
Ana Cardoso (PhD candidate & Master’s in European Union Law at the School of Law of University of Minho. FCT research scholarship holder – 2025.06747.BD.)
I.
On March 23, 2026 the European Commission took the final procedural step required for provisional application of the EU-Mercosur interim Trade Agreement (“iTA”), by notifying the Mercosur countries with a “note verbale”.[1] This means that as of May 1, 2026, the iTA has started being provisionally applied, despite the European Parliament’s decision to ask for the European Court of Justice’s (“CJEU”) opinion on whether the EU-Mercosur Free Trade Agreement (“EMTA”) is in conformity with the Treaties.[2]
This was possible because the EMTA is divided into two main documents: (i) the iTA covering trade liberalisation and (ii) a broader comprehensive Partnership Agreement; the first can take effect while the second faces the hurdles of full ratification.[3]
Given this somewhat unprecedented decision by the Commission – which ignores a long-standing gentleman’s agreement of institutional respect between the Commission and the Parliament – it is worth questioning if this provisional application might end up jeopardising the EU’s ambitious climate and environmental goals or if, on the other hand, the internal legal framework in this area is strong enough to prevent indirect backtracking.
Continue reading “Appreciating the value of the self? Some environmental concerns relating to the provisional application of the EU-Mercosur interim Trade Agreement”








