WTO strikes global trade deals after 'roller coaster' talks
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[June 17, 2022]
By Emma Farge and Philip Blenkinsop
GENEVA (Reuters) -The World Trade
Organization agreed the first change to global trading rules in years on
Friday as well as a deal to boost the supply of COVID-19 vaccines in a
series of pledges that were heavy on compromise.
The deals were forged in the early hours of the sixth day of a
conference of more than 100 trade ministers that was seen as a test of
the ability of nations to strike multilateral trade deals amid
geopolitical tensions heightened by the Ukraine war.
Delegates, who had expected a four-day conference, cheered after they
passed seven agreements and declarations just before dawn on Friday.
Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told them: "The package of
agreements you have reached will make a difference to the lives of
people around the world. The outcomes demonstrate that the WTO is in
fact capable of responding to emergencies of our time."
Earlier she had appealed to WTO members to consider the "delicate
balance" required after nearly round-the-clock talks that have at times
been charged with anger and accusations.
The package, which the WTO chief called "unprecedented", included the
two highest profile deals under consideration - on fisheries and on a
partial waiver of intellectual property (IP) rights for COVID-19
vaccines.
The accord to curb fishing subsidies is only the second multilateral
agreement setting new global trading rules struck in the WTO's 27-year
history and is far more ambitious than the first, which was designed to
cut red tape.
At one stage, a series of demands from India, which sees itself as the
champion of poor farmers and fishermen as well as developing countries,
appeared set to paralyse talks but accommodations were found, trade
sources said.
The WTO's rules dictate that all decisions are taken by consensus, with
any single member able to exercise a veto.
'LOT OF BUMPS'
"It was not an easy process. There were a lot of bumps, just like I
predicted. It was like a roller coaster, but in the end we got there,"
an exhausted but elated Okonjo-Iweala told a final news conference.
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World Trade Organization Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
delivers her speech during the closing session of a World Trade
Organization Ministerial Conference at the WTO headquarters in
Geneva, Switzerland June 17, 2022. Fabrice Coffrini/Pool via REUTERS
The deal to ban subsidies for illegal, unreported and
unregulated fishing or fishing of an over-fished stock has the
potential to reverse collapsing fish stocks. Though pared back
significantly, it still drew approval.
"This is a turning point in addressing one of the key drivers of
global over-fishing." said Isabel Jarrett, manager of The Pew
Charitable Trusts’ campaign to reduce harmful fisheries subsidies.
Okonjo-Iweala said it was the first step after 21 years of talks
towards what she hoped would be a more comprehensive deal.
The deal on a partial IP waiver to allow developing countries to
produce and export COVID-19 vaccines has divided the WTO for nearly
two years, but finally passed. It has also drawn the fiercest
criticism from campaign groups that say it barely expands on an
existing exemption in WTO rules and is too narrow by not covering
therapeutics and diagnostics.
"Put simply, it is a technocratic fudge aimed at saving reputations,
not lives," said Max Lawson, co-chair of the People's Vaccine
Alliance.
One agreement also reached was to maintain a moratorium on
e-commerce tariffs, which business says is vital to allow the free
flow of data worldwide.
Overall, many observers said the deals should boost the credibility
of the WTO, which was weakened by former U.S. President Donald
Trump's crippling of its ability to intervene in trade disputes, and
set it on a course for reform.
European Trade Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis said the WTO meeting
had clinched outcomes of global significance despite unprecedented
challenges.
"The profound divergences here amply confirm that a deep reform of
the organisation is urgently needed, across all its core functions,"
he said, adding he would work to get it agreed at the next
ministerial conference due in 2023.
(Writing by Emma Farge and Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Richard
Pullin and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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