Analysis-WTO seeks fish, vaccine deals as war ignites trade tensions
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[June 03, 2022]
By Emma Farge and Philip Blenkinsop
GENEVA/BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The World Trade
Organization will host ministers from across the globe this month with
the aim of striking deals on fish and vaccines, testing the world's
ability to set trade rules at a time of mounting tensions.
Global trade discord, COVID-19 and the crippling of its dispute
settlement mechanism had already weakened the Geneva-based body, which
was twice forced to cancel the ministerial conference due to the
pandemic.
The normally biennial meeting, last held over four years ago, will now
take place after Russia's invasion of Ukraine triggered commodity price
hikes and food export bans and China's zero-COVID policy exacerbates
worldwide supply chain difficulties.
Global trade is meanwhile set to slow this year, with the Ukraine war
adding to uncertainty.
Against that backdrop, the ministers will seek to conclude 20 years of
negotiations to reduce fishing subsidies, forge a deal on fairer sharing
of COVID-19 vaccines, push agricultural trade reform and set a path for
reform of the WTO.
Dmitry Grozoubinski, director of the Geneva Trade Platform, said there
was a sense that the meeting, dubbed MC12, was "a little bit cursed".
"This was always going to be a ministerial with modest outcomes at best.
The invasion has made things harder, but things were hardly easy
beforehand," he said.
Several members have said they will not negotiate with Russia, while
Moscow would be expected to block any attempt by Ukraine's allies to
formulate a ministerial statement on the crisis, such as its impact on
food.
"In the background there is the possible total disruption from the
Ukraine war," said Peter Van den Bossche, director of studies at the
World Trade Institute. "I have no doubt Russia will demonstrate that,
without it, no progress can be made."
DIFFICULT VACCINES, FISH SUBSIDY TALKS
Ministers will ideally sign a declaration on trade's role in current and
future pandemics at the meeting but a dispute over how to redress
vaccine inequity has dominated discussions even as the coronavirus
crisis has eased.
Developing countries have sought since 2020 a waiver of intellectual
property (IP) rights for vaccines and other COVID-19 treatments.
It is not yet clear if a vaccine compromise forged by India, South
Africa, the EU and the United States will transform into a full
agreement.
At the same time, members are negotiating a deal to end subsidies for
fishing fleets, a potential landmark deal to reverse a dramatic decline
in fish stocks.
One unresolved issues is the transition period for
developing countries. Many say this should be five to seven years, but
some suggest as much as 25 years.
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An aerial view shows containers and cargo vessels at the Qingdao
port in Shandong province, China May 9, 2022. Picture taken with a
drone. China Daily via REUTERS
From past experience, the prospects are not bright. The WTO has only
managed one update of its global rules in its 27-year history, the
red-tape cutting Trade Facilitation Agreement.
Some observers say the WTO itself needs a deal to save fish stocks
as much as the fish, to show it is still relevant.
The WTO's constant challenge is to find consensus. Just one of its
164 members can block a decision.
Views vary on the prospects of a successful 'MC12'.
Roberto Azevedo, the Brazilian head of the WTO from 2013 to 2020,
said achieving consensus today was "impossible".
"Even when you have issues where you can discern the consensus, or
discern the area where members may converge, even then it's
impossible to get a consensus," he said.
By contrast, John W. H. Denton, secretary general of the
International Chamber of Commerce, said he was optimistic the WTO
could strike an agreement on fishing.
U.S. VS CHINA
The administration of U.S. President Joe Biden will arrive in Geneva
with a more conciliatory tone than that of his predecessor. However,
it is not about to relaunch the WTO's appeals chamber Donald Trump
dismantled and says the Geneva-based body needs reforms.
Washington says the WTO has failed to hold China accountable for
unfair practices and wants the June WTO meeting to tee up a
discussion about the reform of global trade rules.
It also argues that it is time for China to relinquish its status as
a developing country given it has grown to become the world's second
largest economy from sixth place when it entered the WTO in 2001.
Developing countries have privileges at the WTO, such as more time
to implement agreements.
Pascal Lamy, WTO chief from 2005 to 2013, said the WTO's rules were
lagging behind in terms of addressing present obstacles to trade.
"WTO rules today reflect the world where obstacles to trade were
what they were 30-40 years ago - tariffs, subsidies, quantitative
restrictions, etc. These classical obstacles to trade are less and
less relevant," he said.
Still, global trade hit a record of $28.5 trillion in 2021, 13%
above pre-pandemic levels, much of its based on existing WTO rules.
"In that sense, the WTO remains relevant, but it needs to be more
relevant, with new rules," said the World Trade Institute's Van den
Bossche.
(Reporting by Emma Farge and Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Toby
Chopra)
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