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Environmental
Trade Sanctions:
What is at Stake
Alan
Oxley
Click
here for PDF version
Trade
sanctions on environmental grounds would undermine the capacity
of the world trading system to contribute to global prosperity
and growth in developing countries.
In November
last year, the members of the World Trade Organisation (WTO)
agreed at Doha to launch a new trade round, the Development
Round. That outcome is good news for trade liberalisation
and world economic growth. At one stroke, the obligation to
reduce trade barriers was put on the policy table of every
one of the 142 members of the WTO. The WTO membership is now
committed to policies which will speed recovery from recession
and which will support growth in the developing world.
In the
aftermath of the terrorist attacks on peace, prosperity and
civilisation on September 11, the agreement at Doha to continue
to build global economic interdependence is an affirmation
by the nations of the civilised world of their intention to
continue to cooperate for the common good of all. The postwar
multilateral trading system established by the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) has underpinned unprecedented
economic growth and prosperity. The first beneficiaries of
this system were the industrialised nations of the West. The
second will be developing nations. But can the full promise
of prosperity for the developing world be delivered?
The
new threat to liberal trade
At the
initiative of the EU, the WTO Ministers decided at Doha to
include environmental issues in the mandate for multilateral
trade negotiations for the first time in over 50 years. Most
WTO members were opposed but concurred to secure agreement
for the launch of new negotiations. This compromise gives
the EU an opportunity to exert dramatic leverage at the September
2003 meeting in Mexico. Since the issues on which the EU has
been historically most reluctant to moveÑagriculture and garments
and textilesÑare issues of the greatest importance to developing
countries, it is easy to see the EU holding progress in those
areas hostage at the 2003 meeting to commitments to negotiate
rule changes on environmental issues. This could be very detrimental
to prospects for the Round.
At the
same time, new questions have arisen in the WTO about how
far the provisions for exemption from GATT rules permit extension
of trade controls into the territorial jurisdiction of other
parties, or permit trade to be restricted on the basis of
how a product is processed or produced where the justification
is to protect the environment. A ruling by the WTO Appellate
Body in the shrimp/turtle case (see box overleaf) that the
US is permitted to maintain unilateral trade sanctions against
several countries on environmental grounds has altered the
conventional wisdom that GATT rules did not allow such actions,
creating an important precedent for the wider use of trade
sanctions to coerce other nations to comply with US or EU
environmental standards and to legitimise new grounds to protect
uncompetitive industries.
The well
established position is that the WTO cannot get into the business
of ruling on the legitimacy of how a product is made. In the
first place, it does not have the technical competence to
deal with non-trade issues, as shown by its handling of the
shrimp/turtle trade dispute. Second, if it did get into this
business, it would become the focus of every political, religious,
or ideological interest group within the metropolitan powers.
Labour rights, animal rights, religious freedom, womenÕs rights,
will become issues used to justify denial of entry of a product
into a market. International trade will become, as it was
in the inter-war period, highly politicised. In such a situation,
commercial interests will be quick to use the cover of the
environment, or labour rights, or religious freedom, to secure
protection against imports, and those commercial interests
will be prepared to provide financial support for these causes.
Just such an alliance was manifest in the campaigns within
the US, against the WTO, which preceded the Seattle Ministerial
meeting in December 1999, and which culminated in massive
street demonstrations.
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The
Shrimp Turtle Case: A Worrying Precedent
The EU did not get all that it wanted at Doha, but conclusion
in October of long-running litigation by India, Pakistan,
Malaysia and Thailand against unilateral trade sanctions
imposed by the US on environmental grounds in favour
of the US creates some of the grounds to use trade sanctions
to enforce environmental standards which the EU has
been seeking.
The
shrimp-turtle case began in 1996, when India, Pakistan,
Malaysia and Thailand appealed against a trade ban imposed
by the US on shrimp imported from Thailand on the grounds
that its shrimp boats did not use the Turtle Excluder
Devices mandated by US legislation on American shrimp
trawlers. The Disputes Panel found against the US on
the grounds that members of the WTO were not entitled
to set unilateral conditions on access to their markets
because the sovereignty of the WTO membership should
not be put at risk in this way.
The US appealed to the Appellate Body (AB) which overruled
the panel, arguing that in principle the US measure
was consistent with Article XX clause (g) in the GATT
allowing exceptions to protect sustainable natural resources.
