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I dazi UE-Mercosur sono in calo - Ma i sollevatori telescopici dell'UE sono davvero più economici di quelli cinesi in Brasile nel 2026?

Maggio 2, 2026 2 settimane fa
L'acquirente ha capito

Brazil's 14-20% machinery import duty starts phasing to zero on May 1, 2026 for EU-origin equipment. Day-one cut is 1.3-1.7 points; the gap closes meaningfully past year three. Ask EU suppliers for tariff-tracking pricing clauses; benchmark Chinese and Korean quotes on full landed cost including untouched ICMS and IPI.

The EU-Mercosur Interim Trade Agreement entered provisional application on May 1, 2026. Headlines say machinery and appliances tariffs will fall 14-20% toward zero. For procurement teams comparing EU and Chinese telehandler offers right now, the only question that matters is whether the deal closes the cost gap — and on what timeline.

Tariff reduction does not eliminate the cost gap. Manufacturing cost still dominates — and 2026 is only year-1 of a 10-year ramp.

Key takeaways (30-second scan)

  • Short-term (2026-2028) — Tactical impact: negligible. The year-1 cut of 1.3-1.7 percentage points is far smaller than the EU-China FOB gap on a 16 m / 4-ton telehandler. Procurement strategy should not change in 2026 based on tariff news alone.
  • Mid-term (2029-2032) — Strategic impact: moderate. Cumulative tariff reductions begin to compound. Buyers locked into Manitou / JCB parts ecosystems gain marginal cost relief; buyers still free to choose continue to see a Chinese landed-cost lead.
  • Long-term (2033+) — Structural impact: gap narrows but does not invert. By 2036, EU machinery tariffs into Brazil approach zero on most lines, but FOB price differentials and after-sales operating cost still dominate the total-cost-of-ownership equation.

What changed on May 1, 2026

  • Mechanism: Provisional application of the EU-Mercosur ITA. Full ratification by EU member states is still pending and carries political risk through 2026-2028.
  • Scope (machinery and appliances): 14-20% cumulative tariff reduction phased over 10 years, with safeguards on sensitive lines.
  • Year-1 effect (2026): roughly 1.3-1.7 percentage points off the relevant Brazilian Mercosur Common External Tariff lines.
  • Year-10 effect (2036): full reduction realized; many machinery lines approach zero tariff for EU origin.
  • Not yet covered by provisional application: parts of services, sustainability, and dispute-resolution chapters. Ratification is still required for permanence.
  • Rules-of-origin compliance: EU-origin claims will require supplier declarations and documentary trail; tariff overlap with state-level ICMS / IPI is unchanged.

For a single 16 m / 4-ton telehandler landing at Santos at roughly USD 80,000 FOB, year-1 means about USD 1,200 off the import-duty line. Real money on a single unit, not a category shift.

EU vs China vs Local Assembly — the real cost comparison

Cost driver EU import (Manitou / JCB / Merlo class) Cina fabbrica-diretta Brazil local assembly
FOB / ex-works price band — 16 m / 4-ton USD 95,000 – 130,000 USD 60,000 – 85,000 USD 80,000 – 110,000
2026 Brazil import tariff (post year-1 ITA cut) ~16 – 17% ~18% (no Mercosur preference) n/a (locally built)
2036 import tariff (full ITA effect) ~0 – 3% ~18% (unchanged) n/a
ICMS / IPI / PIS / COFINS Same for all imports Same for all imports Slightly favored on local content
Spare-parts lead time 4 – 12 weeks (Europe → BR) 6 – 10 weeks (China → BR) 1 – 3 weeks (in-country)
Customization flexibility Low (standardized EU specs) High (factory-direct configuration) Medio
Delivery to São Paulo port 6 – 9 weeks 5 – 7 weeks n/a

In 2026, a comparably-specified Chinese unit lands in Brazil roughly USD 30,000 – 45,000 below an equivalent EU unit. The year-1 ITA cut barely touches that gap. Even at full 2036 implementation, the EU-China FOB differential is likely to exceed the cumulative tariff benefit on most machinery HS codes.

