Commitments on Fish and Pledges on Health and Food Security after
more than five Gruelling
days of Negotiations
·
The WTO committed to conduct discussions so as to have a
fully functioning dispute settlement system by 2024.
The World Trade Organization's 164 members approved a
series of trade agreements early on Friday that included commitments on fish
and pledges on health and food security after more than five gruelling days of negotiations.
Here are details on those agreements
Pandemic Response
India and South Africa and other developing countries
have sought a waiver of intellectual property rights for COVID-19 vaccines,
treatments and diagnostics for over a year, but faced opposition from several
developed nations with major pharmaceutical producers.
A provisional deal between major parties - India, South
Africa, the United States and the European Union - limited to vaccines emerged
in May and this is largely what has been adopted.
Developing countries will be allowed to authorise the use of a patent for production and supply
without the patent holder's consent for five years, subject to a possible
extension. The production need not be predominantly for the domestic market,
meaning more exports are allowed to ensure equitable access.
Within six months, WTO members are to consider extending
the waiver to therapeutics and diagnostics.
China has voluntarily opted out of the waiver, something
the United States had insisted on.
Campaign groups had urged members to reject the text,
saying it was too narrow and was not a real IP waiver at all.
The WTO also agreed a declaration on its response to
COVID-19 and preparedness for future pandemics, stressing the needs of least
developed countries.
Members further recognised that
any emergency trade measures should be proportionate and temporary and not
cause unnecessary disruptions to supply chains. Members should also exercise
restraint in imposing export restrictions on essential medical goods.
Fishing
WTO members struck an agreement to reduce subsidies that
contribute to over-fishing, a step that environmentalists say is vital to
helping fish stocks recover.
Talks have been going on for 20 years and the deal is
only the second multilateral agreement on new global trade rules that the WTO
has agreed in its 27-year history. The fisheries outcome was seen as a critical
test of the WTO's own credibility.
The agreement says that no WTO member shall grant any
subsidy for vessels or operator engaged in illegal, unreported and unregulated
fishing or for fishing of an over-fished stock.
Developing countries will be exempt for two years.
Members themselves will carry out investigations into
activities off their coasts and all member will be required to notify the WTO
of their fishing subsidy schemes.
India had earlier been one of the biggest critics.
Talks will however continue to achieve a more
comprehensive agreement to crack down further on fisheries subsidies, ideally
for the next ministerial conference, likely to be in 2023.
Food Security
The WTO sought to respond to a food supply and price hike
crisis exacerbated by export disruptions from major cereal producers Ukraine
and Russia.
WTO members agreed in a declaration that they would take
concrete steps to facilitate trade of food and agriculture, including cereals,
fertilizers and other agricultural inputs, and reaffirmed the importance of
limiting export restrictions.
WTO members also agreed to a binding decision not to curb
exports to the World Food Programme (WFP), which
seeks to fight hunger in places hit by conflicts, disasters and climate change.
Members would still be free to adopt measures to ensure their own food
security.
E-Commerce Moratorium
WTO members have extended a moratorium on placing customs
duties on electronic transmissions, from streaming services to financial
transactions and corporate data flows, worth hundreds of billions of dollars a
year.
The moratorium has been in place since 1998. South Africa
and India had initially opposed an extension, saying they should not be missing
out on customs revenues.
The extension runs to the next ministerial conference,
which would normally be held by the end of 2023, but in any case will expire on
March 31, 2024.
WTO Reform
All WTO members say the organisation's
rule book needs updating, although they disagree on what changes are required.
Most pressingly, its dispute appeals court has been paralysed for nearly two years since then-U.S. president
Donald Trump blocked new adjudicator appointments, which has curbed the WTO's
ability to resolve trade disputes.
Members committed to work towards necessary reforms of
the WTO to improve its functions. This work should be transparent and address
the interests of all members, including developing countries, which are
afforded special treatment.
The WTO committed to conduct discussions so as to have a
fully functioning dispute settlement system by 2024.
The declaration highlighted the growing importance of
services trade and the need to increase the participation of developing
countries.
The members also recognised global
environmental challenges including climate change and related natural
disasters, loss of biodiversity and pollution. Some experts believe issues
about the environment have the potential to give the body a new vitality and
purpose.