Genetically Modified Organisms

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Genetically Modified Organisms

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Title: Genetically Modified Organisms


1
Genetically Modified Organisms
1
US-EU GMO Case Jessica Perotti Egla Taye Roberto
Valencia
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2
Measures Affecting the Approval and Marketing of
Biotech Products
2
  • DS-291,DS-292, DS-293

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History and Context
3
  • Background
  • Beginning in October 1998, The European
    Communities (EC) applied an EU-wide moratorium on
    the approval of any new genetically engineered
    biotech products
  • This moratorium restricted the imports of
    agricultural and food products from the US,
    Canada, and other countries involved with
    complaint
  • The refusal by the EC to admit GMO biotech food
    and feed products into their markets has arguably
    resulted in one of the most volatile trade
    disputes

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History and Context
4
  • Terms
  • Genetically Modified Organism(GMO)- is an
    organism whose genetic material has been altered
    using genetic engineering techniques
  • Genetically Modified Foods(GM)-are foods made
    from crops that have been given specific traits
    through genetic engineering
  • Typically, Genetically Modified Foods are plant
    products soybean, corn, canola, and cottonseed
    oil.

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History and Context
5
  • Impact
  • The de facto ban has halted over 300 million in
    US corn shipments and also threatens trade in soy
  • Products from livestock that are fed with GMO are
    also at risk, as well as flour and flour-based
    exports, grain-based products, vegetable oil
    derived from soybeans, and pet food.

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History and Context
6
  • Request for Consultations
  • On 13 May 2003, US and Canada requested
    consultations with the EC concerning certain
    measures taken by the EC and its member States
    affecting imports of agricultural and food
    imports from the US and Canada
  • Consultations were held on 13 June 2003
  • According to the US the measures at issue
    appeared to be inconsistent with the ECs
    obligations under several articles that will be
    discussed later.
  • Canada and Argentina also consider that the
    measures at issue nullify or impair benefits and
    are inconsistent with ECs obligations under
    several articles

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History and Context
7
  • Establishment of Panel
  • On 7 August 2003, US, Canada, and Argentina each
    requested the establishment of a panel
  • At a meeting on 18 August 2003, the Dispute
    Settlement Body (DSB) deferred the establishment
    of the panels
  • Further, to second requests to establish a panel
    from the US, Canada, and Argentina, the DSB
    finally established a single panel at its meeting
    on 29 August 2003
  • On 23 February 2004, the US, Canada, and
    Argentina requested the Director-General to
    compose the panel. On 04 March 2004,
    the Director-General composed the panel

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History and Context
8
  • Parties Involved
  • In the first dispute (WT/DS291), with the US as a
    complainant-Australia, Argentina, Brazil, Canada,
    Chile, Colombia, India, Mexico, New Zealand and
    Peru requested to join the consultations.
  • In the second dispute (WT/DS292), with Canada as
    the complainant- Australia, Argentina, Brazil,
    India, Mexico, New Zealand and the US requested
    to join the consultations
  • In the third dispute(WT/DS293), with Argentina as
    the complainant- Australia, Brazil, Canada,
    India, Mexico, New Zealand and the US requested
    to join the consultations.

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History and Context
9
  • Delays
  • On 12 July 2004, the Chairman of the Panel
    informed the DSB that it would not be able to
    complete its work in six months, due to the
    parties common request for additional time to
    prepare rebuttals
  • On 18 August 2004, the Panel estimated it would
    issue its final report to the parties by the end
    of March 2005. The delay was due to the parties
    common request for additional time to prepare
    their rebuttals as well as the Panels decision
    to seek scientific and technical expert advice
  • On 2 November 2004, the Panel decided it would
    not be possible to issue its final report to the
    parties until the end of June 2005.

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History and Context
10
  • More Delays
  • On 13 June 2005, the Panel estimated it would
    issue its final report to the parties by the end
    of October 2005
  • On 11 August 2005, the Panel estimated it would
    issue its final report on 21 December 2005.
  • On 30 March 2006, Chairman informed the DSB that
    it would not be possible to issue its final
    reports to the parties at the end of March 2006
    as the Panel has yet to receive further comments
    from the parties on its interim reports
  • Finally, on 29 September 2006, the panel reports
    were circulated to the Members.

