EU takes Russia to WTO in Fourth Case
Alleges Violation of Bound Rates on Paper, Palm Oil and
Refrigerators
The EU has moved forward in
its WTO dispute against Russia over alleged violations of Moscow’s tariff
commitments, filing a request on 26 February for the establishment of a panel
to hear the case.
The case (DS485) is the fourth
dispute that Brussels has lodged against Moscow in the two years since Russia
joined the organisation, and deals specifically with the tariff treatment
Russia accords to certain goods in both agricultural and manufacturing sectors.
Trade tensions between the two
sides have been running high over the past several months for a variety of
reasons, some due to the fall-out from the crisis in Ukraine, as well as
repeated claims by Brussels and several other WTO members that Moscow is
running afoul of its commitments at the global trade body.
Russia, in turn, has charged
that the economic sanctions it has suffered in the wake of the situation in
Ukraine may themselves be WTO violations, while not formally filing a case on
the subject.
The EU alleges that Russia has
applied duty rates on products such as paper, palm oil, and refrigerators that
exceed its bound rates, which are the maximum tariff ceilings that Moscow
agreed to respect when joining the WTO in August 2012.
Those higher duties, Brussels
claims, hurt European exports of those products, which are worth approximately
€600 million a year.
The EU filed its original
request for consultations – the first stage in WTO dispute settlement
proceedings – last October. However, these consultations failed to settle the
dispute.
Russia is the EU’s third
largest trading partner, with European exports to its Eastern neighbour
amounting to €120 billion annually.
EU allegations
In its panel request, the EU
refers to 12 measures imposed by Russia over different tariff lines through the
Common Customs Tariff of the Customs Union of the Republic of Belarus,
Kazakhstan and Russian Federation, as amended by subsequent acts.
The EU claims that Russia
applies customs duties that are in excess of those outlined in its schedule for
select goods. For instance, in the case of paper and paperboard products,
Russia applies duty rates of 10 or 15 percent,
depending on the tariff line, even though the bound rate is five percent.
Furthermore, regarding palm
oil and its fractions, refrigerators and combined refrigerator-freezers, the EU
refers to measures that result in duties being levied above those provided in
the schedule when the customs value is below a certain level.
These measures involve a
variation of the structure and design of duties from what is outlined in
Russia’s schedule. The EU says that Russia uses a combination of ad valorem rates
and specific elements even where the schedule outlines a different set-up.
The EU also claims that Russia
does not have mechanisms in place that would prevent the applied duties from
exceeding the bound duties.