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Ethanol off the table in Brazil-US tariff talks

  • Market: Biofuels
  • 13/07/26

A lowering of Brazilian tariffs against ethanol is off the table in current US-Brazil trade negotiations, Brazil trade minister Marcio Elias Rosa said ahead of a 15 July deadline for a new set of US Section 301 tariffs against Brazil.

Brazil charges a 18pc rate on ethanol imports, regardless of origin.

Ethanol market access in Brazil is among concerns that could warrant the return of a 25pc tariff on Brazil goods to be decided by 15 July, the US Trade Representative's office (USTR) has said.

The added tariff would bring the total US rate on Brazilian ethanol to 37.5pc, up from the baseline tariff of 2.5pc prior to US president Donald Trump's Liberation Day.

US industry groups in last week's hearing urged USTR to go beyond just applying a 25pc tariff, arguing the government should also remove barriers for crediting US ethanol imports under the Renovabio program.

But Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva Rosa does not want ethanol to be in the agenda this time around, nor does he want it to be discussed without sugar tariffs being addressed too, Rosa said.

"It is unfortunate that some want a parity regime so that US ethanol can enter [Brazil] with ease," he told reporters. "Opening the market to US ethanol would put ethanol production in Brazil's northeast at risk in particular. We need to take a very careful approach to this industry, which has already been struggling with declining prices."

Brazil exported around 50 b/d of ethanol to the US in January-May, according to US Department of Agriculture data. The US exported 11,420 b/d of ethanol to Brazil over the same period.

The minister added that Brazilian sugar faces additional tariffs of up to almost 100pc in the US, adding that it is impossible to separate the discussions because they are all linked to the same production chain.

The US barriers against Brazilian sugar were also mentioned by Brazil regional sugarcane and bioenergy association Unica as an "asymmetry in bilateral trade".

Unica — one of the groups present in the USTR hearings last week — also said the current 18pc ethanol tariff is compatible with World Trade Organization rules, applied on a non-discriminatory basis to all countries that do not have a preferential agreement with Mercosur, the trade bloc of Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay. There is no bilateral agreement requiring Brazil to grant preferential tariff treatment to US ethanol, it argued.

The decline in US ethanol exports to Brazil is primarily the result of structural market changes, namely the expansion of corn-based ethanol production in the country filling seasonal gaps, rather than tariff policy, Unica added.

"Discussing tariffs among the two largest producers in the world doesn't seem like the best scenario," Andrea Verissimo, Brazilian corn ethanol association Unem's director of international affairs and communications, said in the 6 July USTR hearing.


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