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Mercosur launches economic partnership talks with Japan, eyes China

By Thomson Reuters Jun 30, 2026 | 12:09 PM

SAO PAULO, June 30 (Reuters) – The South American trade bloc Mercosur launched negotiations with Japan on Tuesday for an economic partnership agreement as it seeks to expand trade ties ​following a recent deal with the European Union.

A deal ‌would create a free trade area of about 400 million people with a combined GDP of $7 trillion. The push for new trade partnerships comes as U.S. President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs on goods from trading partners around the ‌globe ​have driven countries to diversify economic ties.

Mercosur’s ⁠members – including Argentina, Brazil, ⁠Paraguay and Uruguay – announced the talks during a leaders summit in the Paraguayan capital Asuncion, as the host country transferred the bloc’s pro tempore presidency to Uruguay.

The bloc had already held ​two meetings with Japanese officials in January and March, the countries said in a joint statement.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da ⁠Silva and Japanese Prime Minister Sanae ⁠Takaichi discussed the launch of negotiations during a bilateral ​meeting at the G7 summit earlier in June, noting progress in ​previous talks between the parties.

“Under this agreement, the two parties ‌will seek to expand access to markets for agricultural and non-agricultural goods, as well as cooperation and mutual investment, by integrating the value chains between their two economies,” the statement said.

The bloc  ⁠signed in January a free-trade deal with the EU after 25 years of negotiations, setting up one of the world’s largest free-trade zones. The ⁠agreement provisionally entered ‌into force on May 1.

Beyond Japan, Mercosur has ⁠ongoing negotiations with Canada for a trade deal, ​as officials ‌on both sides hope to conclude the talks ​as soon ⁠as September or October.

The bloc aims to soon launch negotiations with China as well, Lula said in a speech at the summit, as it “continues to move closer to the most dynamic markets on the planet.”

(Reporting by Fernando Cardoso and Isabel Teles, Editing by Franklin Paul ​and Sanjeev Miglani)