The new reference to sustainable development in the
preamble of the WTO (adopted in 1994) and international
concern about turtle preservation justified this.
either
the Panel nor the AB sought to define Ôsustainable developmentÕ,
even though the meaning of the term is strongly contested.
Some argue that it is synonymous with preserving the
environment, regardless of other considerations. Others
maintain it means balancing conservation with economic
development. The AB findings suggest the former meaning
was the one employed by the Panel.
The AB quoted extensively from the 1992 UN Conference
on Environment and Development and the WTO Committee
on Trade and Environment to demonstrate that sustainable
development was endorsed by the international community
as a legitimate goal, but ignored the leading conclusions
of both bodies that trade measures should not (except
as a last resort) be used for environmental management.
The
AB deliberately elected not to address whether or not
the US was entitled to assert extraterritorial reach
when invoking the terms of Article XX. By remaining
silent on this point, the AB has opened the possibility
that WTO members might have a right to deny access by
exporters to their markets unless the government of
the exporter adopted production and processing environmental
methods mandated by the member. Until this point, the
vast majority of WTO members would have refused to accept
that Article XX created any right to assert jurisdiction
in the territory of another member.
The WTO Dispute Panel and the Appellate Body also assumed
the competence to assess the environmental importance
and effectiveness of the US measures. In so doing they
demonstrated an incapacity in understanding and a lack
of expertise in handling technical material. They declared
that the international community had agreed (in CITES)
that migratory turtles were in danger of extinction,
but they did not demonstrate that the US measures would
be effective conservation measures. They judged the
US measures for their preservation value (would it save
turtle lives?) not their conservation value (would it
conserve the species?). The scientific evidence before
the panel supported the preservation value of the US
measures, but did not agree on the conservation value.
This
result has serious implications. First, the AB has placed
the WTO in the business of determining environment policy
for the members of the WTO, despite the repeated refusal
of the membership, confirmed by Ministers in 1996, to
entertain any such outcome. Second, if countries can
restrict trade on the basis of how a product is made,
it sets at risk the basis of all international trade,
the capacity of WTO members to exploit their comparative
advantages in the global economy. Third, the ruling
ignores WTO member preferences that unilateral trade
restrictions with extraterritorial reach should be avoided,
and that respect for national sovereignty should be
the guiding principle in international endeavours to
improve the environment.
The
AB has become lawmaker, ruling that economically powerful
countries can impose their political will and deny access
to their markets to countries which are economically
dependent on uninterrupted access to their markets.
The real lawmakers in the WTOÑthe membersÑwould not
do this. Something has got to give.
Alan Oxley
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What
is driving EU policy
The aim
of the EU in securing agreement to include the environment
as a mainstream issue in the WTO negotiations is to legitimise
trade sanctions to impose environmental policies extraterritorially.
This reflects the disposition in the EUÕs institutions of
government towards centralised command and control, rather
than free market policies and the subsidiarity principleÑdelegating
authority to subsidiary organsÑas the means of improving the
environment. The result would be a weakening of the free market
structures of the WTO, all in the pursuit of poor environment
policy.
The greater
efficiency of the subsidiarity principle and of encouraging
free market forces to serve public policy interests applies
to environment policy as much as in any other area. This is
why the free market systems of the West increased prosperity,
and raised social and environmental standards, while the command
and control systems of the communist bloc destroyed both physical
and social capital and degraded the environment.
The dominant
philosophy behind EU environment policy is to improve the
environment by fiat. Compliance with policies is secured by
sanctions. It is EU policy to invest environment officials
with executive power to regulate by the use of political discretion,
not to establish regulators who monitor adherence to technically-based
standards. It is also EU policy to place the cost of environmental
protection on producers, rather than on consumers or the community
generally. Where such policies impact on trade, WTO rules
impede their use. This is why leading environmental NGOs want
the WTO rules changed.
Multilateral
environment agreements (MEAs)
The approach
preferred by the international community on collective action
to improve the environment is to seek international agreement
among Governments to take common action, negotiate international
environmental agreements for that purpose, and implement the
commitments in national law. This has been the traditional
role of international agreements, and it is an approach that
respects the national sovereignty of each government.
The United
Nations system fosters international environmental agreements.
In 1992 the UN established a global umbrella for world environmental
action by creating the UN Commission on Sustainable Development
to implement the programme adopted at the UN Environment and
Development Summit (the Rio Summit). A UN Environment Programme
was also established to administer several Multilateral Environment
Agreements (MEAs).
