WTO
DG Calls Members to Deliver Results at MC12 despite Challenging Circumstances
· Difficult context made reaching
agreements both harder and more urgently necessary, she noted, urging delegations
to be open-minded and flexible on substance and in how they engage with each other.
·
WTO response to the current and future pandemics, including intellectual
property issues, where members will discuss possible
elements of a compromise at a time to be determined by
the Chair of the TRIPS Council
·
Progress on reforming the WTO
·
Global crisis in food security, with prices for food, fertilizer and
energy rising sharply from already high levels
·
Exemption from export restrictions for World Food Programme humanitarian purchases
·
US support comes with the expectation that the WTO should produce results
and continue to be active in helping to solve the multiple challenges facing the
world.
Director-General Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala on 4 May called on WTO members to push as
hard as they can to bridge differences and reach agreements in time for the 12th
Ministerial Conference (MC12), to be held in Geneva on 12-15 June. While recognizing
that the current geopolitical context means “we may not be able to achieve everything
we want,” she said members need to deliver concrete results in order to demonstrate
that the WTO is fit for purpose and able to help them tackle
current and future global challenges.
Speaking to heads of WTO member delegations, the Director-General observed
that ministers would gather at WTO headquarters next month against a backdrop of
the COVID-19 pandemic, rising food and energy prices, debt distress, and war.
"This is not an ordinary Ministerial Conference," she said.
The difficult context made reaching agreements both harder and more urgently necessary,
she noted, urging delegations to be open-minded and flexible on substance and in
how they engage with each other.
Describing her wish for a "streamlined, business-like" MC12,
DG Okonjo-Iweala said delegations need to achieve clarity
about how they want to use the meeting. She urged them to finalize outcomes ahead
of time so that ministers can "bless" them and focus on providing guidance
for future work. "MC12 should not simply be a talk shop," she said.
One potential MC12 deliverable is a WTO response to the current and
future pandemics, including intellectual property issues, where members will discuss
possible
elements of a compromise at a time to be determined by
the Chair of the TRIPS Council, the DG said. Other potential deliverables include
concluding an agreement on fisheries subsidies, achieving outcomes on agriculture
and making progress on reforming the WTO in addition to various initiatives members
are taking forward, she added.
The Director-General pointed to the threat of a global crisis in food
security, with prices for food, fertilizer and energy rising sharply from already
high levels. She suggested members could use MC12 as a platform to take actions
on these issues separately from the ongoing agriculture negotiations.
The DG said she would be consulting with members in the days ahead
as to what such actions could entail. In addition to the proposed exemption from
export restrictions for World Food Programme humanitarian
purchases, she added, some members have talked about sharing buffer stocks and were
seeking assistance in getting grain to world markets, or directly assisting other
members needing support in government-to-government transactions.
During the meeting, the Chair of the General Council, Ambassador Didier
Chambovey (Switzerland), outlined how MC12 be organized.
Members received an update on recent developments in the fisheries subsidies negotiations
from Ambassador Santiago Wills (Colombia), Chair of the Negotiating Group on Rules;
on the agriculture negotiations from Chair Ambassador Gloria Abraham Peralta (Costa
Rica); and on the services negotiations from Chair Ambassador Zhanar Aitzhanova (Kazakhstan). The
three chairs outlined their respective roadmaps for taking talks forward in the
coming weeks.
Ambassador Dacio Castillo (Honduras) in his
capacity as the General Council Chair's Facilitator also reported to the members
on his consultations on the WTO's response to the pandemic.
Over 40 WTO members took the floor to comment on the interventions
of the Director-General, the Chairs and the Facilitator.
As part of her remarks to members, DG Okonjo-Iweala
reported on her recent official visits to the United States and Brazil, where she
met with top officials from both countries. In Washington DC, she joined the G20
finance ministers meeting and participated in the International Monetary Fund and
World Bank spring meetings, and also met with members of the US Congress. Support
for the WTO was a clear theme in these discussions, she said, but US support comes
with the expectation that the WTO should produce results and continue to be active
in helping to solve the multiple challenges facing the world.
Regarding MC12, the Director-General said, the goal "is to show
we have an organisation that is part of the solution to
the polycrisis we face," alluding to simultaneous
global crises in the economy, the environment, public health, and security. She
reiterated that in the five weeks before MC12, she stood ready to work with members
to find compromises.
"Weekends, nights, whatever it takes," she said. "Let's
get going."