Chile is Latin America’s fifth-largest economy and is the EU's third-biggest trading partner in Latin America. The EU is Chile’s second-biggest market for goods exports.
With a population of 20 million, its annual output is over €340 billion.
The EU and Chile concluded an Association Agreement in 2002, which includes a comprehensive Free Trade Agreement (FTA) that entered into force in February 2003 covering EU-Chile trade relations.
EU-Chile bilateral trade grew by 169% between 2002 and 2022.
EU firms exported to Chile:
In 2022, total EU-Chile trade in goods was €18.5 billion. In 2021, total EU-Chile trade in services was €7.2 billion.
In 2017, the EU and Chile launched negotiations to modernise the EU-Chile Association Agreement, so it can address all relevant areas of the relationship between the EU and Chile even better, in the face of political, economic and technological changes over the last 20 years.
On 9 December 2022, the European Union and Chile concluded negotiations on the modernisation of the EU-Chile Association Agreement, now named an Advanced Framework Agreement.
The trade part of the agreement will provide new opportunities for EU businesses in Chile, one of the biggest Latin American economies.
The agreement also contains major commitments on sustainable trade, notably on multilateral environmental and labour standards, climate, energy, and raw materials, as well as gender equality and sustainable food systems.
The agreement will deepen EU-Chile trade and investment relations and provide new opportunities for EU businesses in Latin America’s fifth-largest economy:
The agreement will contribute to the EU and Chile’s shared ambition of developing a fruitful partnership based on sustainability and shared values, through:
The modernised EU-Chile Agreement will be composed of two parallel legal instruments:
It will be easier for Chile to export to the EU, while respecting the EU’s high standards. All Chile’s industrial goods exports to the EU will remain tariff-free, and its agricultural products will get better market access conditions.
The trade deal will give more opportunities for Chilean citizens to provide their services in the EU, including on a temporary basis through their physical presence in EU countries, such as contractual service suppliers or as independent professionals.
The agreement will eliminate tariffs on EU exports, which is expected to increase EU exports to Chile by up to €4.5 billion over time:
The agreement will make it easier for EU firms to sell their services to Chile, including in:
The agreement will reduce and eliminate discrimination and expand opportunities for EU and Chile service providers and investors.
It guarantees the right of EU Member States' authorities to maintain public services, and it will not force governments to privatise or deregulate any public service at national or local level.
Similarly, Member States' authorities retain the right to return privately provided services to the control of the public sector. Europeans will continue to be able to decide for themselves how they want critical services such as healthcare, education and water to be delivered, for example.
It will facilitate digital trade by addressing unjustified barriers and ensuring an open, secure and trustworthy online environment for businesses and consumers, along with high standards of personal data protection. It notably prohibits data localisation requirements, while preserving the EU's policy space regarding the protection of personal data. It will provide greater legal certainty for businesses engaged in digital trade through additional commitments like the validity of e-contracts and electronic authentication.
Trade barriers disproportionately affect smaller businesses more than large companies, because they may not have the time and resources to overcome them. The agreement includes a dedicated chapter for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to address the specific challenges of small companies in international trade and investment.
EU SMEs will gain significantly from many of the more general provisions of the trade agreement:
EU farming communities stand to gain from easier access to the Chilean market, and more opportunities to sell their produce to Chile's 20 million consumers with the 2 nd highest per capita income in Latin America. The agreement will add 162 tariff lines, mainly of agricultural products, for liberalisation after a maximum staging period of seven years (for cheese, dairy, some sugar-containing products, and vegetable oils) and 34 tariff lines will already be fully liberalised at entry into force (covering notably cereals and some vegetable oils).
Chile will ultimately fully liberalise all EU dairy products and food preparations, which are important agri export categories to Chile. The existing tariff rate quotas for EU cheese will remain temporarily in place but will be finally liberalised under the new agreement. These improved market access opportunities have the potential to further allow EU farmers to increase dairy exports to Chile.
At the same time, for the first time, the 216 most relevant geographical indications of agri-food items coming from a broad variety of EU Member States to the Chilean market will be protected in Chile under the modernised agreement, thereby avoiding usurpation of iconic EU food item names such as 'Parmigiano Reggiano', 'Bayerisches Bier' or 'queso Manchego' on the Chilean market.