There
are six key MEAs, three of which require parties to enforce
the environmental objectives of the treaties by banning trade
with countries which are not parties to the MEAs. These agreements
are the convention banning trade in endangered species, within
which a controversial ban on all trade in ivory was enacted
(CITES), the Montreal Convention to ban production (and trade)
in chlorofluorocarbons to preserve the ozone layer, and the
Basel Convention banning trade in hazardous wastes to prevent
illegal dumping of toxic waste in developing countries.
It is
a radical innovation to negotiate international treaties which
impose penalties on non-parties. The United Nations Charter
decrees it a breach of the doctrine of national sovereignty
on which the UN Charter is based. The Rio Summit stated that
trade sanctions should not be used to enforce environmental
goals. The provisions in the MEAs do not respect national
sovereignty. This creates conflict with WTO provisions and
much confusion. Tellingly, most of the MEAs arise from initiatives
from Northern Europe.
The
clash between MEAs and WTO rules
The conflict
between the obligations of countries as members of the WTO
and their obligations as members of MEAs has generated much
debate and analysis by lawyers. The debate appears complex
but in reality it reduces to whether two simple propositions
should be accepted. First, trade sanctions should be permitted
to enforce environmental policies and, second, imports should
be restricted if they are not processed in a way that meets
the domestic environmental standards of the importing country.
The WTO is a target because it generally does not allow such
trade controls.
The WTO
does not permit any member to impose its own policies extraterritorially
under the threat of trade bans and it does not permit WTO
members to discriminate amongst each other in their trade
policies. The apprehension of the Green groups is that one
day a WTO member that is not a party to an MEA might secure
a WTO ruling that another WTO member has acted illegally under
WTO rules by restricting trade in accordance with the terms
of the MEA. Greenpeace and the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) have
been pressing for a decade for an amendment to the WTO rules
which would remove the right of any WTO member to take such
a case. This is the result the EU is seeking.
Such a
result would legitimise discriminatory trade provisions and
undermine the core values which have made the GATT-WTO a success.
The WTO rules have worked because they respect the national
sovereignty of every WTO member. Trade access is guaranteed
by its rules which are accepted and applied, in common, by
every member, rich or poor, large or small. If the precedent
is established that one member, or a sub-set of members, can
impose their own conditions for trading with other members
of the WTO, the fundamental principle which sustains the whole
WTO legal structure will fail.
The
eco-imperialist impulse
Trade
sanctions make poor environmental policy. Government measures
to secure protection of the environment should aim to impact
on the source of the environmental degradation. Usually it
is at the point of production or consumption. Trade is almost
never the cause of degradation. Trying to secure an environmental
result with a trade ban is an extremely inefficient and consequently
ineffective method.
This
did not dissuade the World Wildlife Fund from promoting trade
bans to protect endangered species, despite a vigorously contested
argument inside the organisation, with its field officers
in Africa arguing strongly against a ban on trade in ivory.
Southern African countries which have effective elephant conservation
programmes are still opposed to the ban, which inhibits their
conservation programmes. Nor did it stop Greenpeace from promoting
trade bans in the Basel Convention.
The Basel
Convention requires exporting industrialised economies to
permit exports of specified materials only if they consider
and approve the environment policies of the importing countries.
It bans completely trade in other proscribed materials. Basel
puts into international law a view of the developing world
reminiscent of the European colonial period, one that still
permeates the mindset of European NGOs, that the interests
of developing countries are better understood and managed
by the developed world.
The United
States is not a party to the Basel Convention which, until
recently, was the most egregious offender against WTO principles.
It is understandable that policymakers in Washington would
pay little attention to a Convention to which the US was not
a party. There is, however, a policy interest in Washington
which results in a sympathetic hearing for the EU approach.
The collaboration between protectionist interests and environmental
lobbyists over the last decade has made respectable the idea
that no trade agreement is any good unless it provides for
extraterritorial reach with respect to environmental policy.
This idea is now part of the basic position of the Democrats
and protectionists in Congress. Paradoxically, this gives
unintended support to the EU position. Green groups like WWF
and Greenpeace understand that this position reinforces their
global interest in protecting the MEAs that they have sponsoredÑCITES
and Basel respectively.
