I paesi dell’UE approvano l’accordo UE-Mercosur

http://www.rte.ie/news/2026/0109/1552254-mercosur-trade-deal-blog/

di nitro1234561

18 commenti

  1. mizezslo on

    We need to take care of our farmers in the face of this, including those who lease the land they farm. But we also need to get away from our US-centric trade policy given their being an unreliable partner. Tough choices, and I don’t know what the right one is.

  2. Moist-Dependent5241 on

    Isn’t our beef and dairy renowned? Shouldn’t we do everything to develop and protect that industry?

  3. buzzbaron on

    Cutting down the Amazon faster will defo be a good way to tackle climate change, big bualadh bos for ya Ursula.

  4. The main opponents appear to be farmers. I understand their grievances. Having to provide food that is safe for consumption only for your government to import millions of tonnes of unregulated beef is a tough pill to swallow.

    But where are the food regulators? My fix would be, import the bloody beef and make dam certain it has an appropriate health warning “may contain hormones or antibiotics that are harmful for human consumption” or similar. Should be same for restaurants and fast food serving beef without packaging. This stuff is going to be imported (as it always has been just in bigger quantities) and they don’t give a shit. Yet we are hearing of more and more food recalls on other products.

  5. Brave-Mistake-1007 on

    Good news for EU , bad news for polluting Irish farmers.

  6. KeyboardWarrior90210 on

    We’re an export nation. We need to do trade deals to help diversify trade and expand markets. There’s always winners and losers in them but overall the effect will be net positive. Ireland only voted against it because the government knew there was enough votes for it to pass

  7. Cautious-Hovercraft7 on

    Isn’t it great, look at all the cars Germany and France will be selling to latin America

  8. jacqueVchr on

    Mercusor is an incredibly good deal for the Irish economy. It removes tariffs from our top exports (chemicals) removes imports of rare earths into the EU (needed for vast swathes of production) and increase imports on consumer goods.

    This also isn’t the doomsday scenario that farmers claim it to be. Whilst the farming sector (an increasingly smaller share of the economy) who are already highly subsidised cry foul of any trade deal (they’re doing the same with CETA) total beef imports into the EU will only increase to a maximum of 99k tonnes ie 1.5% of total beef production. A lot of this beef is already being imported, the only difference is that the 8% import tariff is being removed.

  9. Grand-Cup-A-Tea on

    Ireland voted against this yet imports animal feed from many of these counties. Me thinks food safety isn’t the 1st priority here. 

  10. JohnC_92 on

    I don’t know much about this but I am skeptical of commenters who describe it as all upside for Ireland and the EU. No downsides. How can that be the case?

  11. muttonwow on

    Just like those who didn’t read the EU Migration Pact, this will be forgotten about by many of the deals opponents within a week.

  12. Shadowbringers on

    Great news. Farmers are the most heavily subsidised group in Europe and all their doomposting propaganda didn’t matter in the end. You would think this massive deal is all about beef if you read the headlines.

    Europe needs to diversify trade and this is a great step

  13. Thank god, now we will have more cheap Brazilian products in Ireland and more Kerrygold and Guinness in Brazil. Being great for everyone.

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