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At G20 summit, Germany hoping for EU-Mercosur trade progress

November 18, 2024

In these politically difficult times, Germany is looking for partners in Latin America who are willing to seal the EU-Mercosur trade agreement. However, opposition has grown after 25 years of talks.

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A large screen at the G20 press center shows German Chancellor Olaf Scholz (right) shaking hands with Brazil's president Lula
Germany is hoping to make headway on the EU-Mercosur trade deal at the G20 summitImage: Kay Nietfeld/dpa/picture alliance

When Olaf Scholz comes back to Germany from the G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Wednesday, the crisis-ridden chancellor could be returning with something truly historic: a free-trade agreement between the European Union and the Mercosur states of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. That is, if he can seal the deal after decades of negotiations.

"This free-trade agreement would be liberating for the German economy. It's almost impossible to imagine a more difficult situation geopolitically — we have to use this opportunity," Volker Treier, the foreign policy leader of the German Chamber of Commerce and Industry, told DW.

"Right now the window is open — you can't negotiate for 25 years, not have a deal, and still believe you can just keep stretching it out like chewing gum," Treier said. "If not now, when?"

German economy hoping for breakthrough

Treier noted a recent business survey from the Association of European Chambers of Commerce and Industry in Brussels. The result, he said, was "pretty dismal."

With the European Union facing US protectionism under the incoming Trump administration, Treier said, an agreement with Mercosur would be an important signal for EU and German businesses. When it comes to batteries, solar panels, wind energy and green hydrogen, he said, the European Union could achieve its green transformation more quickly and sustainably with the help of raw materials from Latin America.

EU-Mercosur trade deal: A tale of two cattle breeders

In return, European businesses would no longer pay €4 billion ($4.2 billion) in tariffs to export their goods to Mercosur countries, according to Treier. "We already have good relations with Mercosur, but there's no real dynamism. In part, that is because Mercosur countries are imposing 25-30% tariffs on classic German export products like cars, but also electronics or machined goods," said Treier.

Kaja Kallas, the EU's incoming foreign affairs chief, echoed those sentiments. "If we don't do a trade agreement with them, then this void will be filled by China," she said during her confirmation hearing before the European Parliament this week. China has increased its investment in the region by a factor of 34 between 2020 and 2022, and the first Chinese-controlled mega-port in South America has just opened for business in Chancay, Peru.

In the event the agreement isn't signed at the G20, proponents are aiming to get it wrapped up at the Mercosur summit taking place in Montevideo, Uruguay, in early December.

Opponents to EU-South America deal gathering force

At the same time, opposition to the deal is also gaining momentum in Europe and South America — and it's not just coming from environmentalists. European farmers are livid, criticizing double standards and unfair competition with their South American colleagues.

In an appeal printed in the French daily newspaper Le Monde, some 600 French parliamentarians called for European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to refrain from signing the agreement. Moreover, and potentially more ominously, French Prime Minister Michel Barnier has said Paris would not agree to the deal in its current form.

"The agreement between Mercosur and the EU is far more advantageous to Europe than it is to South America," as Raul Montenegro, an Argentine biologist and 2004 Right Livelihood Award winner, told DW. "The main losers in an eventual agreement will definitely be biological diversity in South America, as well as the small and midsized businesses and poor in both regions."

Germany 'strongly committed' to EU-Mercosur deal: Scholz

Brazil on its way to becoming a global player

G20 host Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who hopes to enshrine the fight against hunger and climate change in the Rio summit's final communique, is facing a herculean task when it comes to the endless discussion of free-trade agreements, yet remains upbeat.

"I have never been so optimistic about the EU-Mercosur," the Brazilian president said on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York in September. Lula is determined to heave Brazil into the role of a global player in his third and likely last term in office.

That is yet another reason that Treier of the German Chamber of Commerce and Industry said time is fleeting.

"Self-confidence is increasing among the Mercosur countries, the same way it is across the Global South. We were in India two-and-a-half weeks ago for our Asia conference and the same thing is happening there: They are still willing to reach out to us, but things won't stay that way forever," he said.

This article was originally written in German.

Oliver Pieper | Analysis & Reports
Oliver Pieper Reporter on German politics and society, as well as South American affairs.