Raed Safadi - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Raed Safadi

Description:

Environmental Aspects of A Successful Doha Deal Raed Safadi Deputy-Director, OECD Trade and Agriculture Directorate Workshop on Recent Analysis of the Doha Round, – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:45
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: Saf139
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Raed Safadi


1
Environmental Aspects of A Successful Doha Deal
Raed Safadi Deputy-Director, OECD Trade and
Agriculture Directorate
Workshop on Recent Analysis of the Doha
Round, Geneva, 2 November 2010
2
Environmental goods and services
  • The struggle to avert climate change is one of
    the greatest challenges facing the international
    community today.
  • Strong and urgent action is needed to stabilize
    greenhouse gas concentrations.
  • Access to clean air, clean water, efficient
    sanitation, and modern forms of energy are
    problems that cannot be solved by technological
    fixes, but for which environmental technologies
    and services are likely to play an important
    role.
  • Trade liberalization in goods and related
    services can and should support actions to
    safeguard the environment.

3
Meanwhile, environmental goods are made more
expensive/prohibitive as a result of trade
barriers
  • Responses to an OECD survey of 77 companies
    across 10 OECD and non-OECD countries have
    confirmed the presence of significant barriers
    (i.e. rated major or prohibitive)
  • Testing and certification (27 firms)
  • Customs procedures (24)
  • Regulations on payments (23)
  • Adequacy of intellectual property protection (19)
  • Government procurement procedures (14)
  • Product standards and technical regulations (13)

4
A triple-win agreement
  • A win for increased trade through a reduction or
    elimination of tariff and non-tariff barriers
    (NTBs). Domestic purchasers, including business
    and governments at all levels, would be able to
    acquire environmental technologies at lower costs
    and have facilitated access to specialized
    technologies.
  • A win for the environment by improving access to
    high-quality environmental goods and services.
    This can lead to direct quality-of-life benefits
    for people everywhere, to the extent that greater
    availability of such goods and services helps
    achieve a cleaner environment and improve energy
    efficiency, while satisfying basic human needs,
    such as access to safe water, sanitation or clean
    energy.
  • A win for development, enabling developing
    countries to obtain the tools they need to
    address key environmental priorities as part of
    their on-going development strategies.

5
The WTO negotiations on EGS
  • Concern about dual uses (i.e., non-environmental
    as well as environmental) of many of the goods
    proposed
  • The sheer number of goods on the compiled lists
    (several hundred at one point) and
  • The poor coherence among the three liberalization
    components tariff and non-tariff barriers on
    goods, and barriers to trade in related services.

6
Counting the benefits
  • According to a World Bank study, International
    Trade and Climate Change, liberalizing a small
    number of low-carbon goods (wind turbines, solar
    PV cells, clean-coal technologies and efficient
    lighting) in 18 developing countries would lead
    to
  • 7 trade gains if only tariffs are removed, and
    13 if both tariffs and non-tariff barriers
    (NTBs) were removed.
  • Another paper, by the IISD, estimated the
    greenhouse gas emission focusing on the Friends
    of the EGS list of 153 goods its conclusion the
    impact on GHG emissions is almost exclusively due
    to the lists inclusion of renewable electricity
    generation technologies. No other parts of the
    list would have a comparable material impact on
    GHG emissions.

7
Still, a worthwhile exercise
  • Worldwide, studies estimate that increased
    renewable electricity generation from the
    technologies whose goods are included within the
    list of 153 could result in reductions of 0.96.5
    GtCO2 annually by 2030.
  • A rough upper boundary approach to ascribing what
    share of these savings could result from tariff
    removal concludes that less than 5 of savings
    could be ascribed.
  • Whilst relatively small, the analysis does
    confirm the view that trade liberalization would
    be beneficial as it would result in higher trade
    (and thus production) of climate-friendly
    technologies.

8
Two key conditions that must be met to maximize
the potential
  • A broader coverage needs to be achieved for the
    goods that are necessary in each relevant
    technology.
  • Accompanying measures would be necessary to
    ensure that the potential for uptake offered by
    tariff liberalization is actually exploited
  • Attention to non-tariff barriers.
  • Attention to the capacity of host states to
    absorb new technologies --

9
Natural resources and agriculture
  • Agriculture is a major user of natural resources
    and its environmental performance needs to be
    monitored and evaluated.
  • Impact on environment occurs on and off farm
    includes both pollution degradation of soil,
    water air, but also the provision of
    environmental services, such as biodiversity,
    flood drought control, a sink for greenhouse
    gases
  • Agriculture currently accounts for about 70 of
    world freshwater withdrawals (45 in OECD
    countries).
  • In 2004 agriculture directly contributed about 14
    of global GHG emissions. Land use, land use
    change and forestry account for a further 17.
  • Agriculture will inevitably be called on to
    contribute to the mitigation effort.
  • It will also need to apply adaptation strategies
    in order to avoid significant losses in
    production.

10
Relying on markets is key
  • To resolve the different pressures the agro-food
    sector is facing.
  • To resolve climate change and resource scarcity
    issues.
  • Land, water and other resource prices will need
    to reflect the real underlying costs,.
  • Where markets do not exist, they will have to be
    created.