Ultimately,
what matters in Washington is how many votes in Congress are
locked into the position that the environment has to be linked
to trade. This political calculus can only be challenged when
it can be shown that other US interests are threatened as
a consequence. The negotiation in January 2001 of the Cartagena
Protocol to restrict trade in certain Genetically Modified
Organisms (GMOs) has done just that. The Cartagena Protocol
(to which the US is not a party) demonstrates how important
US interests are under threat. It also points to the direction
in which EU policy is moving and how that threat is set to
increase.
EU
trade bans on GMOs
The Cartagena
Protocol does not mandate trade sanctions like the other MEAs,
but it creates other significant conflicts with WTO rules.
It is another Greenpeace initiative, a spinoff of its wider
campaign to ban GMOs, and it has been adopted by the EU.
Otherwise
known as the Biosafety Protocol, it is a protocol to the Biodiversity
Convention (to which the US is not a party). The Cartagena
Protocol gives importing countries unqualified rights to ban
imports of living products which are genetically modified,
for example grains, seeds, fruit and vegetables. Importing
countries have the legal right to invoke the Precautionary
Principle. (The Ôprecautionary principleÕ promotes aversion
or a Ôtake no riskÕ approach rather than a management or Ôassess
and manage the riskÕ approach.) There is no standard definition
of the Principle. The version laid down in the Protocol approach
is phrased in such wide and general terms that it gives officials
in importing countries virtually full political discretion
to block imports. The Protocol gives members expressly stated
authority to ban imports without scientific justification.
With
this provision, Cartagena has created a new and even more
serious conflict with WTO obligations. The WTO allows members
to restrict imports to protect human health, and animal plant
health and safety, but it obliges members, when challenged,
to demonstrate that such restrictions are based on science.
The US has already had experience with EU efforts to evade
this obligation. There has been a long-running dispute over
EU bans of imports of US beef from cows fed with feedstock
enhanced with hormonal growth promotants. There is no conclusive
scientific evidence that such meat can be distinguished from
that of other cows, or that it is a threat to human health.
The US invoked WTO procedures which, in the absence of any
scientific evidence to the contrary, resulted in a ruling
that the EU bans were illegal. The Cartagena Protocol would
give the EU the right to ban imports of living GMOs without
any scientific justification.
It is
no accident that this conflict exists between Cartagena and
the WTO. The promoters of this Protocol were fully aware it
would clash with the WTO rules. Before the WTO Seattle Ministerial
meeting, Public Citizen, the consumer lobby funded by American
businessman Ralph Nader, advocated completion of the Biosafety
Protocol so that there would be a basis to undermine the sound
science approach in WTO agreements. During the Cartagena negotiations
some countries wanted a clause in the Protocol which stated
that WTO rights would be unaffected by accession to the Protocol.
The EU refused point blank to accept the proposal. Today EU
officials point to the Cartagena Protocol and its articulation
of the Precautionary Principle as a standard that should be
followed and applied elsewhere.
The Protocol
is therefore an important precedent for the EU to build its
case to restrict trade in response to consumer or protectionist
pressure, and to ban imports without scientific justification.
Within a couple of decades, virtually every major food product
will have GMO variants or contain GMO elements. If the EU
gets its way, international markets will be highly regulated
and access to the EU will be heavily restricted. The benefits
of GMOs, and adequate returns from investment in them, will
be denied. Populist anti-science values in trade would be
mainstreamed into international regulations. Such a prospect
would choke off investment in research in this exciting new
field of scientific endeavour, which promises unprecedented
gains in agricultural productivity.
Ecolabelling
and Ôwhole of lifecycleÕ management
The EU
also wanted WTO rules altered so that trade can be restricted
on the basis of the environmental impact of the way in which
products can be produced and processed. In March 2000, the
EU issued its ÔIntegrated Policy PaperÕ. This reported the
intention of the European Commission to apply regulations
for Ôwhole of lifecycleÕ product management across the EU.
It referred to a draft directive which was being developed
as a model. This is the Directive on Disposal of Electronic
and Electrical Equipment. Under the directive, every producer
and major importer of every electrical and electronic product
would be responsible for disposal and recycling of the product
at the end of its product life.
The proposalÕs
political appeal relies upon consumers believing that manufactures
and distributors will accept and absorb the economic burdens
of the policy. But it can only work if imports are subject
to the same cost burdens as domestically produced products
and one effect of this policy will be clear. The EU will diminish
the global competitiveness of every industry which is regulated
in this way. This is why the EU wants changes to the WTO rules
to permit ÔecolabelsÕ. The ecolabel will be the certification
that whole of lifecycle regulations are being followed. To
ensure that imported products, which do not have to bear the
extra cost of Ôwhole of lifecycleÕ management, do not have
a cost advantage in the market over domestic products, the
imported product will not be allowed to be sold unless it
qualifies for the ecolabel.
