Under the conditions of CADE, Minerva must sell the plant in the state of Goiás formerly owned by Marfrig.
Brazil antitrust body CADE said on Wednesday it approved meatpacker Minerva's acquisition of slaughtering plants run by rival Marfrig in the country, part of a broader billion-dollar deal involving 16 units in South America.
CADE, however, blocked Minerva from holding Marfrig's Pirenopolis plant, and said that Minerva would have to sell it off for the deal to go through. Minerva said the plant has been closed since 2010, and that it had no plans to reopen.
Brazilian meatpacker Minerva and Marfrig are among the largest beef producers in the world.
The firms announced last year an agreement under which Minerva would buy a total of 16 slaughtering plants from Marfrig in South America for 7.5 billion reais ($1.37 billion). Most of these plants process cattle.
In May, Uruguay's antitrust regulator blocked the purchase of the three plants that are located in Uruguay. The antitrust body indicated that the mitigation measures proposed by Minerva were not sufficient to prevent an anti-competitive impact on the Uruguayan beef market. The decision was not final and Minerva previously said it would appeal.
Minerva said in a securities filing on Wednesday it expects to conclude the acquisition of the slaughtering plants in Argentina, Chile and Brazil by the end of October. It did not mention the Uruguayan plants.
Source: Reuters