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History and Context
11
  • Result of Panel
  • The panel found that the EC adopted a de facto,
    across-the-board moratorium on the final approval
    of biotech products, starting in 1999 up through
    the time the panel was established in August 2003
  • The Panel agreed with the US, Argentina, and
    Canada that the disputed measures of the EC, are
    inconsistent with the obligations set out in the
    SPS (Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary
    Measures) Agreement
  • The Panel found that the EC had presented no
    scientific or regulatory justification for the
    moratorium, and thus that the moratorium resulted
    in undue delays in violation of the ECs
    obligations under the SPS Agreement

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Contested Issue of EC Practice
  • The EC had maintained a moratorium on the
    approval of biotech products that restricted
    imports of agricultural and food products from
    the US and Canada.
  • Certain EC member states had maintained national
    import and marketing bans on biotech products
    despite approval by the EC for import and
    marketing in the EC

13
Relevant WTO Obligations
  • Argentina
  • Articles 2, 5, 7, 8 and 10, and Annexes B and C
    of the SPS Agreement
  • Articles I, III, X and XI of the GATT (1994)
  • Articles 2, 5 and 12 of the TBT Agreement
  • Article 4 of the Agriculture Agreement
  • Canada
  • Articles 2.2, 2.3, 5.1, 5.5, 5.6, 7 and 8, and
    Annexes B and C of the SPS Agreement
  • Articles I1, III4, X1 and XI1 of the GATT
    (1994)
  • Articles 2.1, 2.2, 2.8, 5.1 and 5.2 of the TBT
    Agreement
  • Article 4.2 of the Agriculture Agreement
  • United States
  • Articles 2, 5, 7 and 8, and Annexes B and C of
    the SPS Agreement
  • Articles I, III, X and XI of the GATT (1994)
  • Articles 2 and 5 of the TBT Agreement.
  • Article 4 of the Agriculture Agreement

14
Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and
Phytosanitary Measures (SPS)
  • Basic Rights and Obligations
  • Article 2.2
  • Members shall ensure that any sanitary or
    phytosanitary measure is applied only to the
    extent necessary to protect human, animal or
    plant life or health, is based on scientific
    principles and is not maintained without
    sufficient scientific evidence.
  • Article 2.3
  • Members shall ensure that their sanitary and
    phytosanitary measures do not arbitrarily or
    unjustifiably discriminate between Members where
    identical or similar conditions prevail and the
    measures shall not be applied in a manner which
    would constitute a disguised restriction on
    international trade.

15
Agreement on the Application of SPS Contd
  • Assessment of Risk and Determination of the
    Appropriate Level of Sanitary or Phytosanitary
    Protection
  • Article 5.1
  • Members shall ensure that their sanitary or
    phytosanitary measures are based on an
    assessment of the risks to human, animal or
    plant life or health, taking into account risk
    assessment techniques developed by the relevant
    international organizations.
  • Article 5.5
  • With the objective of achieving consistency in
    the application of the concept of appropriate
    level of sanitary or phytosanitary protection
    against risks to human life or health, or to
    animal and plant life or health, each Member
    shall avoid arbitrary or unjustifiable
    distinctions in the levels it considers to be
    appropriate in different situations, if such
    distinctions result in discrimination or a
    disguised restriction on international trade.
  • Article 5.6
  • When establishing or maintaining sanitary or
    phytosanitary measures to achieve the appropriate
    level of sanitary or phytosanitary protection,
    Members shall ensure that such measures are not
    more trade-restrictive than required to achieve
    their appropriate level of sanitary or
    phytosanitary protection, taking into account
    technical and economic feasibility.

16
Agreement on the Application of SPS Contd
  • Transparency
  • Article 7
  • Members shall notify changes in their sanitary
    or phytosanitary measures and shall provide
    information on their sanitary or phytosanitary
    measures in accordance with the provisions of
    Annex B.
  • Control, Inspection and Approval Procedures
  • Article 8
  • Members shall observe the provisions of Annex C
    in the operation of control, inspection and
    approval procedures, including national systems
    for approving the use of additives or for
    establishing tolerances for contaminants in
    foods, beverages or feedstuffs, and otherwise
    ensure that their procedures are not inconsistent
    with the provisions of this Agreement.