The impact of the improved market access on agricultural products will be marginal, according to the ex-ante Sustainable Impact Assessment (SIA) published in May 2019 and the study on 'Cumulative economic impact of future trade agreements on EU agriculture' published in 2016.
The most sensitive agricultural goods are exempted from full liberalisation under the modernised agreement. These include meat (beef, poultry, pig and sheep meat), certain fruits and vegetables (e.g. garlic, apple juice, grape juices, etc.) as well as olive oil. Improved market access for Chile has been granted under limited and stable Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs), which corresponds only to a tiny fraction of the EU’s internal consumption and production. Sugar is completely excluded from any liberalisation.
In the context of the Tariff Rate Quotas for meat (beef, poultry, pork and lamb), the agreement will put an end to the current automatic undetermined annual increase of the TRQs, and instead grant a reasonable top-up, which ensures that, in the long run, market concessions are more limited than under the status quo. Once the new TRQs are applied, these will remain stable and thereby provide a predictable, long-term limited additional market access for Chile.
The EU is a major producer of distinctive high-quality regional food and drink products.
In the EU, these products enjoy protection under a special status called 'Geographical Indications' (GIs). GIs guarantee to consumers that the produce is the genuine article from the specific locality or region concerned. They also allow European producers to earn a premium price for the quality of their unique produce.
The agreement will protect 216 names of EU Geographical Indications (GIs) for food and drinks in Chile, such as Parmigiano Reggiano, Comté or Gruyère cheeses, Istarski pršut ham, Jabłko grójeckie apples, and Pruneau d’Agen dried plums. This on the top of the existing agreement on wines and spirits, which protects 1,745 GIs for wines and 257 GIs for spirts and aromatised wines from the EU in Chile, such as Prosecco and Tokaji. The agreement allows adding new GIs under the protection of the agreement in the future.
This will make it illegal to sell imitations.
For example, no-one will be allowed to call cheese 'Comté' unless it is the genuine cheese made in Franche-Comté region, France, under specific production conditions.
The agreement will make it easier for European firms to bid for government contracts in Chile. The agreement will do this in three ways:
Lithium is indispensable to produce batteries for electric vehicles. It is thus essential to the green transition and to achieve the EU’s Green Deal objectives.
Demand and competition for lithium will explode globally in the next decade. Reduced access to lithium threatens the future of EU battery production and could make the EU depend on other battery producers, such as China.
Chile is one of the world’s biggest lithium suppliers (40% of global lithium supply and around 80% of all EU imports (2020)).
The EU-Chile Advanced Framework Agreement ensures that we will have access to the lithium we need, while also securing the highest sustainability standards.
It ensures non-discriminatory access by:
It ensures environmental sustainability in energy and raw materials through:
It is an EU priority to establish hydrogen partnerships with reliable suppliers that agree not to distort trade and investments according to the 2022 EU External Energy Engagement Strategy. Chile is a prime candidate for such a partnership as:
The Agreement with Chile provides an excellent framework for trade and investment in hydrogen and renewable electricity production:
Products that are wholly obtained in either party (by agriculture, mining, fishing, etc.) qualify as originating, as well as products containing foreign inputs, if they meet specific requirements for local production called product specific rules.
Materials from Chile can be counted as originating in the EU and vice versa, as well as any processing that has been done on non-originating materials in either party. This is called full bilateral cumulation.
For products not meeting the product-specific rules, there is an additional tolerance of 10% in value for all products except for textiles and clothing, which have a special tolerance.
As with all the EU's trade agreements, the agreement with Chile will not change European standards, including standards for food, agricultural and fishery products. EU standards are not negotiable and are applied equally to all products placed on the EU market.
The agreement has a dedicated chapter on Sustainable Food Systems, a first for an EU trade agreement, and will address several aspects:
The political and cooperation pillar of the agreement includes an entire chapter on Cooperation of Sustainable Development, which contains comprehensive articles on sustainable development, particularly on the environment, climate change, sustainable energy or ocean governance. The Parties commit to effectively implement the multilateral environmental agreements that they have ratified, including the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.
This comes in addition to the comprehensive Trade and Sustainable Development Chapter in the trade part of the agreement, where the EU and Chile have taken clear commitments on effective implementation of ILO conventions and Multilateral Environmental Agreements, coupled with a dedicated dispute settlement mechanism.
