to U.S. tariffs and to reduce reliance on China for critical minerals. 

The German-dominated centre-right European People's Party -- the biggest political group in the European Parliament -- and the European Dairy Association both welcomed the swift application of the agreement.

Ratification progress and next steps

The Commission's move follows Argentina and Uruguay ratifying the agreement on Thursday, with Brazil and Paraguay expected to follow soon.

Von der Leyen statement on readiness and provisional application

"I've said before, when they are ready, we are ready," Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a short statement. "On that basis, the Commission will now proceed with provisional application."

($1 = 0.8473 euros)

(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop, editing by Andrei Khalip)

Key Takeaways

  • The EU is leaning on a two-track legal structure (a broader Partnership Agreement plus an Interim Trade Agreement) that allows earlier “provisional” rollout of the trade pillar before full ratification, a path often used to bring trade benefits forward while politics and legal reviews continue. (policy.trade.ec.europa.eu)
  • Momentum on the Mercosur side increased after Uruguay and Argentina became the first Mercosur members to ratify; Brussels has linked its next steps to Mercosur ratifications, with Brazil and Paraguay widely expected to follow. (apnews.com)
  • EU lawmakers have tried to limit agricultural downside risk with safeguard rules aimed at sensitive products (including beef and poultry), underscoring that farm-sector backlash—led by France—remains the core political fault line even as Germany/Spain frame the deal as strategic. (europarl.europa.eu)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What did the European Commission decide about the EU-Mercosur trade deal?
The Commission said the EU will provisionally apply the free trade agreement with Mercosur to secure first-mover advantage.
When can the agreement enter into force provisionally?
It can enter into force provisionally two months after an exchange of notifications with Mercosur members.
Why is France opposed to the Mercosur agreement?
France says the deal would increase imports of cheap beef, sugar and poultry and undercut domestic farmers, who have staged repeated protests.
Which Mercosur countries are included, and what is the deal’s tariff impact?
The deal is with Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay and could remove around 4 billion euros of duties on EU goods exports.

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