logo
South American bloc looks to Asia, Europe in face of Trump trade war

South American bloc looks to Asia, Europe in face of Trump trade war

Kuwait Times2 days ago
Lula extols potential benefits of deeper relations with Asian countries
BUENOS AIRES: South America's Mercosur bloc sought Thursday to expand its markets in the face of US President Donald Trump's global trade war, with Brazil calling for closer ties with dynamic Asian economies. 'It's time for Mercosur to look toward Asia,' President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said, extolling the potential benefits of deeper relations with Japan, China, South Korea, India, Vietnam and Indonesia.
In a reflection of regional tensions, however, Argentina's President Javier Milei threatened to go it alone if necessary to secure a free trade deal with the United States.
'We will embark on the path of freedom, and we will do so together or alone because Argentina cannot wait,' Milei warned, calling for 'more freedom' to negotiate. The libertarian leader, a huge fan of Trump, has made no secret of his disdain for Lula, referring to him in the past as 'corrupt' and a 'Communist.' Lula, on his first trip to Argentina since Milei took office in December 2023, had no bilateral talks with the self-declared 'anarcho-capitalist.'
The veteran Brazilian leftist, who took over Mercosur's rotating presidency from his Argentine counterpart, has accused Milei of talking 'nonsense.' Lula said that under his leadership, Mercosur would aim to 'strengthen inter-bloc trade with external partners' and to implement a landmark trade agreement with the European Union. Brussels in December struck a deal with Mercosur's founding members—Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay—to create a free trade zone of around 700 million consumers.
The agreement has been 25 years in the making, but still needs to be ratified by EU member states.
It has faced stiff opposition from France, where farmers worry about being undercut by less-regulated Latin American peers.
Uruguayan President Yamandu Orsi said that it was now 'time to resume negotiations with key partners such as South Korea and Canada.' Uruguay has for decades sought a relaxation of the bloc's rules, which prevent agreements with other countries without the consent of all partners.
Climate change, the energy transition, combating organized crime and promoting technological development would be Mercosur's main objectives during the next six months, Lula said.
Steps were discussed to make progress on trade agreements with the United Arab Emirates and Canada, as well as update accords with Colombia, Ecuador, Panama and the Dominican Republic, and to advance regional gas integration. On Wednesday, Mercosur foreign ministers announced a free trade agreement with the European Free Trade Association, made up of non-EU members Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland.
Adding to the tense atmosphere surrounding the summit, Lula took the time to visit his ally Cristina Kirchner, the former Argentine president who is under house arrest.
Lula, who was granted permission by a court to see Kirchner, spent almost an hour at her apartment in Buenos Aires. He found her 'in good health, strong and determined to fight,' he said on social media platform X. 'In addition to expressing my solidarity with her for everything she has been through, I wished her all the strength she needed to continue fighting, with the same determination that has characterized her career,' he wrote. Kirchner hailed the visit as 'much more than a personal gesture: it was a political act of solidarity,' in her own message on X. Kirchner, the standard-bearer of the Argentine left for over two decades, was convicted of 'fraudulent administration' while president between 2007 and 2015.
The 72-year-old, who says her trial was an attempt to silence her criticism of the right, began a six-year sentence last month after losing a Supreme Court appeal. —AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EU GDPR should merely be a guiding framework for Kuwaiti legal system
EU GDPR should merely be a guiding framework for Kuwaiti legal system

