Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Details of some of the European standards whose compliance will not be required — or cannot be verified — for imports from MERCOSUR or other continents.

The divergence of standards between the EU and Mercosur, one by one.

AVEC published a detailed technical analysis that dissects, area by area, the regulatory differences between the requirements that European producers must meet and those applied — or, in many cases, not applied — to imports from third countries. The table reproduced below, translated in full into English, is the centrepiece of that analysis and is essential for understanding the scale of the regulatory asymmetry.

“If meeting the EU’s exemplary standards ends up causing our producers to be displaced by less sustainable imports, what is the point of setting such requirements without guaranteeing reciprocity? — Birthe Steenberg, AVEC”

STANDARDS DIVERGENCE AND MERCOSUR INDUSTRY STRUCTURE

SubjectRequirements under EU legislationApplied to third countries?


Animal welfare
Specific on-farm welfare requirements for broilers — Council Directive 2007/43/ECMaximum stocking density for broilers set by law (33–42 kg/m²; depending on prevailing factors)

Permanent access to dry, friable litter across the entire floor surface

Light intensity (20 lux) and lighting pattern (24-hour cycles, 6 hours of darkness) set by law

Maximum levels of ammonia (20 ppm), CO₂ and relative humidity applicable when higher stocking densities are used
 
Welfare requirements during transport — Regulation 1/2005All animals must be fit for the journey

Maximum journey times (12 hours excl. loading and unloading) set by law

Space per bird during transport specified according to live weight

Authorisation and certification systems for drivers and attendants
 


Animal health
Salmonella control on farms — Regulation 200/2010 — Regulation 200/2012Legislation in force for farms, hatcheries, feed manufacturing and processing; implemented through National Control Plans in each Member State

Mandatory testing of breeders and broilers; slaughter of breeders if positive results are obtained
 
Avian influenza
Regulation 429/2016
Regulations 687, 689 and 690/2020
Legislation in force for surveillance, control and emergency measuresEquivalence applied to third countries, but DG SANTE audit reports have revealed problems in: Thailand, Brazil, Argentina
Use of antibiotics
Regulation 6/2019
Regulation 4/2019
Antibiotics may only be administered on veterinary prescription and the quantity prescribed must be limited to the treatment

Preventive use of antibiotics is prohibited

List of antibiotics reserved exclusively for human use

Medicated feed requires a veterinary prescription, may only be prescribed for two weeks and may not contain more than one antimicrobial substance

On-farm monitoring systems for antibiotic use and national surveillance of antibiotic use are mandatory
Residue monitoring plan for third countries, but DG SANTE audits show inconsistencies: Brazil


Environment
Environmental controls
Directive 2010/75 (under review) — Directive 2011/92
Regulation 1069/2009
All farms with more than 40,000 birds and all slaughterhouses with a capacity exceeding 50 t/day must hold an environmental permit based on Best Available Techniques (BAT)

Environmental impact assessment mandatory for new facilities with more than 85,000 broiler places

Disposal of mortalities only by approved methods; composting, on-farm burial and disposal pits are excluded
 


Animal feed
Poultry feed
Regulation 183/2005
Regulation 1372/2021
Regulation 1831/2003 (under review)
Regulation 1829/2003 — Regulations 6/2019 and 4/2019
Only specified animal by-products may be used: porcine PAP and fishmeal only; no-“cannibalism” rule + strict segregation requirements

Antibiotics may not be used as growth promoters

Feed manufacturers must implement and maintain HACCP systems

Only authorised additives and veterinary medicines may be used

Restricted list of approved GMOs for feed imports and cultivation in the EU
From 2026, an official declaration by a Brazilian veterinarian is required confirming the non-use of antibiotics as growth promoters


Food safety
General food hygiene — Regulation 625/2017
Regulations 852/2004 and 853/2004 — Regulation 2073/2005
The ‘farm-to-table’ approach is applied, with procedures based on HACCP principles

Hygiene requirements in force for primary production (farms) and transport of live animals

Additional hygiene requirements for food of animal origin

Food safety criteria require absence of Salmonella Typhimurium and Enteritidis in neck-skin samples; process hygiene criteria for Salmonella and Campylobacter

Equivalence required from third countries





Equivalence required from third countries




Equivalence required from third countries
Carcass decontaminationOnly the use of authorised substances is permitted; currently, for poultry in the EU only water treatment is authorisedEquivalence required from third countries


Quality
Poultrymeat Regulation — Regulation 1337/2013
Regulation 543/2008
Mandatory origin labelling Class A defined by law





Maximum water absorption percentages specified for carcasses

Maximum water/protein ratio specified by law for cuts
Applied to third countries only for fresh products (imports are generally destined for processed products and food service, where there is no obligation to indicate origin)

Applied to third countries, but inconsistencies do not entail visible penalties

Applied to third countries, but inconsistencies do not entail visible penalties

Source:
-. AVEC EU-MERCOSUR agreement: Impact on Poultry Sector.

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