Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Eu-south America deal ‘could kill 20,000 French farms’: union

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Over 20,000 French farms could go bankrupt if the European Union concludes a major trade deal with four South American countries, France’s biggest farm union warned yesterday.

Christiane Lambert, head of the National Federation of Agricultur­al Holders’ Unions, said France risked losing “between 20,000 and 25,000 farms” if the EU signs a deal allowing tens of thousands of tonnes of tarifffree South American beef into the bloc.

On Wednesday, beef farmers across France demonstrat­ed against the deal which could see up to 99,000 tonnes of beef from the Mercosur trading bloc (Brazil -- the world’s top exporter of the meat -- as well as Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay) flooding Europe every year.

Some campaigner­s have raised concerns about the use of hormones in these countries which lead to artificial­ly high growth rates in cattle -- a practice that is widespread in the United States but banned in Europe.

Lambert told BFM television she was worried the EU would agree to waive food security norms in return for access to a market of 260 million South American consumers for EU cars and auto parts, dairy products and other goods and services. She complained that the use by South American producers of hormones and of meat and bone meal - a type of feed banned in the EU since the BSE or “mad cow” crisis of the 1990s -would allow them to undercut their French counterpar­ts by up to 30 percent.

At a meeting Thursday with farmers, President Emmanuel Macron promised France would not budge on meat safety.

“There will never be beef with hormones in it in France. We shouldn’t play with fear,” he said, adding: “There will be no reduction in our social, environmen­tal or health standards.”

Negotiator­s from Mercosur and the EU resumed talks on Wednesday after edging closer to a deal during the last round in Brussels.

Paraguay’s Foreign Minister Eladio Loizaga, whose country currently holds the rotating presidency of the Latin American bloc, said Monday that the two sides were in agreement on “90 percent” of the issues, including beef exports to Europe.

 ??  ?? Christiane Lambert
Christiane Lambert

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