17
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
  • General Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment
  • Article I1
  • With respect to customs duties and charges of
    any kind imposed on or in connection with
    importation or exportation or imposed on the
    international transfer of payments for imports or
    exports, and with respect to the method of
    levying such duties and charges, and with respect
    to all rules and formalities in connection with
    importation and exportation, and with respect to
    all matters referred to in paragraphs 2 and 4 of
    Article III, any advantage, favor, privilege or
    immunity granted by any contracting party to any
    product originating in or destined for any other
    country shall be accorded immediately and
    unconditionally to the like product originating
    in or destined for the territories of all other
    contracting parties.
  • National Treatment on Internal Taxation and
    Regulation
  • Article III4
  • The products of the territory of any contracting
    party imported into the territory of any other
    contracting party shall be accorded treatment no
    less favorable than that accorded to like
    products of national origin in respect of all
    laws, regulations and requirements affecting
    their internal sale, offering for sale, purchase,
    transportation, distribution or use. The
    provisions of this paragraph shall not prevent
    the application of differential internal
    transportation charges which are based
    exclusively on the economic operation of the
    means of transport and not on the nationality of
    the product.

18
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
Contd
  • Publication and Administration of Trade
    Regulations
  • Article X1
  • Laws, regulations, judicial decisions and
    administrative rulings of general application,
    made effective by any contracting party,
    pertaining to the classification or the valuation
    of products for customs purposes, or to rates of
    duty, taxes or other charges, or to requirements,
    restrictions or prohibitions on imports or
    exports or on the transfer of payments therefor,
    or affecting their sale, distribution,
    transportation, insurance, warehousing
    inspection, exhibition, processing, mixing or
    other use, shall be published promptly in such a
    manner as to enable governments and traders to
    become acquainted with them.
  • General Elimination of Quantitative Restrictions
  • Article XI1
  • No prohibitions or restrictions other than
    duties, taxes or other charges, whether made
    effective through quotas, import or export
    licenses or other measures, shall be instituted
    or maintained by any contracting party on the
    importation of any product of the territory of
    any other contracting party or on the exportation
    or sale for export of any product destined for
    the territory of any other contracting party.

19
Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT)
  • Preparation, Adoption and Application of
    Technical Regulations by Central Government
    Bodies
  • Article 2.1
  • Members shall ensure that in respect of
    technical regulations, products imported from the
    territory of any Member shall be accorded
    treatment no less favourable than that accorded
    to like products of national origin and to like
    products originating in any other country.
  • Article 2.2
  • Members shall ensure that technical regulations
    are not prepared, adopted or applied with a view
    to or with the effect of creating unnecessary
    obstacles to international trade.  For this
    purpose, technical regulations shall not be more
    trade-restrictive than necessary to fulfill a
    legitimate objective, taking account of the risks
    non-fulfillment would create.

20
Agreement on Agriculture
  • Market Access
  • Article 4.2
  • Members shall not maintain, resort to, or revert
    to any measures of the kind which have been
    required to be converted into ordinary customs
    duties, except as otherwise provided for in
    Article 5 and Annex 5.

21
Main Parties Positions
  • 01 July 2003, European Parliament ended the
    moratorium on new GMO crop approvals, but
    replaced it with food traceability and labeling
    rules
  • Traceability and labeling rules
  • "The provisions for traceability ensure a high
    level of environmental and health protection and
    pave the way for a proper labeling system. E.U.
    Environment Commissioner Margot Wallstrom said in
    a statement. Certainly there is a cost for the
    producers and for trade, but what is at stake is
    our ability to build public confidence. The
    requirements also cover highly refined products
    such as corn oil or soybean oil, where the
    original GMO content is removed during the
    production process. These will have to be labeled
    as derived from GMOs although not actually
    containing them.
  • Under the moratorium, the EU had effectively
    banned GMO foods since 1998, the US believes this
    is in violation of WTO rules
  • US government initiated litigation at the WTO
    regarding EU policy

22
Main Parties Positions Contd
  • Framework of argument
  • US-Trade Issue
  • GMOs are a natural progression of the breeding
    of plant and animal species that humans have been
    engaged in for thousands of years
  • EU-Public Safety Issue
  • Precautionary principle- Scientific research must
    be exhaustive and prove beyond doubt that a food
    product is safe before it can be approved for
    production and sale
  • In practice, research can not answer scientific
    questions about products until data has been
    collected for many years. As a result, applying
    precautionary principle can cause the approval of
    products to be delayed for years.