11
The WTO is part of the solution
  • Trade and an efficiently functioning
    international trading system will be a key
    framework condition allowing global supply to
    match global demand and meeting consumer
    requirement for quality and variety.
  • Production patterns globally are likely to shift
    and the general consensus is that fragile, food
    deficit areas in parts of Asia and Africa may be
    even less able to feed their growing populations
    than before.
  • This implies that trade will become increasingly
    important in connecting food surplus with food
    deficit areas.
  • In parallel, development strategies are needed
    that will create employment outside agriculture
    for poor populations whose already meager
    livelihood from farming will come under threat.
  • The multilateral trading system will need to be
    strong enough and reliable enough to satisfy food
    deficit countries that trade is indeed a reliable
    component in a broad food security strategy.

12
WTO rules necessary though not sufficient
  • Attention to improving the framework policy
    conditions in many less developed economies is
    also required, as is increased investment in
    developing country agriculture.
  • Without improvement in the supply capacity on
    many poor countries, they will not be able to
    respond to markets at either local, regional,
    national or international levels.
  • Both public and private investment can provide
    the needed capital for further development, but
    the private sector has an additional contribution
    to make with respect to bringing know how and
    networks to less developed regions.
  • We should always keep in mind that agricultural
    policy reform and trade liberalization are a
    necessary but not sufficient condition for
    sustainable development in agriculture, and they
    must be accompanied by appropriate environmental
    policies.

13
Externalities positive and negative
  • To a large extent environmental effects are
    largely determined by farmers choices of how and
    what to produce, and these decisions in turn can
    be influenced by the way agriculture policy
    attempts to integrate environmental concerns.
  • The dilemma faced by the agricultural sector is
    that the policy failures due to government
    intervention in agricultural markets tend to
    reinforce rather than mitigate market failures in
    agriculture.
  • Agriculture support programmes, import
    restrictions on efficient biofuels and fossil
    fuel subsidies have encouraged production methods
    that did not pay attention to environmental
    impact.
  • Subsidies have also encouraged over-exploitation
    of natural resources.

14
Reforming agricultural policies A for the
environment
  • OECD countries are responding to the
    environmental impacts of agriculture through a
    combination of agricultural and trade policy
    reform, and specific environmental policy
    instruments.
  • However, the starting point should always be the
    reform of agricultural policies in order to
    reduce the production distortions associated with
    many forms of agricultural support.
  • Regulations and taxes continue to be important,
    but OECD analyses show that environmental
    objectives can be achieved more efficiently by
    innovative approaches such as cross-compliance
    and decoupling.
  • In this approach, payments and other forms of
    support depend on meeting targets other than
    increased production of specific commodities, for
    example preserving the landscape.

15
Looking for win-win solutions
  • The effects on environmental performance of
    reforming agriculture policies will depend on the
    type of policy measure in place.
  • Most harmful interventions for the environment
    are market price support, output payments and
    input subsidies (such as fertiliser, pesticide
    and energy subsidies).
  • Cross compliance mechanisms require farmers to
    fulfil specific environmental requirements in
    order to be eligible for specific agricultural
    support payments. In the EU, US and Switzerland,
    cross-compliance is significant.
  • Agri-environmental payments. Some OECD countries
    (EU countries, Norway, Switzerland and US) have
    also developed a wide range of agri-environmental
    payments under voluntary programmes providing
    payments to farmers to adopt specific farming
    practices, with positive environmental effects
    and/or providing public goods (such as landscape,
    biodiversity, etc).

16
The overall burden of agricultural support has
declined across all OECD
  • Total support to the OECD agricultural sector,
    was USD 368 billion in 2006-08.
  • This is equivalent to 0.9 of OECD GDP, down from
    2.5 in 1986-88.
  • The reduced burden of agricultural support on the
    overall economy is characteristic of all OECD
    countries and primarily is a reflection of the
    falling share of agriculture in their GDP.

17
and more payments are giving greater
flexibility to farmers, including no obligation
to produce
  • Payments to farmers are less tied to producing a
    specific commodity, either by allowing a group of
    commodities or any commodity to be eligible for a
    payment.
  • In 2006-08 around one quarter of total support to
    producers in the OECD area was arising from
    policies that did not oblige farmers to produce
    any commodity in order to receive support, in
    particular direct payments in the US or single
    payments in the EU.
  • However, commodity-specific support is
    significant for rice, sugar, and some livestock
    products. In the case of rice, such support
    amounted to 60 of total producer rice receipts
    in 2006-08.

18
Despite notable progress, policy distortions
inthe OECD area remain large
  • Progress has been made in reforming support
    policies
  • The level of support is down from 37 of farm
    receipts in 1986-88 to 23 in 2006-08
  • The share of the most production and trade
    distorting support is also down, from 86 of
    total support PSE to 56.
  • The implementation of more decoupled policy
    instruments has played a very important role in
    the reform process in OECD countries. But more
    needs to be done
  • Better targeting of policies to specific income
    objectives or market failures remains a major
    challenge of ongoing policy reforms.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com