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WTO strikes landmark deals package after marathon talks

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THE World Trade Organizati­on concluded a landmark bundle of deals Friday (17) covering fishing subsidies, food insecurity and Covid-19 vaccines following hectic round-the-clock talks.

WTO director-general Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said trade ministers had struck an ‘unpreceden­ted’ number of agreements that would affect the lives of people everywhere.

The talks in Geneva began on June 13 and had been due to wrap up on Wednesday (15).

But instead the WTO’s 164 members went through two straight nights before getting the package over the line at around 5:00 am (0300 GMT) Friday.

‘DEAL!’ tweeted EU trade commission­er Valdis Dombrovski­s after the conference went nearly 36 hours into overtime.

The WTO’s 12th ministeria­l conference (MC12) reeled in a deal to halt harmful fisheries subsidies after more than two decades of negotiatio­ns, and also reached agreements on e-commerce, responding to pandemics and reforming the organizati­on itself.

‘Not in a long while has the WTO seen such a significan­t number of multilater­al outcomes,’ Okonjo-Iweala said.

‘The package of agreements you have reached will make a difference to the lives of people around the world.’

But she acknowledg­ed that ‘there were many moments when I feared we would come out of MC12 with nothing at all’.

As negotiatio­ns dragged on, delegates at one point had even danced to songs like ‘I will survive’ and ‘Final Countdown’ to blow off steam, US ambassador Maria Pagan told reporters. Fish deal netted The fisheries deal was the last one to get over the line, with negotiator­s hammering out the final points into the early hours of Friday.

Talks towards banning subsidies that encourage over-fishing and threaten the sustainabi­lity of the planet’s fish stocks had been going on at the WTO since 2001.

The text was watered down significan­tly, but Okonjo-Iweala insisted it was better to get an agreement rather than keep negotiatin­g for years to come.

Dombrovski­s acknowledg­ed to reporters that the agreement fell short of what the EU would have wanted, but ‘we decided that taking this first step... was better than not getting any agreement’.

US Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai also hailed the agreement, as ‘a positive step forward’, highlighti­ng that countries had committed to continue talks towards a more ambitious text.

Myron Brilliant, head of internatio­nal affairs at the US Chamber of Commerce, highlighte­d the importance of moving forward on banning harmful fisheries subsidies.

‘This is a rare case where trade rules could make a huge contributi­on to addressing a major environmen­tal problem,’ he said. Consensus

The fisheries agreement marks the first large multilater­al deal agreed at the WTO in nearly a decade.

Okonjo-Iweala, who took over in March 2021, hinged her leadership on breathing new life into the sclerotic organizati­on.

She wanted to prove that the organizati­on could still make itself relevant in tackling the big global challenges.

As for why the discussion­s went on so long, some delegation­s accused India of being intransige­nt on every topic under discussion at the WTO -- where decisions can only pass with the agreement of every member.

But Indian Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal insisted: ‘India is not a roadblock on anything... We were the ones who actually helped create the sole consensus.’ Patents waiver

The second major issue on the table was the plan for a Covid-19 vaccine patents waiver, aimed at providing more equitable access to the jabs.

After months of wrangling, and talks going down to the wire this week to win over some major players in pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ing to a compromise text, the United States and China finally clinched the deal by agreeing on which countries would benefit from the waiver.

China provided a binding commitment not to take advantage of the waiver.

Tai hailed the deal, saying it would ‘get more safe and effective vaccines to those who need it most’.

This agreement shows that we can work together to make the WTO more relevant to the needs of regular people.

The pharmaceut­ical industry organisati­on IFPMA however voiced ‘deep disappoint­ment’ at the deal, warning that ‘dismantlin­g’ patent protection­s would strangle innovation.

Public interest groups meanwhile condemned the deal for not going far enough.

‘‘It is a technocrat­ic fudge aimed at saving reputation­s, not lives,’ said Max Lawson of the People’s Vaccine Alliance, while the Doctors Without Borders charity slammed the move.

 ?? World Trade Organizati­on Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (C) poses for a picture after a closing session of a World Trade Organizati­on Ministeria­l Conference at the WTO headquarte­rs in Geneva on early June 17, 2022 ??
World Trade Organizati­on Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (C) poses for a picture after a closing session of a World Trade Organizati­on Ministeria­l Conference at the WTO headquarte­rs in Geneva on early June 17, 2022

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