MEDIA ADVISORY
Friends of the Earth International
wto april talks off - good news for the
poorest and the environment
21 April 2006 -- The World Trade
Organisation (WTO) announced today that there
will be no Ministerial gathering in Geneva
(Switzerland) to move forward trade talks in
April.
This will be welcome news for the many
developing countries seemingly denied access
to the proposed Ministerial by WTO Director
General Pascal Lamy and for campaigners
around the world striving for poverty and
hunger eradication, environmental protection
and democracy.
The WTO ‘Doha Development Agenda’ trade
talks are not about development. Recent World
Bank and other studies [1] - and even
government negotiators [2] themselves - give
witness to the fact that the current trade
liberalizing agenda is not working for the
majority of people in the developing
countries.
It is clear that the interests of the
largest and most powerful countries and their
transnational companies continue to dominate
the WTO’s agenda. [3]
Furthermore, consideration of the
disastrous potential global environmental
impact of current negotiating proposals is
virtually non-existent within the WTO [4].
This is in spite of the fact that there is
increasing evidence elsewhere, including from
studies commissioned by the European
Commission, that escalating international
trade in natural resources is likely to
damage global biodiversity and local
economies. [5]
Indeed, if more natural resources are
traded internationally instead of being
available for use locally - as certain
countries and transnational corporations wish
- this could increase poverty for millions in
the world’s poorest communities . [6] For
example, forests and fish and fish products
are both sectors slated for complete or
exceptionally high levels of liberalization
in the WTO’s current negotiations.
Yet worldwide, some 60 million indigenous
people are almost completely reliant on
forest resources for their livelihoods – for
food and fuel, medicines and materials - and
some 36 million people directly employed in
small-scale artisanal fishing [7].
Similarly, current negotiations to expand
international trade in agricultural products
could threaten the livelihoods of millions of
small and peasant farmers worldwide. In
short, poverty could be increased
significantly by the WTO’s negotiations. This
would go completely against the grain of
governments’ existing Millennium Development
commitment to halve world poverty by
2005.
Friends of the Earth also revealed today
that the European Union this week put forward
a controversial proposal that would allow
trade experts to resolve disputes over
domestic regulations and standards swiftly
behind closed doors, without the involvement
of any other parties. [8]
Friends of the Earth International trade
campaigner Ronnie Hall said:
“It’s about time this practice of
exclusive invitation-only mini-Ministerial
meetings was stopped, once and for all, not
just next week. The WTO has a comprehensive
set of anti-development and anti-environment
proposals on the table and those governments
who recognise this fact are being gagged when
they should be allowed to speak out. Next
week’s cancelled meeting reflects the fact
that the WTO talks are in crisis and could
soon collapse. This can only be a good thing–
it’s time to halt the WTO process and review
the impacts of past and potential
negotiations.”
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT
In London (UK):
Ronnie Hall, Friends of the Earth
International, +44 7967017281
In Brussels (Belgium):
Alexandra Wandel, Friends of the Earth
Europe: +49 172 748 3953 or email
alexandra.wandel@foeeurope.org
In Montevideo (Uruguay):
Alberto Villarreal, Friends of the Earth
International Trade Campaign
+598-5228481 or email
comercioredes@gmail.com
NOTES TO EDITORS
[1] A study by the World Bank's
Independent Evaluation Group (IEG) released
in March 2006 concluded that the World Bank's
strategies on trade have not delivered on
employment and poverty reduction. World
Bank’s Independent Evaluation Group Issues
report Assessing Two Decades of Global Trade
Programs, IEG, World Bank, Washington DC, 22
March 2006,
www.worldbank.org/ieg/trade/docs/press_release_trade_evaluation.pdf.
In addtion, a 2006 study by the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace also
suggests that the gains that have been
predicted from world trade are likely to be
much more modest than has been portrayed,
with those countries particularly reliant on
subsistence farming likely to be harmed.
Winners and Losers: Impact of the Doha Round
on Developing Countries, Sandra Polaski,
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
Washington DC, 2006,
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/files/BWfinal.pdf
[2] For example, the Hon. Charles Savarin,
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Trade and
Labour, Commonwealth of Dominica, has said:
“In recent times, the rules,norms and
procedures of the multilateral trading system
have pushed the Caribbean to the precipice of
disaster…Called the Doha Development Round,
these on-going trade talks are failing the
Region.” Caribbean Regional Negotiating
Machinery press release, No. 27/2005,
December 6, 2005. The G33 group of countries
has also recently sent a letter to Pascal
Lamy stating that its members will not accept
proposed modalities for agriculture if these
do not include modalities on special products
(SPs) and a special safeguard mechanism (SSM)
that are key aspects of special and
differential treatment for developing
countries(Geneva, 20 April). These were
agreed in Hong Kong but have now been
sidelined for attention at some later
date.
[3] Some WTO papers are surprisingly
explicit about engagement with industry. For
example: “This forest products proposal is
driven by industry interest. The Santa
Catalina Group, which has industry
representatives from both developed and
developing countries, has met with NAMA
negotiators on several occasions to discuss
its members’ priorities” Market Access for
Non-Agricultural Products, Tariff
Liberalization in the Forests Product Sector,
Communication from Canada, Hong Kong China,
New Zealand, Thailand and the United States,
TN/MA/W/64, 18 October 2005 (05-4784), World
Trade Organization, Geneva.
[4] The WTO’s Committee on Trade and
Environment is mandated to oversee the
environmental impacts of all the WTO’s
current negotiations but has not done so.
Indeed, there is an unwritten rule in the WTO
that multilateral environmental or
sustainability impact assessments are not
permitted, because they are too
controversial, as Pascal Lamy himself
confirmed in a meeting with civil society ,
17 October 2005.
[5] The European Commission-financed
sustainability impact assessment on the
forest sector, for example, demonstrates that
there are likely to be significant and
irreversible impacts on forests and
biodiversity in‘biodiversity hotspot’
countries such as Brazil, Indonesia,
countries in the Congo Basin and Papua New
Guinea. In addition, countries that currently
protect their forest industries using trade
measures can expect those industries to
shrink and possibly collapse. Sustainability
Impact Assessment of Proposed WTO
Negotiations: Final Report for the Forest
Sector Study, Marko Katila and Markku Simula,
Savcor Indufor Oy, Finland, in association
with the Institute for Development Policy and
Management, University of Manchester, UK,
with financial assistance from the Commission
of the European Communities, 19 June 2005
http://www.sia-trade.org/wto/final%20report%20page.shtml
[6] Worldwide, some 60 million indigenous
people are almost completely reliant on
forest resources for their livelihoods – for
food and fuel, medicines and materials.
Almost 40 million people are involved in
fisheries globally and 90 percent of these
are employed in small-scale artisanal
fishing,
[7] For further details see FOEI’s The
Tyranny of Free Trade: wasted natural wealth
and lost livelihoods, December 2005,
http://www.foei.org/publications/index.html
[8] For more information read the press
release online
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/press_releases/mandelsons_secret_wto_cour_21042006.html
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