The agreement includes a Joint Statement committing the parties to initiate a review process of the Trade and Sustainable aspects of the agreement, as soon as the interim Free Trade Agreement comes into force and with a clear time frame for delivery. In this review process, the EU will be guided by the principles and objectives set out in the EU policy on trade and sustainable development, which includes proposing to trade partners the possibility to resort to trade sanctions, as a measure of last resort, in certain specific cases (e.g. in case of failure to comply with obligations that materially defeat the Paris Agreement on Climate Change or in serious instances of non-compliance with the ILO fundamental principles and rights at work).
Under the agreement, the EU and Chile commit to effectively implement the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Paris Agreement on Climate Change. They also commit to promoting trade’s positive contribution to the fight against climate change.
The agreement has a dedicated chapter on Trade and Gender equality, a first for an EU trade agreement, and will address several aspects:
Both the EU and Chile have strong laws protecting workers' rights. They have agreed that the trade deal between them must support existing rights and not reduce or dilute them.
The agreement prohibits either side from unduly encouraging trade and investment by:
The two sides have also agreed to ensure that core labour rights as defined by the International Labour Organization (ILO) are respected. These concern:
They have also agreed commitments on labour inspection and on health and safety at work, in line with ILO standards.
The EU and Chile have agreed that the trade deal between them must support existing environmental standards and labour rights and not lower or dilute them. They have also agreed that each side has the right to regulate in order to protect the environment and workers’ rights.
The agreement prohibits either side from unduly encouraging trade and investment by:
Both sides have agreed to effectively implement the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and all other multilateral environmental agreements that Chile and the EU have ratified; for instance, the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).
The Trade and Sustainable Development (TSD) Chapter includes further provisions on the fight against climate change and the transition to a sustainable low-carbon economy. It also identifies potential areas where trade and environmental agendas can reinforce each other, such as: the conservation and sustainable management of biological resources, forests and fisheries; the promotion of trade in legally harvested and sustainable products; or the promotion of low-carbon technologies and energy efficiency. Key relevant international instruments include:
Yes. The commitments set out in the section on Trade and Sustainable Development will be enforceable through a dispute settlement mechanism that includes:
Yes. The agreement asserts the right of governments to regulate on the basis of the precautionary principle.
The 'precautionary principle' means that governments have a legal right to act to protect human, animal or plant health, or the environment, in the face of a perceived risk even when scientific evidence is not conclusive. This is explicitly mentioned in the chapter on trade and sustainable development.
The agreement will not affect the right of the EU or Chile:
Like all EU trade deals, the EU-Chile Agreement leaves governments on both sides entirely free to manage water distribution or other essential services as they see fit. They continue to choose whether such services are part of the public or the private sector. The EU-Chile agreement is no different.
The agreement will enable the EU and Chile to work together on some regulatory issues – on a voluntary basis.
Cooperation will only apply to EU laws that affect trade or investment. It will not include EU Member States’ laws.
The European Commission negotiated on behalf of the EU in line with a mandate granted to it by the governments of the EU Member States.
The Commission has always ensured that the negotiation process is accountable to EU Member States and to the European Parliament.
The Commission negotiators and services:
Throughout the negotiations, the Commission has regularly met, informed and shared information with:
On its website the Commission has published dedicated pages with links to:
The Commission also:
The EU commissioned an independent Sustainable Impact Assessment (SIA) on these negotiations. The SIA was conducted in regular dialogue with all relevant stakeholders from civil society. The SIA has been published in May 2019 and a Commission Services’ Position Paper was published in June 2020.
The EU also commissioned an independent Impact assessment study on the negotiations.
The Commission regularly reports back to the governments of the EU's Member States and keeps the European Parliament informed of progress in the negotiations.
The European Commission has also held four meetings with representatives of many of the 460+ civil society organisations registered with its ongoing dialogue on trade policy.
These EU-based, not-for-profit organisations include:
These meetings enable a wide range of bodies to make their views heard and to comment on the negotiations. At the meetings, the Commission informs and updates civil society on the negotiations.
In 2015, the European Commission issued new guidelines for transparency. Since then, the Commission has made public all new negotiating papers tabled in the talks.
The modernised EU-Chile Agreement will be composed of two parallel legal instruments:
As a first step, both the EU and Chile will proceed with the legal verification of the agreement. Following that, the EU will propose the Comprehensive Agreement and the iFTA for conclusion and ratification.