What prompted the EU’s recent flurry of trade agreements?
A mix of factors: the 2025 US tariff shock pushed partners to diversify, long‑running negotiation stalemates were resolved, and Europe sought new suppliers and markets to regain geopolitical and economic leverage.
Why are Brazilian rare earths singled out in the report?
Brazil has some of the largest rare earth deposits outside China; securing and processing them would help Europe reduce dependence on Chinese magnets used in EVs, wind turbines and defence tech.
Will the EU‑Mercosur deal instantly break China’s dominance in rare earths?
No. Brazil’s processing capacity is small today, so change will be gradual. The deal lowers barriers for investment and imports, which is necessary but not sufficient to shift global market share quickly.
What internal EU challenges could slow these trade ambitions?
Environmental and agricultural concerns, opposition from member states (eg. France, Poland), and complex European legal procedures have complicated ratification and implementation.
How are European automakers responding to the new trade landscape?
They’re targeting growing markets like Brazil and India where emissions rules may be less strict, while also racing to scale EVs to remain competitive against subsidized Chinese firms.