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Impasse over environmental issues likely at WTO meet
By C. Rammanohar Reddy
GENEVA, AUG. 2. A looming controversy on proposals for
introducing environmental rules in trade has the potential of
having the same deal-wrecking impact on the Doha Ministerial
meeting of the World Trade Organisation that labour standards had
on the 1999 Seattle conference. But the difference this time is
that it is not a rich-poor divide but mainly the European Union,
Switzerland, Norway and Japan versus the rest of the world.
Disputes over the application of environmental norms in trade are
not new to the WTO; but while the organisation has seen a few
high-profile cases, including the shrimp-turtle dispute in which
India was a co-complainant against the U.S., this time formal
proposals are being made for negotiation in the proposed new
round of trade negotiations.
The first proposal is for allowing countries to control imports
when food safety is involved, by invoking the ``precautionary
principle'' - where there is a threat of irreversible
environmental harm even if the scientific evidence is not
certain. With consumers in Europe having definite negative views
on GMO food, this move is seen as an attempt to give Governments
the power to monitor trade in such products. But it is strongly
opposed by the U.S. and the Cairns group of agricultural
exporting nations, who naturally see it as disguised
protectionism and argue that the grounds for application of the
precautionary principle are already spelt out in the WTO
agreement on sanitary and phytosanitary measures.
At this point, the E.U. is not talking of new negotiations only
for a substantive interpretation of past rulings in WTO disputes;
but everyone knows this is the first step towards negotiation of
more liberal rules on the WTO books.
Eco-labelling - the certification that products are manufactured
in an environmentally benign way - is the second area proposed by
the E.U. for negotiations; though this one too is already covered
in the WTO agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade. ``There has
been a proliferation of private initiatives in eco-labelling.
What we need is a transparent and WTO-compatible process that
will give a reliable process of certification,'' says Mr. Kare
Bryn, Norwegian Ambassador to the WTO.
While some developing country officials acknowledge that there is
an intellectual case for WTO disciplines in eco- labelling, they
express concern that a rush to negotiate could result in more
harm than good to the process. There is a preference instead for
certification that is born out of co- operation between producer-
exporters and distributor-importers, as suggested recently by
Malaysia.
Many observers see the E.U. position at the WTO on these
environment/food safety issues (supported by countries like Japan
and Switzerland which are also opposed to liberalisation of trade
in farm products) as meant to assure domestic opinion that the
WTO will not permit trade in unsafe food or products made by
destroying the environment. ``There is a huge constituency out
there for these proposals unlike for the E.U.'s demands on
foreign investment and competition policies.
Besides, the European NGOs, already unhappy that labour standards
are now on the backburner, are not going to allow the same thing
to happen to environment. This makes the E.U. proposals a
potentially explosive one,'' says Dr. Geoff Raby, Australia's
Ambassador to the WTO.
While feelings run strong on both sides on these two proposals,
there is another controversial suggestion, this time by the U.S.,
for the inclusion of a seemingly innocuous statement in the
preamble to the Ministerial declaration in Doha which will refer
to the freedom of countries to introduce the `highest
environmental standards possible.'' The proposal, also meant to
placate domestic environmental NGOs, would imply that Governments
could depart from WTO rules when the situation demands. However,
a trade official asks a question that will be at the heart of the
controversy that is sure to develop: ``How can such departure
from multilateral disciplines be permitted when it is a question
of protecting turtles, but not from TRIPS where the health of
human beings is involved?''
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