Indian Bodies Discuss WTO Panel Report on State
to State Subsidies in Indonesia vs EU Stainless Steel Case
·
Event & Organisers:
o Hosted by Centre for Trade and Investment
Law (CTIL), Indian Institute of Foreign Trade.
o In collaboration with SAIELN and ISIL.
o Held at Indian Society of International
Law, New Delhi.
·
Focus of Discussion:
o WTO Panel Ruling in EU Countervailing
and Anti-Dumping Duties on Stainless Steel Cold-Rolled Flat Products from Indonesia
(DS 616).
o Legal and policy implications under the
SCM Agreement.
o Examination of EU’s attribution of foreign
entity contributions to the Indonesian government.
·
Key Legal Findings:
o WTO Panel clarified that “financial contribution”
under Article 1.1(a)(1) SCM Agreement is a closed list, excluding government-to-government
inducements.
o Emphasis on substantive assessment of
“public body” status and its relationship with government.
·
Broader Implications:
o Impact on regulation of transnational
subsidies.
o Challenges posed by cross-border state
support mechanisms to WTO framework.
o Linkages with evolving industrial policies
and international trade law.
·
Speakers & Chairs:
o Opening remarks: Prof. (Dr.) Manoj Kumar
Sinha (ISIL President, DNLU VC).
o Chaired by Dr. James J. Nedumpara (Head, CTIL).
o Panelists: Shri Sharad Bhansali (ASL Legal), Shri
Mukesh Bhatnagar (Centre for WTO Studies), Shri Parthsarathi
Jha (ELP), Mr. Ashutosh Kashyap (CTIL).
o Concluding remarks: Dr. Utkarsh K Mishra
(DNLU).
·
Outcome:
o Interactive discussion with participants
on implications of the Panel Report for future trade disputes.
o Highlighted growing complexity of regulating
transnational subsidies within WTO frameworks.
[ABS News Service/20.04.2026]
The Centre for Trade and Investment Law
(CTIL), Indian Institute of Foreign Trade, in collaboration with the South Asian
International Economic Law Network (SAIELN) and the Indian Society of International
Law (ISIL), organised a panel discussion on the WTO Panel Ruling on transnational
subsidies in the dispute European Union Countervailing and Anti-Dumping Duties on
Stainless Steel Cold-Rolled Flat Products from Indonesia (DS 616) at the Indian
Society of International Law, New Delhi.
The discussion focused on the legal and
policy implications arising from the WTO Panel Report, particularly in the context
of the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (SCM Agreement) and its
application to transnational subsidies. The deliberations examined the European
Union’s approach in attributing financial contributions provided by foreign entities,
including state-linked actors, to the Government of Indonesia and treating such
contributions as countervailable subsidies.
The panel analysed the WTO Panel’s findings,
which clarified that the definition of “financial contribution” by a government
under Article 1.1(a)(1) of the SCM Agreement constitutes a closed list, thereby
excluding government-to-government inducement from its scope. The discussion also
addressed issues related to the determination of “public body” status, highlighting
the need for a substantive assessment of an entity’s characteristics and its relationship
with the government.
The broader implications of the ruling
for regulating transnational subsidies were also examined, including its potential
impact on the interface between international trade law and evolving industrial
policies. The session highlighted the growing complexity of cross-border state support
mechanisms and the challenges they pose to the existing WTO framework.
Opening remarks were delivered by President,
Indian Society of International Law (ISIL) and Vice Chancellor, Dharmashastra National Law University (DNLU), Jabalpur, Prof.
(Dr.) Manoj Kumar Sinha (Virtual), who underscored the increasing complexity of
international trade regulation in the context of cross-border economic cooperation
and evolving industrial strategies.
The panel discussion was chaired by Professor
and Head, CTIL, Dr. James J. Nedumpara, and included Managing
Partner, ASL Legal, Shri Sharad Bhansali; Adjunct Professor, Centre for WTO Studies,
Shri Mukesh Bhatnagar; Partner, Economic Laws Practice (ELP), Shri Parthsarathi Jha; and Research Fellow, CTIL, Mr. Ashutosh Kashyap.
The session concluded with remarks by
Director, Centre for Studies in International Trade and Investment Laws and Assistant
Professor of Law, Dharmashastra National Law University
(DNLU), Jabalpur, Dr. Utkarsh K Mishra (Virtual), followed by an interactive discussion
with participants on the implications of the Panel Report for future trade disputes.