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Jan 14, 2026

Farmers’ tractor convoy blocks Ostend Airport access roads in latest anti-Mercosur action

Farmers’ tractor convoy blocks Ostend Airport access roads in latest anti-Mercosur action
Before dawn on 13 January, about 60 tractors formed a rolling blockade around Ostend-Bruges International Airport, widening Belgium’s farmer protests against the EU–Mercosur free-trade agreement. Vehicles parked across the cargo-terminal approach lanes cut traffic to a one-way shuttle system and added up to 40 minutes to passenger drop-off times, airport authorities said.

While previous demonstrations targeted motorway junctions and distribution warehouses, union leaders said an airport blockade was intended to expose what they call a new ‘back door’ for low-cost South-American meat imports that bypass port inspections. The action coincided with the first 2026 shipments of chilled beef from Brazil under the draft accord’s tariff-rate quota.

Farmers’ tractor convoy blocks Ostend Airport access roads in latest anti-Mercosur action


For global mobility teams, immediate concerns centre on workforce and supply-chain continuity. Ostend handles roughly 15 % of Belgian perishables and an expanding share of e-commerce freight; time-critical pharmaceutical samples and aircraft-on-ground spares were among consignments delayed on Monday morning. Employers flying staff into Ostend for offshore-energy projects diverted arrivals through Brussels or Amsterdam, adding road-transfer costs and visa-compliance checks at alternate Schengen ports of entry.

At this juncture, organisations scrambling to reroute travellers may find it useful to tap VisaHQ’s Belgium platform (https://www.visahq.com/belgium/). The service accelerates Schengen visa appointments, conducts document pre-checks and issues real-time status alerts—valuable tools when technicians or auditors suddenly need to land via Brussels, Liège or Maastricht instead of Ostend. VisaHQ can also generate invitation letters and circulate protest-related travel advisories, helping mobility managers keep projects on schedule despite shifting entry points.

Police negotiated a partial reopening of one lane by late afternoon, but protest leaders warned actions could “migrate south” to Charleroi Airport if the federal government fails to guarantee import-price floors within 48 hours. Mobility managers are advised to activate travel-alert channels, arrange contingency routings via Liège or Maastricht and remind travellers that Schengen 90/180-day rules still apply when itineraries change at short notice.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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