Who is most affected — sensitivity matrix

Buyer segment ITA sensitivity What changes for them
Short-term project buyers (delivery <18 months) Negligible No change. Specify on landed cost, not press releases.
Rental companies (LATAM utilization-driven) Medio-basso TCO math unchanged in 2026. Reassess at the 2030 step in the tariff curve.
Mid-size engineering contractors Basso Procurement risk is still about supplier vetting and parts SLAs, not country of origin.
Industrial / mining buyers Basso Operating-condition fit (engine torque, dust tolerance, cold-weather behavior) dominates.
Infrastructure (long-cycle, 7+ year hold) Medium-High Long fleet horizon makes the 2030+ tariff curve relevant to fleet-replacement scheduling.
Large fleets / public tender buyers High (negotiation leverage) Tariff-linked pricing clauses with EU suppliers are newly negotiable on multi-year frame contracts.

What buyers should do now

Short-term projects — deliveries needed within 6-18 months
– The 2026 ITA cut is too small to wait for. Spec your machine on landed-cost math, not future tariff schedules.
– Chinese factory-direct still clears the price gap on units arriving before mid-2027.

Long-term fleet planning — 3 to 10 year horizon
– Track the year-by-year EU tariff schedule per HS code; the ramp is non-linear.
– Run two scenarios: (a) ratification proceeds on schedule, (b) ratification stalls. Both still leave a manufacturing-cost gap to Asian suppliers.

Large fleets and tender-driven buyers
– Negotiate tariff-linked pricing clauses with EU suppliers if you commit to multi-year frame contracts. This is the only segment where the ITA materially changes leverage in 2026.
– For Chinese suppliers, leverage shifts to customization, parts-kit terms, and after-sale spares network — that is where landed cost moves more than tariffs do.

Trade-offs honestly stated

Where EU tariffs falling actually matters
– Long-cycle assets where the 2030+ tariff drop materially compounds.
– High-prestige rental fleets where brand badging carries dayrate premium.
– Buyers locked into Manitou / JCB parts ecosystems for whom switching cost outweighs the FOB delta.

Where the ITA is a distraction in 2026
– Sub-USD 100k unit purchases with delivery before 2028.
– Buyers whose decision is dominated by customization, lead time, or working capital — not by 1-2 pp of tariff.
– Markets where Chinese after-sales presence is already established (most of LATAM telehandler segments).

Honest limitations of Chinese factory-direct procurement
– Brand recognition gap with Manitou / JCB inside very conservative procurement committees.
– Local parts depots are thinner outside Brazil’s southeast — buyers should negotiate spare-parts kits up front and require named SLA terms.
– Resale value on secondary markets still trails EU brands; matters more for short-hold rental fleets than for own-use industrial fleets.

Decision implication

Tactical (2026-2027) — no procurement strategy change is warranted. The year-1 ITA cut does not close the FOB gap. Buyers scoping projects with delivery before mid-2028 should specify on current Chinese factory-direct landed cost, not on the EU tariff trajectory.

Strategic (2027-2030) — reassess fleet replacement scheduling, not supplier choice. As the cumulative ITA reduction crosses 5-7 percentage points, factor the year-by-year tariff curve into multi-year frame contracts. EU-supplier negotiation leverage opens up for tariff-linked pricing clauses; Chinese-supplier negotiation leverage continues to come from customization scope and parts-kit SLAs.

Structural (2030+) — the gap narrows, but the 2030+ decision is no longer about tariff. By the time the ITA is fully phased in, FOB price differential, parts-network density, and operating-cost fit dominate the TCO equation. Buyers planning past 2030 should be modeling those variables now, not the tariff schedule.

The honest summary for most Brazilian buyers in 2026: the EU-Mercosur ITA reshapes the 2030+ purchase decision. It does not flip the 2026 decision.

Run the math on your specific project

The math that actually matters is your specific landed cost — not the press release. For Brazilian projects evaluating EU vs Chinese telehandlers in 2026-2027, the variables that move the answer are FOB band, customization scope, delivery window, and parts-kit terms. The ITA is real, but it is a 2030+ story, not a 2026 story.

If you are scoping a 2026-2027 project, the comparison worth running is your specific HS code, target port, fleet size, and operating profile against current Chinese factory-direct quotations — not a generic ITA summary.

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