Analysis

Arguments For and Against Macron’s Mercosur Threat

France threatens to hold up a trade deal unless Brazil does more to fight forest fires.

Angela Merkel Emmanuel Macron
German chancellor Angela Merkel and French president Emmanuel Macron meet on the sidelines of a European Council summit in Brussels, June 20 (Elysée/Soazig de la Moissonniere)

French president Emmanuel Macron has threatened to hold up ratification of an EU trade deal with Mercosur unless Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro does more to fight fires in the Amazon Rainforest.

Canada, Finland, Ireland and the Netherlands have backed Macron up. Germany is less sure. Donald Trump is expected to side with Bolsonaro at the G7 summit this weekend.

Here are the arguments for and against the threat.

Arguments for

  • The Amazon is burning. Fires are up 84 percent from the same period last year. This is a global catastrophe. The rainforest produces one-fifth of the world’s oxygen.
  • Nobody else is going to pressure the far-right Bolsonaro, who has accused environmental groups of starting the fires in order to discredit him.

Arguments against

  • The EU-Mercusor trade deal is the result of two decades of negotiations. It covers everything from agriculture to public procurement. What wasn’t part of the agreement was forest management. Adding this as a last-minute condition makes the EU an unreliable partner.
  • The other Mercusor nations — Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay — haven’t done anything wrong.
  • It reeks of Trumpian great-power politics in which big nations (or blocs) force their will on the small. The EU has a population of half a billion and an economy worth $19 trillion; Mercosur has 264 million people and a GDP of $5 trillion.