Kuwait Times

time21 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

EU GDPR should merely be a guiding framework for Kuwaiti legal system

By Noura Almutairi Since May 25, 2018, the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) has been applied across all EU member states, establishing a global benchmark. Several countries, including South Korea, Brazil, Japan, Kenya, Egypt, Indonesia and the US State of California, have enacted data privacy laws aligned with the GDPR. Unlike the EU Data Protection Directive (DPD), the GDPR aims to enhance control over personal information to safeguard fundamental rights, especially the individual's right to data protection. The right to protect personal information is distinct from the right to privacy under the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR). The values underlying the regulation and protection of the former right are transparency, autonomy, fairness, dignity and non-discrimination. These are different from the values of reputation and honor, which underpin the individual's right to privacy in Kuwaiti society. Nonetheless, this article urges Kuwaiti lawmakers to be guided by the GDPR, as the individual's right to privacy is one of the values underpinning the protection of their personal information under the GDPR. Some of an individual's personal information, as defined under Article 4 of the GDPR, is linked to their right to privacy, for example, their photo. In addition, most of the individual's sensitive or private information, as outlined in Article 9 of the GDPR, is linked to the individual's right to privacy or a private life under the Kuwaiti legal system. Examples of such information include genetic data and health data. Even the process of collecting an individual's non-sensitive or private information can be used to reveal hidden private data about them. To illustrate how this point is relevant to the GDPR, it applies to private companies (as data controllers) that monitor individuals' online behavior and activities through their online identifiers or observed data, such as IP addresses, cookies and location data. A massive amount of 'dynamic personal information' is collected through such observed data and can then be analyzed predictively or using AI, which may infer private information about the Internet. As such, the GDPR protects the individual's right to privacy. However, this article suggests that Kuwaiti decision-makers should be guided by the GDPR, rather than merely copying it, when drafting a comprehensive Data Privacy Law. The GDPR has legal loopholes and vague provisions, and it does not entirely suit Kuwait for the following reasons, as explained. Firstly, the meaning of 'personal information', which determines the material scope of the Data Privacy Law, should be interpreted broadly to cover an exponentially growing range of situations. This article finds that identifiability is the core element required to consider data or information as personal information under the definition of personal information under Article 4 of the GDPR. Therefore, the GDPR does not cover anonymous information within its scope; however, the re-identification of an individual's data may still occur. Re-identification of an individual's data can be easily achieved, for example, through the Internet of Things (IoT), such as wearable devices like a Fitbit or an Apple Watch; the combined data, including location information, can distinguish one person from millions of others. Therefore, this article recommends that when Kuwaiti decision-makers draft an information Data Privacy Law, they should broaden the definition of personal data to include not only identifiability but also the ability to single out an individual from a crowd, regardless of whether their identity can be confirmed. Although Recital 26 of the GDPR explicitly mentions 'single out,' there is no clear indication of whether singling out an individual without identifying them is covered under the GDPR's scope. The GDPR also does not clarify whether inferred data falls within the scope of personal information, and the European Court of Justice's approach is inconsistent. To emphasize this point, the judgment in the case YS, M and S v Minister voor Immigratie, Integratie en Asiel clearly excludes inference data from the safeguards of Data Protection Law, while a later judgement of the case Peter Nowak v Data Protection Commissioner in 2017 attributes the status of 'personal data' to inferences. However, in the former case, the Court was clear that GDPR does not grant all rights for inference data. As such, this article recommends including inferred data within the protection or material scope, since these types of data contain hidden private information. Secondly, Article 8 (1) of the GDPR states that the processing of minors' data (those under the age of 16, or if the law of the Union Member State sets a lower age, but not younger than 13) must be authorized by the holder of parental responsibility. This article argues that the decision maker in Kuwait, instead of ignoring this requirement, should consider the following questions before implementing the parental consent requirement under Article 8 (1): Whether the age setting under Article 8(1) accurately reflects the concept of childhood, culture, social heritage, and the Kuwaiti legal system; Should the requirement for parental consent apply to all online service providers, or should online services that are offered directly to children be excluded? If so, what are the indicators that an online service is offered directly to children? How can it be ensured that parents give verification in cases where a parent is no longer responsible for their child, or when parents are deceased? Thirdly, the digital privacy rights are the legal mechanisms that put an individual in a position of control over their personal information, thereby safeguarding the individual's right to privacy. However, not all the rights that regulate users under the GDPR are necessary to put Internet users in control of their data, to safeguard their right to privacy from the challenges posed in the digital age. To illustrate this point, the right to data portability, as outlined in Article 20 of the GDPR, empowers individuals to take control of their data by allowing them to retrieve it from one service and transfer it to another. Although it offers individual control, it is not rooted in the right to privacy; rather, it stems from competition laws. The right to data portability aims to foster competition among private companies, serving a primarily economic purpose to enhance the market, which is one of the main objectives of the GDPR. Therefore, this article does not recommend that Kuwaiti lawmakers recognize data portability as a new right within a Data Privacy Law, as it is not directly related to the right to privacy. Also, some rights under the GDPR are redundant, as they can be exercised through other rights. For instance, the right to restriction of processing under Article 18 of the GDPR is an alternative or optional right that an individual can exercise in place of other rights in some legal cases. As an alternative right, whether this right is regulated or guaranteed is less critical, since another right takes its place. To emphasize this point, if an individual's consent is not valid, instead of requesting erasure, they may request a restriction on processing. As such, this article emphasizes that there is no need to set the right to restriction of processing, except in cases where the individual requires that right for the establishment, exercise or defense of legal claims against a company for breach of their right to privacy by misuse of their private data, in which case the plaintiff can request restriction of processing through an immediate injunction under the KCC. NOTE: Noura Almutairi is an Assistant Professor at Kuwait University School of Law, Private Law Department, with research interests in the right to privacy, AI, the tort liability of tech companies and IP law.

