Carrefour's cold shoulder for South American beef sparks a backlash from
Brazil
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[November 26, 2024] By
FABIANO MAISONNAVE
BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) — Supermarket giant Carrefour’s support for French
farmers’ protests against a trade agreement between the European Union
and the South American bloc Mercosur has sparked a strong reaction in
Brazil, including a refusal to supply beef to Carrefour stores in
Brazil.
Carrefour CEO Alexandre Bompard announced in social media posts last
week that the French company would stop buying beef from all Mercosur
countries, which also include Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay. Bompard
wrote that he agrees with French producers' arguments that Mercosur beef
is an unfair competitor due to lower production costs resulting from
fewer environmental and sanitary requirements.
The executive encouraged other retailers to follow suit.
Brazil's Ministry of Agriculture called Bompard's move protectionist,
saying it was made “without any technical criteria.”
The decision also angered Brazil's meatpackers. Though France makes up
just a tiny sliver of Brazil’s beef exports, meatpackers worried that
Carrefour’s decision would hurt its reputation in other markets.
Beef giants JBS and Marfrig halted supplies last Friday to Carrefour's
extensive supermarket chain in Brazil, including the food warehouse
giant Atacadao. Both companies refused to comment on the boycott to The
Associated Press, but Minister of Agriculture Carlos Fávaro confirmed
it.
“We support the reaction of the meatpackers. If Brazil´s beef isn’t good
enough for Carrefour’s shelves in France, it isn’t good enough for
Carrefour’s shelves in Brazil either,” Faváro told Folha de S.Paulo
newspaper on Monday.
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Carrefour Group in Brazil
acknowledged the boycott in a statement, though it said there's not
yet a shortage of beef in stores. It said it has “esteem and
confidence in the Brazilian agricultural sector, with which it
maintains a solid relationship and partnership.”
“Unfortunately, the decision to suspend the meat supply has an
impact on customers, especially those who rely on the company to
supply their homes with quality and responsible products,” the
statement said. “It is in constant dialogue in search of solutions
that will make it possible to resume the supply of meat to its
stores as quickly as possible, respecting the commitments it has to
its more than 130,000 Brazilian employees and millions of Brazilian
customers countrywide.”
The backdrop for the conflict is the EU-Mercosur trade deal, which
would increase agricultural imports to EU countries from South
America. French farmers fear it will affect their livelihoods. An
initial agreement was reached in 2019, but negotiations have
faltered since then due to opposition that also includes some
European governments.
Brazil’s agribusiness sector also fears that the pending European
Union Deforestation Regulation will outlaw the sale of
forest-derived products within the EU’s 27-nation bloc if companies
can’t prove their goods are not linked to deforestation. Its scope
includes soy and cattle, Brazil’s top agricultural exports. Almost
half of the country’s cattle is raised in the Amazon region, where
90% of deforested land since 1985 has turned into pasture, according
to MapBiomas, a nonprofit network. The date of its implementation
remains uncertain.
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