"Bayer, the owner of glyphosate (after buying Monsanto in 2018 in arguably the worst merger of modern corporate history), is in dire financial straits. As the FT reported earlier this year, “its breakup looks inevitable.” Its shares continue to slide, having already lost roughly 80% of their value since 2018, and are now worth just 20 billion euros, significantly below its net debt (39 billion euros). In its latest earnings statement, the much-diminished German chemicals giant reported a net loss of 4.18 billion euros in the third quarter. Worldwide sales of glyphosate are sinking and one of the worst performing regions for its agricultural market is Latin America. Just what the German economy needed.
-
The US’ corn dispute with Mexico is one of a host of trade disputes that have been brought against the Mexican government by its USMCA partners since the signing of the trade deal in 2018. In 2023, Mexico had received the most investment arbitration claims under investment protection treaties worldwide, according to the Transnational Institute.
It is a trend that shows no sign of abating. In coming months, the Sheinbaum government is planning to pass over a dozen constitutional reforms, on (among other things) mining, energy, housing, agriculture and labour rights, etc, that are also likely to ruffle feathers in the C-suites of US and Canadian companies.
The USMCA trade agreement, now in its fifth year of existence and up for renegotiation next year, is looking increasingly frail. Trump is threatening to impose ratcheting tariffs of up to 100% on Mexican goods if the Sheinbaum government doesn’t close its border with the US. Of course, this could be pure electoral bluster coming from Trump. But if he does follow through on these threats, it would seriously undermine the very trade deal he himself helped broker as well as invite tit-for-tat tariffs from Mexico’s government.
Meanwhile, in Canada the governor of Ontario, Doug Ford, has called for the removal of Mexico altogether from the trade agreement due to its growing trade and diplomatic ties with China (a topic we covered just a couple of months ago).
“Since signing on to the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, Mexico has allowed itself to become a backdoor for Chinese cars, auto parts and other products into Canadian and American markets, putting Canadian and American workers’ livelihoods at risk while undermining our communities.”
The Canadian government is also up in arms about the Sheinbaum government’s plans to radically rewrite Mexico’s mining laws. For over three decades, Mexico has been a veritable paradise for global mining conglomerates, many of them based in Canada, serving up some of the laxest regulations in Latin America. That is now changing. The proposed reforms include a near-total ban on open-pit mining and much stricter restrictions on the use of water in areas with low availability.
Ford’s proposal to eject Mexico from USMCA has an ironic twist given that it was Mexico’s AMLO government that allegedly intervened to helped seal Canada’s membership of the USMCA. By late 2018, relations between Trump and Trudeau had soured to the point where Trump was threatening to leave Ottawa out of the trade deal altogether after already signing a preliminary agreement with Mexico. But AMLO apparently said to Trump: “No, we are going to have Canada participate as well.” And President Trump acceded.
Now, Canada’s Deputy Prime Minister, Economy Minister and WEF Trustee Chrystia Freeland is paying Mexico’s government back by echoing US concerns that Mexico’s trade policy is not in line with its US allies on China. Speaking to reporters in Ottawa this week, Freeland claimed to have heard these concerns from people expected to serve alongside US President-elect Donald Trump, as well as current Biden administration officials and other US business leaders."
MadeInDex
in reply to henry • • •MadeInDex reshared this.
Melroy van den Berg
in reply to MadeInDex • • •MadeInDex
in reply to Melroy van den Berg • • •👍 Let's pray for 418 billion euro losses in the fourth quarter 🤝
@henry
hyakinthos
in reply to Melroy van den Berg • • •@melroy
Also good to know your adversaries. I #boycott all #GMA members (that’s the food lobby that ensured #GMO labelling fails in the US).
commondreams.org/views/2014/05…
It’s depressing how big the list of food brands is -- but it’s managable despite being all the brands you are likely familiar with. I have been boycotting all of them for over a decade so it can be done.
@madeindex @henry
The Great Boycott: Monsanto and the GMA
ronnie-cummins (Common Dreams)MadeInDex
in reply to hyakinthos • • •Impressive! I recently had a chat with a #phytotechnology student trying to explain why the dangers of #GMO are overstated and that we will not have enough food without widespread use. Seems like that is what some professors are teaching 😮
@melroy
hyakinthos
in reply to MadeInDex • • •@madeindex @melroy The problem is that many different GM techniques are described as “GMO”, but they are not equal. Some techiques are quite risky and some are about as safe as simple cross-breeding that happens in nature.
Europe invests in GMO research (there is a misconception that Europe has banned GMO when really it’s just some regions).
So I would not fear GMO as a whole w.r.t safety. But all GMO’d US-sourced food involves Monsanto. Boycotting US-based GMO is a way to boycott Monsanto.
hyakinthos
in reply to hyakinthos • • •@madeindex It sounds convincing that the world population would need GMO to get the scale needed.
The problem with Monsanto is they are trying to take control of the world’s food supply. They want to monopolize so the that whole world needs Monsanto for survival. I’m not sure on the details of Monsanto’s bullying but I heard many Indian farmers committed suicide over it.
MadeInDex
in reply to hyakinthos • • •@hyakinthos
#Bayer #Monsanto is definitely among the worst corporations! They are bullying #farmers around the world, even in the US 👹
There are many alternative solutions to GMO for the #food issues:
- vegetarianism / #Veganism
- #Verticalfarming
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vertical…
- natural, higher-yield methods such as #permaculture
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permacul…
- ocean #farming e.g. seaweed
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seaweed_…
-...
💚
practice of growing crops in vertically stacked layers
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)MadeInDex reshared this.
Priceless Planet
in reply to MadeInDex • • •Or you mean choosing organic and non GMO ?
MadeInDex
in reply to Priceless Planet • • •A #vegetarian / #vegan diet requires significantly less land and resources to produce the necessary nutritional value for a human :)
@hyakinthos
Priceless Planet
in reply to MadeInDex • • •Melroy van den Berg
in reply to MadeInDex • • •hyakinthos
in reply to Melroy van den Berg • • •Indeed. Someone in my family was on a pescetarian diet (vegan+fish) and was hospitalized for malnutrition. I was surprised because I would have expected the fish exception to mitigate most risks. I don’t know what he did wrong but I guess omega-3 would not have been the issue (he loved sushi).
@madeindex @PrPl
Melroy van den Berg
in reply to hyakinthos • • •@hyakinthos @madeindex @PrPl Could have been mercury poisoning by eating a lot of fish (especially tuna & mackerel).
Of course it could have been anything..
MadeInDex
in reply to Melroy van den Berg • • •@melroy @hyakinthos @PrPl
Seems more likely than malnutrition, a friend of mine ate only #spaghetti for a month and was perfectly healthy, & some others on veeeery simple/bad vegan diets didn't have any issues either 🤷