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Chancellor Olaf Scholz travels through Argentina, Chile and Brazil. Not least because these countries have so much that Germany would also like to have. The problem: not only Germany.comment by Christopher GurkThere's no question: it's not exactly the closest route from Berlin to Buenos Aires. The German and Argentinian capitals are 12,000 kilometers apart, and the flight takes about 14 hours, which is quite a strain. And yet Chancellor Olaf Scholz chose South America as the destination for his first...
After years of negotiations on the trade agreement, a basic agreement was reached in 2019, but the national parliaments have not yet ratified the agreement. Fernandez blamed protectionism on the part of the Europeans, who in turn are demanding concrete steps from Brazil to protect the Amazon rainforest. Berlin is hoping for progress here after the new Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva took office, who announced a new climate policy. Scholz wants to meet Lula on Monday. source...
The Federal Chancellor is traveling through Latin America for four days to make new friends and deepen old ones. The talks revolve around raw materials, energy and the faltering Mercosur agreement.from Christopher Gurk, Buenos AiresWhen Olaf Scholz landed in Buenos Aires on Saturday afternoon just before 6 p.m. local time, that was a small success in itself. The German Chancellor traveled to the Argentine capital for the last time in 2018. At that time, however, there was a serious breakdown...
trade Germany and Argentina are aiming for an EU-Mercosur agreement Federal Chancellor Olaf Scholz (l, SPD) and Alberto Angel Fernandez, President of Argentina, hold a press conference after their talks in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. photo © Kay Nietfeld/dpa The EU and the South American confederation Mercosur have been negotiating a free trade agreement since 1999. Not much is happening at the moment. Chancellor Scholz wants to change that on his trip to Latin America. Germany and Argentina are...
world mirror Status: 01/29/2023 08:48 a.m Chancellor Scholz's trip to South America is also about raw materials - especially lithium. In Argentina, however, there is resistance to mining - environmentalists fear that nature will be sold out. By Xenia Böttcher, ARD Studio Rio de Janeiro Farmer Clemente Flores likes to laugh and talk about his family and his llamas. On one subject, however, he becomes serious, almost angry. It's about the raw material lithium. "We are destroying the region's ecosystem...
Status: 01/29/2023 03:58 am Chancellor Scholz traveled to South America for four days to agree on projects in the areas of energy, raw materials and climate protection. He used his first stop in Argentina to promote the free trade agreement between the EU and the Mercosur countries. At the start of his trip to Latin America, Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Argentina urgently called for the deadlocked negotiations on the free trade agreement between the EU and the South American federation...
Argentina Scholz wants to get EU-Mercosur negotiations going again Federal Chancellor Olaf Scholz (l, SPD) and Alberto Angel Fernandez, President of Argentina, hold a press conference after their talks in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. photo © Kay Nietfeld/dpa Chancellor Scholz's state visit to South America is also about economic interests - the EU has been negotiating a trade agreement with Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay since 1999 At the start of his trip to Latin America, Chancellor Olaf Scholz...
Status: 01/28/2023 08:46 a.m Another member of the government is traveling to South America - and Chancellor Scholz himself. Why is the region so important for the federal government at the moment? By Evi Seibert, ARD Capital Studio "Multipolar" is a word that government politicians in Berlin are using a lot these days. In plain language it means: The world is currently being reorganized - and Germany is looking for new partners in order to position itself more broadly. That's...
South America Argentina and Brazil want to revive ties Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (l) and Argentina's President Alberto Fernandez together in Buenos Aires. photo © Gustavo Garello/AP/dpa The first trip of the new Brazilian President Lula goes to Buenos Aires. It is about the rapprochement of the two South American countries. The two large South American countries Argentina and Brazil want to revive their relations and deepen trade. "Today is the resumption of a relationship that should...