WTO Members
Discuss Use of Virtual Platforms during COVID-19 Lockdown
At a
virtual meeting of all WTO members on 17 April, over 50 delegation heads took
the floor to exchange views on the use of online discussions and written
procedures to continue WTO work and decision-making during the COVID-19
lockdown. Director-General Roberto Azevêdo also used
the informal session to urge members to submit information about pandemic-related
trade measures to the WTO Secretariat’s ongoing monitoring exercise.
(The
virtual meeting had over 250 participants. A total of 54 delegations spoke. At
the end of the meeting, the Director-General said he had heard overwhelming
support for the use of virtual meetings for information exchange. As for
deliberations on current negotiations and taking formal decisions remotely,
members did not have a common view, so more consultation would be needed,
possibly with a case-by-case approach for individual decisions. He urged the
chairs of WTO bodies to consult with members on how to proceed with regular
committee meetings.)
In-person
meetings at the WTO and other Geneva-based international organizations have
been suspended since mid-March, in line with Swiss government recommendations
to curb the spread of the virus. While different WTO bodies have continued with
smaller-group conference calls and written exchanges since the lockdown
started, this was the first virtual meeting of the entire membership.
In
his remarks, the Director-General said the virtual meeting responded to the
desire expressed by a large number of members to find ways forward on WTO work
during the lockdown. He also noted that several delegations had underscored the
challenges involved in maintaining proper consultations with officials and
other stakeholders, both in capitals and in Geneva, during the pandemic. He
therefore invited delegations to indicate whether they would be comfortable
conducting informal meetings and information exchange through virtual
platforms. He also asked if they would be open to formal decision-making
through virtual meetings or written procedures until traditional in-person
gatherings can resume.
“The
idea for today is to give members a chance to provide their views on whether
they feel this online format is viable for some types of work until we can
resume normal meetings,” he said.
“We
are facing the deepest recession of our lifetimes, so we cannot lose sight of
the big picture. But today’s meeting is about smaller-scale practicalities —
about how we can advance work in the weeks ahead,” DG Azevêdo
added, noting that the United Nations General Assembly had agreed on a written
process for adopting resolutions.
The
Director-General briefly addressed the economic consequences of the pandemic,
which include severe disruptions to global trade. He pointed to the recent
forecast by WTO economists projecting that global merchandise trade would
shrink sharply in 2020 and emphasized that maintaining open markets for trade would
be critical, along with fiscal and monetary measures, in laying the groundwork
for a strong recovery.
DG Azevêdo reported on his recent engagement with the G20 at
the group’s emergency virtual meetings of leaders and trade ministers on the
COVID-19 crisis. He also described the WTO’s outreach to other international
organizations on keeping trade flows open, particularly for essentials such as
medical products and food.