23
Main Parties Positions Contd
  • US Policy makers perspectives
  • GMOs are normal product
  • GMOs could potentially
  • Promote health through the creation of more
    nutritious foods
  • Create new vaccines that combat animal disease
    and increase animal livestock production
  • Fight world hunger by creating high-yield crops
  • Protect the environment by reducing the need for
    pesticides and fertilizers
  • Resistance towards GMOs as an inappropriate trade
    restriction
  • George W. Bush
  • EU officials are allowing prejudice to obstruct
    the vital humanitarian goal of beating world
    hunger by blocking all new bio-crops because of
    unfounded, unscientific fears

24
Main Parties Positions Contd
  • United States
  • Rejects precautionary principle
  • Merely a tactic of protectionism and used to
    compensate for EUS lack of technological
    capability in the field
  • Directly violates Sanitary and Phytosanitary
    (SPS) Agreement
  • Countries have a right to set special controls on
    food products based on scientific principle
    however, the precautionary principle states a
    product must be proven safe before being approved
    for sale to the public

25
Main Parties Positions Contd
  • Dispute Continues
  • EU demands US exporters keep detailed records of
    origins and movements of GMO foods and clearly
    label them as such
  • EU claims this will allow them to track food
    products from the farm to the fork
  • EU officials acknowledge that these rules could
    mean aa drop in sales for US producers

26
Other Implications
  • Not only concerned with access to EU Market but
    other countries as well
  • African nations refused US food aid
  • US government and corporate leaders were
    convinced at first that Europe was indulging in
    protectionist activity, but came over time to
    understand that the European reaction was mostly
    consumer-driven and derived from citizens'
    suspicion of government's ability to understand
    and regulate scientific discoveries sufficiently
    to protect public health. Still, US food
    corporations were alarmed when in 2002 Zambia
    refused to accept desperately-needed US food aid
    on the grounds that US-made GM products might
    preclude Zambia selling its own produce to
    Europe.

27
Sources
27
  • Raymond J. Ahearan, Foreign Affairs, Defense, and
    Trade Division, US-EU Trade Relations Issues
    and Policy challenges, at p. Crs-10
  • USTR, Dispute Settlement Update September 21,
    2007 http//www.ustr.gov/assets/Trade_Agreements/M
    onitoring_Enforcement/Dispute_Settlement/asset_upl
    oad_file243_5697.pdf
  • Duncan EJ Currie LL.B. (Hons.) LL.M, Genetic
    Engineering and the WTO an Analysis of the
    Report in the EC-Biotech Case GreenPeace
    .http//www.wto.org/english/forums_e/ngo_e/posp66_
    greenpeace_engi_e.pdf
  • National Foreign Trade Council, Inc Looking
    Behind the Curtain The Growth of Trade Barriers
    that Ignore Sound Science http//www.wto.org/engl
    ish/forums_e/ngo_e/posp47_nftc_looking_behind_exsu
    m_e.pdf
  • World Trade Organization, Uruguay Round
    Agreement Agreement on the Application of
    Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (1995),
    http//www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/15-sps.p
    df, 70.
  • World Trade Organization, Dispute 291 European
    Communities Measures Affecting the Approval and
    Marketing of Biotech Products (2008),
    http//www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dispu_e/cases_
    e/ds291_e.htm.
  • Source World Trade Organization, Uruguay Round
    Agreement Agreement on the Application of
    Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (1995),
    http//www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/15-sps.p
    df, 71-72.
  • World Trade Organization, Uruguay Round
    Agreement Agreement on the Application of
    Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (1995),
    http//www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/15-sps.p
    df, 73.
  • World Trade Organization, Uruguay Round Agreement
    General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (1994)
    http//www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/gatt47_e
    .pdf, 2-6.
  • World Trade Organization, Uruguay Round Agreement
    General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (1994)
    http//www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/gatt47_e
    .pdf, 16-17.
  • World Trade Organization, Uruguay Round
    Agreement Agreement on Technical Barriers to
    Trade (1995), http//www.wto.org/english/docs_e/le
    gal_e/17-tbt.pdf, 118.
  • World Trade Organization, Uruguay Round
    Agreement Agreement on Agriculture (1995),
    http//www.wto. org/english/docs_e/leg88al_e/14-ag
    .pdf, 46.

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