Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro during a ceremony at the Planalto Palace in Brasilia, Brazil, October 15, 2019. / Reuters photo
Brazil aims to conclude free trade agreements between the South American free trade bloc Mercosur and Singapore and South Korea by next year, as it also eyes deals with several other Asian countries, a Brazilian diplomat said on Tuesday.
Mercosur will hold initial trade talks with Vietnam and Indonesia later this year, while it could seek to expand an existing trade deal with India and is also interested in an accord with Japan, said Reinaldo Jose de Almeida Salgado, the Foreign Ministry's secretary for bilateral negotiations with Asia.
Brazil is the largest economy in the four-country Mercosur bloc that also includes Uruguay, Paraguay and Argentina and therefore plays a major role in its trade negotiations held by the group.
Salgado made the remarks in a briefing on Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro's trip to Japan and China, which takes place next week amid the country's efforts to expand trade with the region.
There are currently no plans to initiate free trade talks between China and Mercosur, he said.
Salgado said he expects that other agreements will be signed between China and Brazil in connection with Bolsonaro's visit. For the agriculture sector, the agreements would be related to "four or five specific products," he said
Agreements with China related to renewable energy, investment and transportation are also possible, he said.
Brazil wants to send a message that it is open for business, Salgado said.
"We don't intend to be selective in relation to trade opening," he said.