12 november 2002
Friends of the Earth Europe
WTO trade talks: Call on EU to preserve
global environmental agreements from trade
rules
As governments meet today in Geneva to
discuss the relationship of global
environmental agreements with World Trade
Organisation rules (WTO)(1), Friends of the
Earth Europe called on the EU to ensure that
current negotiations will in no way undermine
the implementation and further development of
environmental treaties such as the Biosafety
and Kyoto Protocol. Instead governments
should reaffirm the authority and autonomy of
global environmental treaties, make WTO rules
compatible with sustainable development and
resolve the overarching governance imbalance
between multilateral environmental agreements
(MEAs) and the multilateral trading system,
the environmental pressure group said
today.
Following the EU's push to launch
negotiations at the last WTO Ministerial in
November 2001 in Doha (2) on the relationship
between global environment and trade rules,
perspectives for a positive outcome for the
environment increasingly look dim. The EU
would like to see an initial agreement at the
next WTO Ministerial in Cancun in September
2003.
However, recent talks at the WTO have
raised serious concerns among civil society
groups, including FoEE: instead of ensuring a
positive outcome for MEAs, negotiations
threaten to undermine MEAs, with some
countries suggesting a WTO screen test for
trade measures of environmental agreements,
FoEE warned today.
In addition, many civil society groups
have been disappointed by the EU's position
at the World Summit for Sustainable
Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg in
September 2002. Despite worldwide pressure
from
civil society groups (2), governments made
no progress towards protecting the status of
MEAs versus trade rules. In one of the WSSD's
most significant negotiating battles, a
number of countries (notably Ethiopia,
Norway, some Carribean countries and
Switzerland, but not the EU) supported by a
global network of NGOs, succeeded in
preventing the retention of text that would
"ensure WTO consistency" in the relationship
between trade, environment and development.
(3) Nevertheless, governments failed to
secure the status and autonomy of MEAs
specifically, leaving negotiations on this
issue to the WTO. (4)
Alexandra Wandel of FoEE commented:
''The EU will come to Geneva today with a
proposal (5) to grant secretariats of global
environmental treaties observer status to the
WTO. While this will help open the door for
more external transparency and openness in
the WTO, it is not sufficient to resolve the
overarching governance imbalance between
multilateral environmental agreements and the
multilateral trading system. If the EU is
truly committed to sustainable development,
it cannot allow that trade officials start
questioning the status of environmental
treaties in the WTO. Environmental treaties
need to be reaffirmed and further
strengthened, not weakened.''
In light of today's meeting, FoEE has
presented key concerns and demands to EU
trade and environment officials, see 'After
Doha and Johannesburg: Dispute over
Multilateral Environmental Agreements (MEAs)
and Trade Rules: What Next?', FoEE commentary
on the current EC position,
www.foeeurope.org
For further information, contact
Alexandra Wandel, +49 172 748 39 53
(mobile)
Notes
(1) Today governments meet in a special
session of the Committee on Trade and
Environment of the WTO in Geneva where the
relationship of MEAs and trade rules,
specifically information exchange and
observer status between MEAs and the WTO will
be discussed.
(2) There are around 20 global
environmental treaties with trade provisions
such as the Kyoto and Biosafety Protocol.
With some governments arguing that there is
potential conflict between trade and
environmental rules governments in Doha
agreed to negotiate on 1) the relationship
between WTO rules and specific trade
obligations of MEAs 2) the granting of
criteria for observer status of MEAs.
2) See International Civil Society
Statement signed by more than 180 groups from
57 countries: Earth Summit must agree that
the WTO rules will respect Multilateral
Environmental Agreements , see
www.rio-plus-10.org
3) WSSD Plan of Implementation, para
91.
4) WSSD, Plan of Implementation: para 92
says: Promote mutual supportiveness between
the multilateral trading system and the
multilateral environmental agreements,
consistent with sustainable development
goals, in support of the work programme
agreed through WTO, while recognizing the
importance of maintaining the integrity of
both sets of instruments.
5) EC proposal to the WTO: DDA paragraph
31 (ii), MEAs: information exchange and
observer status of Multilateral Environmental
Agreements (MEAs) to the WTO. In March 2002
the EC has also submitted 'MEAs:
Implementation of the Doha Development
Agenda. See
europa.eu.int
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