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november 11, 2005
media advisory
friends of the earth international
trade talks at a standstill: good for
people and planet
brussels (belgium) / london (uk)– on the day
of crucial global trade talks in Geneva
(Switzerland) Friends of the Earth
International applauded developing countries’
apparent success in resisting European and US
pressure to open their markets.
Developing countries have argued that
aspects of the deal on the table could lead
to unemployment and increased poverty [1] as
well as increased use of already seriously
depleted natural resources [2].
On Wednesday November 9 several key member
countries of the World Trade Organization
(WTO) said they have reached an impasse and
had run out of time to reach agreement on a
draft trade deal [3] supposed to be finalized
at a WTO December 13-18 conference in
Hong-Kong.
Even though the current trade negotiations
were supposed to focus on development, the
European Union (EU) and the US have been
aggressively using them to insist that poorer
countries open their markets in a wide range
of service, industrial and raw material
sectors, including forests and fisheries.
Meanwhile, the EU and the US are only
willing, in return, to offer superficial
concessions in agriculture.
“The trade proposals on the table are
seriously bad news for poor people and the
environment”, said Ronnie Hall of Friends of
the Earth International. “Developing
countries are right to stand their ground. No
deal is definitely better than a bad
deal.”
Brazil's Foreign Minister among others
said on Wednesday that the EU is coming up
with nothing new on agriculture. But
negotiations on industrial products and in
raw material sectors could see developing
countries being forced open their markets
extensively. They are being put under
pressure to partially liberalize almost all
sectors and completely liberalize in a few
priority areas which include forests and
fisheries.
This could lead to increase production and
consumption of these resources, even though
they are already severely depleted. This
could endanger the livelihoods of up to 40
million people who rely on small-scale
fishing for food and livelihoods and 1.6
billion who rely wholly or partially on
forests [4].
Friends of the Earth International
believes that a review of the impacts of
international trade rules on the impoverished
and the environment is urgently needed.
for more information
contact:
In London (UK) Ronnie Hall, Friends of the
Earth International +44 7967 017281 or
email
In Brussels (Belgium) Alexandra Wandel,
Friends of the Earth Europe: +49 172 748 3953
or email
notes for editors:
[1] The ACP (African, Caribbean and
Pacific Group of States) Ministerial
Declaration on the WTO Doha Work Program
adopted on 11 July 2004 in Mauritius, states
that they “are concerned that the proposals
contained in the Derbez text and its annex on
NAMA [non-agricultural market access
negotiating documents] … would further deepen
the crisis of de-industrialisation and
accentuate the unemployment and poverty
crisis in our countries.”
[2] For further details of the potential
environmental impacts of negotiations on
natural resources see
http://www.foei.org/publications/pdfs/NAMAenvironmentFINAL.pdf
In addition the final Sustainability Impact
Assessment on forests commissioned by the
European Commission states that “in
biodiversity hotspot countries such as
Brazil, Indonesia, Congo Basin countries, and
Papua New Guinea, possible negative impacts
on biodiversity can be irreversible.”
http://trade-info.cec.eu.int/doclib/html/125566.htm
[3] A ‘mini-Ministerial’ meeting was
convened and chaired by Pascal Lamy, Director
General of the WTO, in Geneva on 8 and 9
November. 28 countries considered to be key
to the negotiations participated. Failing to
reach agreement on negotiations they agreed
that it was necessary to ‘scale back’
expectations for Hong Kong. Some Ministers
proposed a second Ministerial be held in
March 2006. This will undoubtedly be the main
topic of discussion at today’s General
Council meeting. Countries present included
the EU, US, India, Brazil, Japan, Canada,
Switzerland, Hong Kong, Zambia, New Zealand,
Australia, Korea, South Africa, Malaysia,
Lesotho, Benin, Chad, Thailand, Argentina,
Mexico, Costa Rica, Jamaica, Egypt, Kenya,
Pakistan and China.
[4] Forests are home to 300 million people
around the world, but more than 1.6 billion
people depend to varying degrees on forests
for their livelihoods, e.g. fuelwood,
medicinal plants and forest foods. 60 million
indigenous people are almost wholly dependent
on forests.
http://www.fao.org/forestry/foris/webview/pageview.jsp?pageId=33453&langId=1
See also 'Food and Agriculture Organization'
Fisheries Department, The State of World
Fisheries and Aquaculture (Rome: FAO,
2004).
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