Illegal loggers profit from Brazil's carbon credit projects
Illegal loggers profit from Brazil's carbon credit projects

Kuwait Times

time21 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

Illegal loggers profit from Brazil's carbon credit projects

PORTO VELHO: Companies around the world have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into conservation projects in Brazil designed to protect the Amazon rainforest in return for carbon credits offsetting their emissions. Reuters found that many of those projects are profiting people and businesses fined by Brazilian authorities for destroying the rainforest. Reporters analyzed 36 conservation projects in the Brazilian Amazon offering voluntary carbon offsets on the global market's biggest registries. At least 24 of those involved landowners, developers or forestry firms that have been punished by Brazil's environmental agency Ibama for their roles in illegal deforestation, Reuters found. The offenses ranged from clear-cutting the rainforest without authorization to transporting felled trees without valid permits and entering false information in a government timber tracking system. Government officials and experts said these infractions reflected the range of roles in the illicit timber trade devouring the rainforest. In 20 of the conservation projects, Reuters found, Ibama had fined key players for deforestation before they were listed with a carbon credit registry. In seven of those cases, the fines for illegal deforestation by the projects' backers continued after registration. 'It's a failure of the whole idea,' said Raoni Rajao, who ran the Brazilian Environment Ministry's program combating deforestation until December. By paying people with a track record of violating environmental law, he said, the carbon market may be funding groups engaged in illegal deforestation. 'They might be reducing deforestation in one place, but increasing emissions somewhere else with those same resources,' said Rajao, now an environmental policy professor at the Federal University of Minas Gerais. Brazil levies fines to enforce laws putting strict limits on deforestation since 2008 in the Amazon, the world's largest rainforest, which has lost about a fifth of its original tree cover over the past half century. Scientists warn further deforestation could release catastrophic quantities of planet-warming carbon dioxide, accelerating climate change. — Reuters That has made the Amazon an important part of the voluntary carbon market, which was worth $7.6 billion globally over the last five years, according to market watcher AlliedOffsets. In this market, projects that show they are reducing greenhouse emissions – for example, by avoiding deforestation in parts of the rainforest – can generate carbon credits, each one equivalent to a metric ton of carbon dioxide saved. Polluters can then voluntarily buy the carbon credits to compensate for their own emissions. The referees setting the standards in that global market are accrediting firms such as non-profit Verra, the world's largest carbon credit registry, and its Colombian rival Cercarbono. They run systems certifying whether a project is reducing emissions as promised. Reuters examined thousands of pages of documents related to the 36 conservation projects in the Brazilian Amazon that had been certified by Verra or Cercarbono at the start of this year. Both provide public records of projects' designs, boundaries and credits issued. Reporters identified key players and cross-checked them against Ibama's database of fines. -- Reuters

US signals trade announcements in 48 hours
US signals trade announcements in 48 hours

Kuwait Times

time21 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

US signals trade announcements in 48 hours

WASHINGTON/BRUSSELS: The United States will make several trade announcements in the next 48 hours, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Monday, adding that his inbox was full of last-ditch offers from countries to clinch a tariff deal before a July 9 deadline. The clock is ticking down for countries around the world to conclude deals with the US after President Donald Trump unleashed a global trade war that has roiled financial markets and sent policymakers scrambling to protect their economies. Bessent did not say which countries could get deals and what they might contain. Trump has kept much of the world guessing on the outcome of months of talks with countries hoping to avoid the hefty tariff hikes he has threatened. 'We've had a lot of people change their tune in terms of negotiations. So my mailbox was full last night with a lot of new offers, a lot of new proposals,' Bessent said in an interview with CNBC. 'So it's going to be a busy couple of days.' Trump said the US would start delivering tariff letters from 12 pm ET (1600 GMT) on Monday, but Bessent said they would not necessarily contain ultimatums. 'It's just 'thank you for wanting to trade with the United States of America,'' he said. ''We welcome you as a trading partner, and here's the rate, unless you want to come back and try to negotiate'.' For its part, the European Union still aims to reach a trade deal by July 9 after Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Trump had a 'good exchange', a Commission spokesperson said. It was not immediately clear, however, whether there had been a meaningful breakthrough in talks to stave off tariff hikes on the United States' largest trading partner. Adding to the pressure, Trump threatened to impose a 17 percent tariff on EU food and agriculture exports, it emerged last week. Trump had on Sunday said the US was close to finalizing several trade pacts and would notify other countries by July 9 of higher tariff rates. He said they would not take effect until August 1, a three-week reprieve. More broadly, stocks drifted and the US dollar held near multi-year lows after the US flagged the tariff reprieve but failed to provide specifics. The EU has been torn over whether to push for a quick and light trade deal or back its own economic clout in trying to negotiate a better outcome. It had already dropped hopes for a comprehensive trade agreement before the July deadline. 'We want to reach a deal with the US We want to avoid tariffs,' the spokesperson told reporters at a daily briefing. 'We want to achieve win-win outcomes, not lose-lose outcomes.' Without a preliminary agreement, broad US tariffs on most imports would rise from their current 10 percent to the rates set out by Trump on April 2. In the EU's case, that would be 20 percent. Von der Leyen also held talks with the leaders of Germany, France and Italy at the weekend, Germany said. Chancellor Friedrich Merz has repeatedly stressed the need for a quick deal to protect industries vulnerable to tariffs ranging from cars to pharmaceuticals. The German spokesperson said the parties should allow themselves 'another 24 or 48 hours to come to a decision'. Germany's Mercedes-Benz on Monday its second-quarter unit sales of cars and vans had fallen 9 percent, blaming tariffs. Russia said BRICS was 'a group of countries that share common approaches and a common world view on how to cooperate, based on their own interests'. – Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store