In a last-ditch bid to secure Walloon backing, EU trade officials are offering tweaks to a political declaration appended to the treaty, an EU source said.
"Trade deals are win-win deals. Each party is able to build more stuff ,export more stuff and do more trade with the other country. And that's what's really, really frustrating," Young said.
Many EU leaders suspect the local government in Namur is using its devolved powers to play domestic politics. "This is first of all an inner-Belgian matter," an EU source said.
Walloon Socialist Party leader Elio Di Rupo, one of the most vocal opponents of the deal, cast doubt an agreement could be reached next week.
"They took years to negotiate #CETA and we are refused a few weeks," Di Rupo, a former Belgian prime minister, tweeted on Sunday. "Will we reach a solution? All depends on the contents. If it doesn't change enough, we will maintain our opposition."
European Council President Donald Tusk, who chairs the collective body of the EU's leaders, will speak to Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel by late on Monday, EU sources said, before informing Trudeau's government of the state of play.
"If Michel says he is not in a position to confirm that Belgium will be able to sign on Thursday, then we won't have the summit," a source said.
If postponed, no new summit date will be set, although the source said neither the EU nor Canada is willing to give up on a free trade pact that has been years in the making.
The issue is greater than just a trade deal with Canada, the EU's 12th-largest trading partner.
If CETA fails, the EU's hopes of completing similar deals with the United States or Japan would be in tatters, undermining a bloc already battered by Britain's vote to leave and disputes over Europe's migration crisis.
"The Eurozone still has the fundamental problems that we've talked about for years," Young said. "It's really a disaster, and that's why people are very, very annoyed, upset and frustrated because it feels like the European Union is being held for ransom by one small, not very important region out of 28 nations."
Source: Meatbusiness