The problem
for the EU is that until recently WTO rules have not permitted
restrictions of this kind. If the WTO gets into the business
of ruling on how a product is made, then this is a very slippery
slope indeed. Labour rights, animal rights, religious freedom,
womenÕs rights, any number of the elements of what is perceived
to constitute comparative advantage in any economy, can be
picked out to justify denial of entry of a product into a
market. The recent decision in the trade dispute over US sanctions
against imports of shrimp raises the possibility that in some
circumstances trade might be controlled on such grounds.
Next,
Kyoto trade sanctions?
For some
time think tanks in Europe have toyed with the idea of proposing
trade sanctions to enforce Kyoto Protocol obligations. The
Shrimp Turtle decision in the WTO has left some wondering
if that sets a precedent that the EU could follow by employing
unilateral trade sanctions against imports which were greenhouse
unfriendly (products produced with energy which generated
greenhouse gases) and justified on the grounds that the sanctions
support a domestic programme to conserve an exhaustible natural
resource. While legal analysts are cautious about jumping
to conclusions, this was the justification for allowing the
US to maintain trade sanctions against certain shrimp importers.
The Kyoto
Protocol to the UN Convention on Climate Change obliges parties
listed in Annex B of the ProtocolÑmost are industrialised
economiesÑto reduce emissions of greenhouses gases, particularly
carbon dioxide. To achieve the targets, industrialised economies
will have to impose taxes on energy consumption, particularly
of carbon based fuels. This will significantly reduce their
competitiveness against countries which do not increase their
energy costs. According to the Kyoto Protocol, developing
countries are not obliged to increase their energy costs.
The United States has said it will not accept the Protocol
while developing countries do not have comparable obligations.
It is hard to believe that the EU, disadvantaged by self-imposed
carbon taxes, would not consider invoking a right to restrict
trade on environmental grounds to protect itself against the
competitive advantage of industries in the United States,
and other countries, not so burdened by high energy costs.
ÔProgressiveÕ
think tanks in Europe are considering arguments that the EU
could impose trade sanctions on carbon emitters. This would
result in a major trade dispute with the US which European
trade officials would hesitate to instigate. European environment
officials would be less concerned. They have consistently
demonstrated lack of appreciation, if not disregard, for the
realities of global economic life.
Conclusion
The acceptance
by the trade ministers at Doha of the EUÕs demand to include
the environment in the negotiating round is a significant
breakthrough in a long-term campaign to secure new rights
to use trade sanctions to achieve environmental objectives.
The EU might argue its motive is to protect the environment,
but the other side of the same coin is that it is an instrument
which would facilitate the protection of European industry
and agriculture from international competition.
The strategic
implications of EU policy go to the heart of how the WTO succeeds.
Every country trades on the basis of what it can best make
or provide. It works when the rules for trade regulate that
and nothing else. If countries want to improve the environment
(or any other sphere of activityÑrespect for human rights,
compliance with labour standards) through international action,
they should do so by negotiating policies and measures to
that end in a purpose-built international agreement through
which each member commits to apply those measures in national
law. If multilateral trade laws are used to enforce non-trade
purposes, their capacity to serve their trade end and to benefit
the common good is lost.
Respect
for national sovereignty must be restored as a key principle
underpinning the WTO rules. Use of trade sanctions to secure
extraterritorial compliance with national environment standards
must be rejected as fundamentally contrary to the modus operandi
of the WTO. If this does not occur, global markets will be
divided with new instruments applied for protectionist purposes
and environment policies will be developed which are intended
as much to punish business as to improve the environment.
Increasingly poor and ineffective environment policy will
be the result. The opportunity presented by the Doha Development
Round of multilateral trade negotiations to deliver the benefits
of greater prosperity to the developing world will also be
severely undermined.
This
article is based on two lengthy reports: A Study of the Trade
and Environment Issue by Alan Oxley and Kristen Osborne (June
2002) and The WTO Doha Development Round by Alan Oxley (February
2002). Both are available at www.apec.org
Alan
Oxley is Chairman of the APEC Study Centre, based at Monash
University, and Director of International Trade Strategies,
Melbourne. He is former Australian Ambassador to the GATT.
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