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Analysis 2026-06-05 15 min

CJEU opinion on the EU-MERCOSUR agreement: legal and political implications

Alessandro Brenci

Attorney at law, international trade law expert

CJEU opinion on the EU-MERCOSUR agreement: legal and political implications
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Opinion of the CJEU on the EU-MERCOSUR Agreement: Legal and Political Implications\n\n### Introduction: The Court of Justice, an Unexpected Arbiter of the Agreement\n\nWhile the provisional application of the interim Trade Agreement (iTA) is underway, the EU-MERCOSUR partnership agreement as a whole faces a major legal obstacle. In January 2026, the European Parliament, in a strong political move, voted to request an opinion from the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) on the compatibility of the agreement with the EU treaties. This referral, although a legal procedure, has frozen the parliamentary ratification process and plunged the future of the agreement into uncertainty. The Court\’s opinion, expected at the end of 2026 or the beginning of 2027, will have far-reaching consequences. This article explores the CJEU\’s competence over mixed agreements, the legal issues at stake, the crucial precedent of Opinion 2/15 on Singapore, and the profound political implications of this move.\n\nThis procedure is not a mere technical formality. It touches upon the very heart of the division of competences between the European Union and its Member States, the place of environmental and social concerns in trade policy, and the balance of power between the European institutions. The CJEU\’s opinion will not only determine the fate of the EU-MERCOSUR agreement, but it will also set a precedent for all future EU trade agreements.\n\n### The CJEU\’s Competence over \"Mixed\" Agreements\n\nThe EU-MERCOSUR agreement is a \"mixed\" agreement. This means that it covers areas falling under both the exclusive competence of the EU (such as the common commercial policy) and the shared or exclusive competences of the Member States (such as the protection of non-direct investments or certain aspects of sustainable development). This mixed nature implies that the agreement must be ratified not only by the EU, but also by each of the 27 national (and sometimes regional) parliaments, a long and complex process.\n\nArticle 218(11) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) allows the European Parliament, the Council, the Commission, or a Member State to request the opinion of the CJEU on the compatibility of an envisaged international agreement with the Treaties. If the Court\’s opinion is adverse, the agreement cannot enter into force unless it is amended or the Treaties are revised. It is a powerful legal weapon, and the Parliament has chosen to use it.\n\n### The Legal Issues at the Heart of the Opinion\n\nThe European Parliament\’s request for an opinion focuses on several sensitive legal points:\n\n1. **Compatibility with the environmental clauses of the Treaties**: Article 3 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU) states that the EU shall work for \"a high level of protection and improvement of the quality of the environment\". Opponents of the agreement argue that the chapter on trade and sustainable development in the EU-MERCOSUR agreement is too weak, particularly its dispute settlement mechanism, which does not provide for trade sanctions. The question is whether this agreement, as it stands, could violate the EU\’s obligation to protect the environment.\n2. **Respect for fundamental rights**: Could the agreement have a negative impact on the rights of indigenous communities in MERCOSUR? The Parliament is asking the Court to verify whether the human rights guarantees are sufficient.\n3. **Division of competences**: The referral to the Court is also a way for the Parliament to clarify the exact nature of the competences. By determining which parts of the agreement fall under the exclusive competence of the EU, the Court could potentially \"un-mix\" the agreement, allowing certain parts (particularly commercial ones) to be approved more quickly at the EU level alone.\n\n### The Precedent of Opinion 2/15 on the Singapore Agreement\n\nTo anticipate the CJEU\’s opinion, all eyes are on Opinion 2/15, delivered in May 2017, concerning the free trade agreement between the EU and Singapore. In this landmark decision, the Court carried out a fine delimitation of competences.\n\n- **Exclusive competence of the EU**: The Court confirmed that the common commercial policy, including trade in goods, services, public procurement, and foreign direct investment, fell under the exclusive competence of the EU.\n- **Shared competence (mixedness)**: However, it ruled that two specific areas fell under shared competence and therefore required ratification by the Member States: portfolio investments (non-direct) and the investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanism.\n\nThis opinion had an immediate practical consequence: the Commission split subsequent trade agreements into two: a free trade agreement (falling under the exclusive competence of the EU) and an investment protection agreement (mixed). If the Court were to follow a similar reasoning for MERCOSUR, it could validate the purely commercial part of the agreement while requiring national ratification for the other parts, which would further complicate the situation.\n\n> A specialized lawyer in Brussels comments: \"Opinion 2/15 was an earthquake. The Court gave a lot of power to the Commission on commercial aspects, but left a door open for mixedness on investments. For MERCOSUR, the key question is whether the provisions on sustainable development will be considered sufficiently linked to trade to fall under the exclusive competence of the EU. That is the major question mark.\"\n\n### Political Implications and Ratification Challenges\n\nBeyond the legal technicalities, the referral to the CJEU is a political act. It has allowed opponents of the agreement (a coalition of Greens, the radical left, and part of the socialists and farmers) to buy precious time and to place the debate on the legal and values-based ground, rather than on the purely economic one.\n\nWhatever the Court\’s opinion, the political implications will be major:\n\n* **If the opinion is positive (the agreement is compatible)**: Supporters of the agreement will have a strong argument to speed up ratification. However, this will not remove the political opposition, particularly from countries like France or Austria, which remain skeptical.\n* **If the opinion is negative (the agreement is incompatible)**: This would be an almost definitive halt to the agreement in its current form. The problematic chapters (particularly on the environment) would have to be renegotiated, a prospect that MERCOSUR might refuse after more than 20 years of negotiations. This would be a major crisis for the EU\’s trade policy.\n* **If the opinion is nuanced (compatible under certain conditions or clarification of competences)**: This is the most likely scenario. The Court could, for example, validate the bulk of the agreement while requiring additional commitments or interpretative declarations on the environmental aspects. This would open a new phase of complex political negotiations.\n\n### Conclusion: The Future of European Trade Policy at Stake\n\nThe request for an opinion from the CJEU on the EU-MERCOSUR agreement is much more than a simple incident in the long ratification process. It is a moment of truth for the European Union, which must arbitrate between its commercial ambitions, its environmental obligations, and the complex division of powers between Brussels and the national capitals. The opinion of the Luxembourg judges will not only seal the fate of this emblematic agreement; it will define the contours and limits of European trade policy for the coming decade. In the meantime, businesses and governments on both sides of the Atlantic are holding their breath, suspended on a decision that will shape the future of their relations.

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