The EU-Mercosur trade deal is officially announced

After 25 years of negotiations, the highly contentious European Union-Mercosur trade deal has officially been announced.

European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen joined South American leaders this morning from Uruguay’s capital city to share the news. The landmark deal will create one of the world’s largest free trade agreements.

“This agreement was designed with your interests at heart. It is made to work for you. It means more jobs, and good jobs; more choices, and better prices. The European Union and Mercosur created one of the largest trade and investment partnerships the world has ever seen. We’re taking barriers down and we are allowing investment in. We are forming a market of more than 700 million consumers, and this partnership will strengthen entire value chains. It will develop strategic industries. It will support innovation, and it will create jobs and values on both sides of the Atlantic.”

However, the deal faced criticism from European farmers who argue the agreement will threaten their livelihoods.

Related Stories
Coal-based ethanol could weaken long-term export demand for corn-based fuels.
New wage rules improve accuracy but may still raise labor costs.
Strong corn and China-driven demand support the pace of U.S. grain exports. RealAg Radio host Shaun Haney discusses Canada-China agricultural trade talks.
Tight global supply is likely to keep fuel and fertilizer costs elevated.
Cattle producers face mounting pressure as U.S.-Mexico trade talks resume, but expanding drought, rising input costs, and policy work to improve the long-term industry outlook.
More Farms File for Bankruptcy As Strong Farm Loan Demand Boosts Bank Earnings

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

A bipartisan Senate delegation recently traveled to China ahead of President Trump’s meeting in Beijing.
Trucking industry expert Lewie Pugh joins us to discuss rising diesel costs, challenges facing independent truckers, and the broader impact on agriculture and rural transportation.