“We
cannot afford to have an MC13 that does not deliver”, WTO DG
·
MC13 is
due to take place in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, during the week of 26
February 2024.
In her opening remarks to an
informal Heads of Delegation meeting on 28 February, Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala underlined the importance of delivering results
at the organisation’s 13th Ministerial Conference (MC13) which will take place
in a year’s time.
“Excellencies, exactly on
this day next year, Ministers will be in Abu Dhabi for MC13,” the
Director-General told members. “We have less than a year to ensure that the
meeting yields meaningful outcomes. Ten months is a short time in WTO
negotiations, so we have to step up our efforts, starting now.”
“Despite the impressive
results you collectively delivered at the 12th WTO Ministerial Conference, we
have so much more to do,” she continued. “MC12 cannot be seen as the miracle on
Lake Geneva. We can only do that by showing that the organization is capable of
delivering continuously, especially now that there's so little faith and belief
in multilateral institutions across the world.”
“We need to show that we can
deliver ourselves, even as our sister organizations are under pressure to
reform and perform,” the DG continued. “So we cannot
afford to have an MC13 that does not deliver.”
MC13 is
due to take place in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, during the week of 26
February 2024.
The chairs for the WTO
negotiations on agriculture, fisheries subsidies and development — Ambassador Alparslan Acarsoy of Türkiye, Ambassador Einar Gunnarsson of Iceland and
Ambassador Kadra Hassan of Djibouti — provided
members with readouts on their consultations and work in their respective
areas.
The Director-General noted
that in her recent outreach to leaders, ministers and other stakeholders in the
Gulf region, the Caribbean and Latin America, one theme that emerged was the
need to address the challenges facing the multilateral trading system by
delivering new outcomes in the lead up to, and during, MC13.
“It has become a WTO
imperative to contribute to solutions to food and energy insecurity, the
climate crisis, sustainability issues, pandemic preparedness, economic recovery
and persistent developmental challenges,” the DG said.
“The sooner we transition to
delivery mode, the better the chances we will have for success,” she continued.
“It is encouraging that certain paths forward are beginning to shape up in some
areas. I urge all of you to step up your engagement even further.”
On agriculture, the
Director-General said food security was a recurrent theme in her discussions
with many leaders over the past two weeks.
“The challenge before us is,
if we can take a food security lens to this problem, how exactly do we deal
with the issues that we've always been concerned about so that we do not let
them stand in the way of our delivering a food security result for MC13? What
are the new approaches that we must take? How do we unpack the longstanding
issues that we have so we can clearly see them and deal with them?”
On fisheries subsidies, the
Director-General welcomed the acceptance by Switzerland and Singapore of the
MC12 Agreement on Fisheries Subsidies and said she was hopeful a “significant
number” of additional acceptances would come in soon.
Acceptances from two-thirds
of WTO members are needed for the Agreement to come into effect. She also
welcomed Japan's recent
donation to the WTO Fisheries Funding Mechanism and underlined to
developing countries the importance of accepting the Agreement which is a
condition for accessing the Fund.
On development, the
Director-General thanked members for actively participating in the focused discussions
on the development dimension of the WTO’s reform agenda
earlier this month. She noted that development is much broader in scope than the
negotiations on special and differential treatment (S&DT) negotiations.
“Given the immense economic
and development challenges facing many members, we must deliver in this area
even before MC13,” she said, adding that this message was reiterated by many members
claiming that adequate attention has not been devoted to the development
agenda.
On WTO reform more broadly,
the Director-General underlined that it remains of “prime importance” for
members who agree on the need for a well-functioning multilateral trading
system with the WTO at its core.
“We need to advance work on
all WTO functions. Let us ensure that we can report meaningful progress to
Ministers at MC13 — one that shows that the WTO is responsive and capable of
driving success.”
The Director-General noted
the “widespread support” for dispute settlement reform and underlined that the
restoration of a functioning mechanism is key to ensure the credibility of the
WTO in the eyes of the outside world.
“We need a clear road map
and way forward. I want to underscore here that reform does not simply mean
resolving the crisis in the Appellate Body. There is more at stake.”
She also called on members
to find a solution on the TRIPS waiver
extension to diagnostics and therapeutics. “While no longer in the
headlines, the pandemic is still with us. Lives remain at stake, and we cannot
afford to be complacent. We need to learn the lessons of the past so as not to
repeat mistakes in the future. I hope that the proponents and non-proponents
can find a mutually acceptable outcome soon, well before MC13,” she said.
Finally, she urged members
to work hard on e-commerce, following the mandate of the MC12 Ministerial Decision.
“We need to work hard to reach a collective agreement on where the moratorium
is going, and to reinvigorate work on the Work Programme
based on its mandate and in line with its development dimension,” she stated.