non agricultural market accessGovernments including Japan, Korea, Mexico and the United States are planning to use new World Trade Organization (WTO) negotiations to dismantle a wide range of national laws protecting the environment, social well-being and health. Legislation covering food, fisheries, timber and petroleum production, energy efficiency, chemical testing, recycling and standards in the electronics and automobile industries have all been raised as potential barriers to trade under the Non- Agricultural Market Access (NAMA) negotiations. Should governments succeed in eliminating these non-tariff barriers' they would undo a wealth of legislation designed and implemented to protect people and their environment around the world.
EU uses WTO to blackmail developing nations Full scale of WTO challenge to health and environment revealed (press release 24 May 05). Environmental laws lined up for removal by new trade talks (press release 18 April 05). Trade negotiations threat to environment and development: new FoEI briefing on NAMA (pdf, 540kb).
wto deal
endangers
environment, development
FoEI's Analysis of Notifications of
Non-tariff barriers in Non-agricultural
Market Access (NAMA) negotiations of the WTO
can be viewed at:
www.foe.co.uk/resource/media_briefing/ntbsanalysis.pdf (in
spanish)
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