ESG is no longer just a growing concept it has become a concrete requirement of the global market. The steady rise in searches for terms such as “ESG”, “renewable energy” and “circular economy” shows that sustainability has moved beyond rhetoric and now influences real business decisions, especially in strategic production chains such as agribusiness.
This shift is not happening in isolation. It is part of a broader transformation, where consumers, investors and international markets now demand transparency, environmental responsibility and structured governance as prerequisites, rather than as mere competitive advantages.
The market has changed and agribusiness must keep pace
For a long time, sustainable practices were viewed as an optional investment or a way to build a positive image. Today, this scenario has changed. As global requirements evolve, failing to adopt ESG criteria can mean direct loss of market share.
The Mercosur–European Union agreement reinforces this shift by establishing new rules that make the following practices mandatory:
- Traceability of production;
- Transparency in operations;
- Environmental compliance.
In practice, this turns ESG into a market access barrier for exports.
ESG is also risk management
Beyond meeting external requirements, ESG serves as a tool to protect the business itself. In a context of growing regulatory and environmental pressure, companies that do not adapt become more exposed to operational, legal and commercial risks.
In practical terms, adopting ESG helps to:
- Reduce regulatory vulnerabilities;
- Improve business predictability;
- Strengthen commercial relationships;
- Secure long-term operations.
In short, it is not only about accessing markets it is about ensuring business continuity.
Direct impact on competitiveness
With these requirements taking formal effect from 2026, producers and agribusiness companies will operate in a new competitive landscape. Producing high-quality goods is no longer enough production must also be responsible, and this responsibility must be verifiable.
This directly affects:
- Access to international markets;
- Product valuation;
- Relationships with investors and partners;
- Long-term business sustainability.
Those who fail to adapt will lose their position in the market.
Conclusion
ESG in agribusiness is no longer an emerging trend. It is an established requirement, driven both by market behavior and international regulations.
In this new context, competitiveness depends not only on productivity, but also on the ability to comply with the new rules of the game.
