Europe

(ARC2020)

European states have been among the most active in pushing trade and investment agreements with countries around the world. The main players in deal-making are the 27-country bloc of the European Union (EU), the European Free Trade Association (EFTA, comprising Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland), the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU, also comprising Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan) and the United Kingdom (UK). Many of these agreements have sparked large-scale resistance movements and fostered international coordination among civil society groups worldwide because of the harmful neoliberal policies they impose on people and the environment, which mostly benefit transnational corporations and elites.

The EU has 44 free trade agreements (FTAs) in force with 76 partners. In January 2026, it signed agreements with Mercosur (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay and soon Bolivia), a move that has attracted much controversy due to its potential impact on farmers, the environment and climate. It also signed an agreement with India. These initiatives are widely seen as a response to the geopolitical turmoil accelerated by Trump. Negotiations on several other agreements are ongoing, including those with Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, the Philippines, Thailand and the United Arab Emirates.

More recently, the EU has initiated new types of narrower deals that complement broader FTAs and are subject to less public scrutiny. It has signed digital trade agreements with South Korea and Singapore. It has also entered into several sustainable investment facilitation agreements, clean trade and investment partnerships, and raw materials partnerships.

In the mid-2010s, there was an unprecedented movement of mass opposition to free trade agreements with the United States (the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, TTIP) and Canada (the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, CETA). Anti-TTIP platforms were established in each EU member state, and a self-organised European Citizens' Initiative against TTIP and CETA gathered over 3.3 million signatures in its first year. Critics were concerned about the potential impact on agriculture and food standards, as well as the inclusion of the investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanism, which allows foreign investors to sue the host country for any resulting loss of future profits in their own privileged court system. In 2017, the talks with the US were indefinitely put on hold, but CETA entered into force provisionally after its ISDS mechanism was rebranded as the "investment court system," which many activists claimed was largely window-dressing.

EFTA has currently signed 33 free trade agreements with 44 countries and territories outside the EU. These agreements have entered into force with 40 of these countries. The most recent FTAs that the bloc has signed are with India (in force since October 2025), Kosovo, Malaysia, Mercosur, Singapore (digital trade deal) and Thailand. EFTA is also negotiating an agreement with Vietnam.

These deals have been criticised by Swiss groups and a UN Special Rapporteur for pushing provisions that go beyond the requirements of World Trade Organization rules contained in the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) – known as TRIPS+ – including UPOV91, which sets out rules that prevent farmers from saving seeds. These provisions are hampering farmers’ rights, as well as the rights to food and health. The EFTA-Mercosur agreement has also been slammed for prioritising increased dairy product exports over climate action.

The UK currently has 40 trade agreements in force with 72 partners, including the EU. These include continuity agreements that were rolled over from the time of EU membership and new negotiated deals.

The UK has post-Brexit agreements in force with Australia, New Zealand, as well as Singapore and Ukraine for digital trade only. In 2024, the UK joined the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership. It has signed a trade deal with India and is currently negotiating with the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), South Korea (an upgraded FTA), Switzerland, Thailand, Türkiye and the US.

Civil society groups have criticised the GCC deal for ignoring human rights and climate issues, and the India deal for endangering the South Asian country's ability to protect health, data and livelihoods. British groups have also condemned UK trade and investment deals for including the ISDS mechanism.

The EAEU has also been very active in negotiating trade deals. The union was historically set up to challenge the economic influence of the US and the EU, and to counter the two superpowers’ attempts to isolate Russia. Although its FTAs tend to be narrower in scope than those of its counterparts, the EAEU is known to push for provisions requiring countries to join UPOV.

The EAEU currently has trade agreements in force with China, Iran, Serbia and Vietnam. It has signed FTAs with Indonesia, Mongolia, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates. The union has been discussing trade deals with Cambodia, Chile, Egypt, India, Israel, Korea and Peru. Potential negotiations with ASEAN, Bangladesh, the Gulf Cooperation Council, Mauritius, Mercosur, Mexico, Morocco, New Zealand, Pakistan, Thailand and Tunisia could also emerge further down the line.

In 2012, the EAEU established a free trade area with Moldova, Tajikistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan, as part of the Commonwealth of Independent States Free Trade Area. On 1 January 2016, Russia suspended the agreement with Ukraine, following the provisional application of the European Union-Ukraine trade deal.

Last update: May 2026

Photo credit: ARC2020


TTIP talks: What's cooking?
A Greens-EFA Group in the European Parliament conference on 10 December 2014
CETA's fate may hinge on outcome of EU-Singapore trade ratification
The fate of Canada’s landmark trade agreement with the European Union, known as CETA, may hinge on an obscure case due to come before the European Court of Justice that relates to a similar deal the EU recently struck with Singapore.
European states, Malaysia seek free trade agreement
A third round of negotiations towards a broad-based free trade agreement between the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) states – Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Iceland, and Norway – and Malaysia took place in Geneva from November 25 to 28, 2014.
The poison in the EPA
Africa must seek other viable alternatives in its quest for economic development, argue the editors of Business Day in Nigeria.
Sigmar Gabriel: ‘Germany will approve CETA’
German Minister of Economic Affairs Sigmar Gabriel is clashing with his own party over the EU’s planned free trade agreement with Canada (CETA), calling on Bundestag members to approve the deal despite the controversial investor protection provision.
Self-driving cars sink the case for TTIP
The EU's case for the Transatlantic trade and Investment Partnership is mostly about cars but fails to take into account what the industry will look like ten years from now.
Full TTIP transparency: much more than opening a door
The European Commission has announced that new transparency measures have been adopted for the TTIP talks -- but not for citizens.
The TISA threat to food and agriculture
Agriculture depends on a whole complex of services – water, credit, research, testing, marketing – which may be privatised by TISA, warns Peter Rossman.
Online protest delays EU plan to resolve US trade row
EU officials say the Commission is divided over how to draw conclusions from the public consultation it held on investor-state disputes under the proposed EU-US trade accord, which is now delaying negotiations.
Luxembourg: Foreign Minister supports TTIP but “not at all cost”
Luxembourg's Foreign Minister says that the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership presents an opportunity but EU should not enter the agreement “at all cost.”

Referenced sites

The UK’s trade agreements

UK government trade portal where trade agreements that the UK is negotiating and that the UK has already signed can be found, including texts of agreements.

TiSA uncovered

A coalition of concerned groups have created this site to give people across the world a chance to see what their governments are signing up to on their beha...

Trade Leaks

Greenpeace's leaked documents underline the strong objections civil society and millions of people around the world have voiced.

Trade SIA of the EU-Mercosur Association Agreement

Website of the European Commission's "trade sustainability impact assessment" of the EU-Mercosur Association Agreement.

tralac

tralac is a capacity-building organisation developing trade-related capacity in east and southern Africa.

Transatlantic Business Council

Lobby group representing 70 global companies headquartered in the US and EU, created in 2013 as the result of a merger between TransAtlantic Business Dialogu...

Trumping Democracy

The dark secrets of EU-US trade talks

TTIP-info-verkosto

Finnish TTIP-info network

TTIP Stoppen

Austrian campaign website

TTIP unfairhandelbar

TTIP - No Thanks! A coalition of German NGOs active in the field of agriculture, environment, development and trade policy was launched to critically monitor...

UMCE

The Union of Mediterranean Confederations of Enterprises (UMCE) is a corporate lobby group pushing for a Euro-Mediterranean Free Trade Area by 2010.

Vapaakauppa.fi

Vapaakauppa.fi is a Finnish site focused on free trade issues, especially big free trade agreements, as TTIP, TiSA and CETA.