BRUSSELS: European Union states gave the go-ahead on Friday for the bloc to sign its largest free trade accord with the South American group Mercosur, despite opposition from farmers in France and some other countries. The approval came more than 25 years after talks began,

With US President Donald Trump shaking up global trade, the European Commission and countries such as Germany and Spain argue the deal will help offset business lost from US import tariffs, and reduce reliance on China by securing access to critical minerals.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva hailed the EU’s clearance as a “historic day for multilateralism”.

“In an international scenario of growing protectionism and unilateralism, the agreement is a signal in favour of international trade as a driver of economic growth, with benefits for both blocs,” he posted on X.

Opponents led by France, the European Union’s largest agricultural producer, say the agreement will jack up imports of cheap food products, including beef, poultry and sugar, undercutting domestic farmers.

Farmers march, bloch highways

Farmers have launched protests across the EU, blocking highways in France and Belgium and marching in Poland on Friday.

France voted against the deal, but a sufficient majority of EU members backed the accord.

An EU diplomat and Poland’s agriculture minister said that 21 countries supported the agreement, with Austria, France, Hungary, Ireland and Poland against and Belgium abstaining.

A minimum of 15 countries representing 65 per cent of the bloc’s total population was required for approval.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz hailed the vote as a “milestone” and said the deal would be good for Germany and for Europe.

“But 25 years of negotiations is too long. It’s vital that the next free trade agreements are concluded swiftly,” he said in a statement. The approval clears the way for Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to sign the agreement with Mercosur partners - Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay - in Asuncion. Argentina’s foreign ministry said the signing ceremony would take place on Jan 17.

The European Parliament will also need to approve the accord, finally concluded a year ago, before it can enter into force.

Battle is not over

The free trade agreement is set to be the European Union’s biggest in terms of tariff reduction, removing 4 billion euros ($4.66 billion) of duties on its exports. The Mercosur countries have high tariffs, such as 35pc on car parts, 28pc on dairy products and 27pc on wines.

The EU and Mercosur will hope to expand evenly split goods trade worth 111 billion euros in 2024. EU exports are dominated by machinery, chemicals and transport equipment, and Mercosur’s are focused on agricultural products, minerals, pulp and paper. To win over deal sceptics, the European Commission has put in place safeguards that can suspend imports of sensitive farm produce. It has strengthened import controls, notably regarding pesticide residues, established a crisis fund, accelerated support for farmers, and has pledged to cut import duties on fertilisers.

The concessions were not enough to convince Poland or France, but Italy shifted from a ‘no’ in December to a ‘yes’ on Friday, swinging the overall balance.

“It seems to me the balance that has been found is sustainable,” Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni told a press conference.

Published in Dawn, January 10th, 2026

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