Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) Agreement Review
New Booklet
Highlights Key Results of 2020 Work on Standards and Regulations
The WTO has launched a new booklet highlighting
ten key results from the latest annual review of the Technical Barriers to
Trade (TBT) Agreement. The booklet outlines how WTO members are implementing
the Agreement.
The TBT Agreement aims to ensure that technical
regulations, standards and conformity assessment procedures are
non-discriminatory and do not create unnecessary obstacles to trade. At the
same time, it recognises WTO members' right to
implement measures to achieve legitimate policy objectives, such as the
protection of human health and safety, or protection of the environment.
The booklet focuses on members' compliance with
notification requirements under the TBT Agreement and the concerns raised in
the TBT Committee, often in response to these notifications. Governments are
required to “notify” other members, through the WTO Secretariat, of proposed
measures that may have a significant effect on other members’ trade and that
are not in accordance with relevant international standards.
Key results highlighted in the publication:
1.
Over 3,000 notifications
are submitted annually.
2.
The number of notifications
has increased by more than 11% each year.
3.
East Africa submitted 26%
of notifications in 2020.
4.
Half of the WTO membership
regularly submits notifications.
5.
A period of 56 days is
allowed, on average, for members to comment on most notifications.
6.
Almost half of all notified
regulations relate to protection of health.
7.
The WTO's main tool to
disseminate TBT notifications, ePing, has more than
12,000 users.
8.
Trade concerns raised by
WTO members have grown by 26% per year, on average.
9.
A record number of new
trade concerns — 57 — were raised in 2020.
10. About one-third of WTO members took part in discussions on trade
concerns in 2020.