European participation in Argentine exports fell from 30% to 10%, the lowest value in 35 years. The decline of biodiesel and soybean meal explains the drop, while the sector hopes that the Mercosur-EU agreement will reactivate the link.
원본 콘텐츠
A study published by the Rosario Stock Exchange (BCR) demonstrated that international trade between Argentina and the European Union (EU) is at its lowest point after three decades of exchange. The country went from allocating 30% of its exports to the European bloc in 1990 to just 9.8% in the first ten months of 2025, a participation that the entity defined as a historic low. The collapse is mainly explained by the sharp drop in the trade of soybean meal and biodiesel, two complexes that once boosted the bilateral relationship. Today, far from those record levels, Argentina's presence in the European market has been reduced to a minimum and reflects a deterioration that concerns both the agricultural sector and the country's commercial policy. The same trend is observed in imports: the entry of European products represented just 13.7% of the total, the second lowest mark in 35 years. With this scenario, the EU loses prominence in trade with Argentina, while the importance of Asia ...