“Environmental Goods” at the Intersection of Trade and Climate Negotiations
The ongoing World Trade Organization (WTO) Doha Round process includes negotiations toward an agreement that would reduce or eliminate tariff and non-tariff barriers to international trade in “environmental” good and services. While the mandate for these negotiations is the 2001 WTO Doha Declaration, the United States now views these negotiations as “complementing and supporting the objectives of and the process under” the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change process. The fundamental goal of a WTO agreement on trade in environmental goods and services is to harness trade liberalization to encourage the global distribution and deployment of environmentally friendly technologies that, among other things, help mitigate climate change.
As in other areas of the ongoing WTO Doha Round negotiations, substantial differences have emerged between developed and developing countries – and in particular, between the United States and the European Communities (EC), on the one hand, and Brazil, on the other.
Currently, one of the principal areas of contention is whether to include biofuels in the definition of “environmental” goods. Brazil argues that the inclusion of biofuels is critical in order to increase exports of environmental goods from developing countries. The United States and the EC have rejected Brazil’s proposal, contending that trade liberalization in biofuels should be negotiated as part of the separate WTO market access negotiations for agricultural goods. Further, in a recent joint proposal, the United States and the EC argue that the environmental goods and services negotiations should be divided into two phases – the first and more urgent phase addressing trade in goods and services directly linked to addressing climate change, and the second phase covering the remaining substantial body of environmental goods and services.
Negotiations are currently scheduled to resume in February 2008. It is widely accepted that Brazil and other developing countries will object strenuously to the recent joint US/EC proposal because it excludes biofuels, and it seems unlikely that it will be easy to bridge this divergence of views. Unlike other areas of the WTO Doha Round negotiations, it does not seem that these negotiations will soon advance to the stage of discussions based on a draft text for an agreement.
For further information about this topic, please contact Akin Gump.


Recent Comments