From: "Rainer,Rob [Sackville]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: FW: Worldwatch News Brief on WTO Reform
Date: Wed, 3 Nov 1999 22:12:12 -0400


Dear LEADers:

For your interest.

Rob Rainer (Canada, C6)

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, November 03, 1999 4:20 PM
Subject: WWN: Worldwatch News Brief on WTO Reform


NEWS FROM THE WORLDWATCH INSTITUTE

Governments and citizen activists will confront a number of
divisive issues at the upcoming meeting of the World Trade
Organization in Seattle in November 1999.

Attached is the latest Worldwatch News Brief on the need for
reforming the rules of the World Trade Organization to better
protect the environment.

Hilary French, the author of this news brief, is also the author
an article in the current issue of World Watch magazine,
"Challenging the WTO," which looks at how global trade rules
threaten to undermine environmental laws of sovereign nations.
You can download this article as a free pdf file by going to the
Worldwatch web site: http://worldwatch.org/mag/1999/99-6.html.

The same issue of the magazine also has an article by World Watch
assistant editor Curtis Runyan on the growing power of
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)on a wide range of issues,
from human rights to child labor to environmental issues. A press
release on this article, "Challenging the WTO," is available at:
http://www.worldwatch.org/alerts/991027.html

***********************************

Worldwatch New Brief 99-11
November 2, 1999

ENVIRONMENTAL TRADE SKIRMISHES DEMONSTRATE NEED FOR WTO REFORM

Hilary French

    The recent burgeoning of environmental trade wars highlights
the need for reforming the rules of the World Trade Organization
(WTO). Thousands of demonstrators expected to gather in late
November in Seattle at a key WTO meeting will challenge trade
ministers to reconcile the rules of world trade with the
imperative of reversing global ecological decline.

One priority is to incorporate into WTO rules a greater respect
for the precautionary principle, which holds that where there are
threats of serious or irreversible damage, lack of scientific
certainty should not be used as a reason for postponing action.
The WTO's provisions shift the burden of proof, in effect
requiring that chemicals and food additives be proven harmful
before their use can be restricted.

If the economy's environmental support systems are to be
protected, several other steps are also required. Among these are
protecting consumers' right to know about the health and
environmental impact of products they purchase by
safeguarding eco-labeling programs from trade challenges;
deferring to international environmental treaties in cases where
they conflict with WTO rules; insuring the right of countries to
use trade measures to protect the global environmental commons;
and opening the WTO to meaningful public participation. These
changes are imperative if the WTO is to garner the public support
it needs to stay in business.

Ongoing transatlantic food fights are emblematic of a new kind of
global trade conflict, in which the stakes are the survival of
national health and environmental laws, rather than such
traditional trade-war issues as tariffs, quotas, and the dumping
of commodities like steel or wheat. In a dispute between the
United States and the European Union over the EU's ban on
hormone-raised livestock, the WTO recently rejected the EU's
defense that the measure was justified by the precautionary
principle. The U.S. and the European Union have long locked horns
over the EU law, which keeps hundreds of millions of dollars
worth of U.S. hormone-raised beef off of European supermarket
shelves. The U.S. government took up the cause of its cattle
industry, arguing that the hormone ban was an unfair trade
barrier that violated WTO rules.

The EU insists the hormone ban is not an intentional trade
barrier at all, but only a prudent response to public concern
that eating hormone-raised beef might cause cancer and
reproductive health problems. The EU has so far refused to
implement the WTO ruling against the hormone ban. Last July the
U.S. government retaliated by imposing WTO-approved sanctions,
slapping 100 percent tariffs on $116.8 million worth of European
imports, including fruit juices, mustard, pork, truffles, and
Roquefort cheese.

The beef hormone controversy is widely viewed as just a warm-up
for a more serious trade controversy over genetically modified
organisms (GMOs). Prompted by public concern over the uncertain
health and ecological effects of GMOs, the EU passed legislation
in 1998 requiring all food products that contain genetically
modified soybeans or corn to be labeled, in order to give
consumers the ability to choose for themselves whether or not to
purchase these products. Several other countries, including
Australia, Brazil, Japan, and South
Korea, are now following suit. U.S. companies allege that the
labeling requirements amount to trade barriers, and both the U.S.
and Canadian governments are now voicing this concern at the WTO
and in other international forums.

    Last February, a proposed biosafety protocol to the UN
Convention on Biological Diversity became the first major victim
of the growing international trade war over GMOs. Negotiations
had been underway for several years, aimed at putting in place a
system of prior consent for the transport of genetically
engineered seeds and products. The talks were scheduled to wrap
up in Cartagena, Colombia in February, but six major agricultural
exporting countries-Argentina, Australia, Canada, Chile, the
United States, and Uruguay-put a monkey wrench into these plans
by blocking adoption of the accord. One of the main U.S.
arguments against the protocol was a claim that its provisions
ran counter to the rules of the WTO.

Although the U.S. government has few qualms about relying on WTO
rules to challenge other countries' laws when it suits U.S. trade
interests, this approach can backfire when U.S. environmental
laws themselves come under attack at the WTO. Several U.S.
environmental laws have in fact been found to be "WTO-illegal"
over the last few years. In the most recent case, a WTO dispute
resolution panel ruled last year against provisions of a U.S. law
aimed at protecting endangered sea turtles.

Sea turtles are both endangered and highly mobile, making
international action essential if they are to be protected. The
provisions of the U.S. law in question were designed to reduce
the accidental death of sea turtles caused by shrimp trawling.
The law closed off access to the lucrative U.S. shrimp market to
countries that do not require their shrimpers to use the turtle
excluder devices (TEDs) that have been mandatory for U.S. fishers
since 1988 or have comparable policies.

Many nations, including 13 Latin American countries and
Indonesia, Nigeria, and Thailand, responded to the U.S. law by
requiring the use of TEDs. But India, Malaysia, and Pakistan
chose a different tack, launching a WTO challenge rather than
meet the U.S. requirement. Although the environmental
effectiveness of the U.S. law was clear, a WTO dispute resolution
panel concluded in 1998 that the measure violated WTO rules, a
decision that calls into question the ability of countries to
take effective action to protect threatened global resources.

The accord that created the WTO in 1994 strengthened the terms of
dispute resolution proceedings to make rulings binding, and to
provide for tougher trade retaliation in cases where countries
are unwilling to adhere to panel findings by changing offending
laws. But dispute resolution panels are typically composed of
trade rather than environmental experts, and are conducted in
closed sessions. Making WTO proceedings more transparent is
essential for an organization that stands in judgment on
environmental laws that were passed by democratically elected
bodies.


-END-


Hilary French is Vice President for Research at the Worldwatch
Institute. She is the author of "Challenging the WTO," in the
November/December 1999 issue of World Watch magazine, and author
of a forthcoming book, Vanishing Borders: Protecting the Planet
in the Age of Globalization, to be published by W.W. Norton & Co.
in March 2000.







Worldwatch is pleased to announce the publication of the
November/December issue of World Watch magazine, which features
two articles of special relevance to the upcoming meeting in
Seattle of the World Trade Organization.


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