GMOs and the WTO Rules Mark Halle Minsk, 24 October 2008.

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GMOs and the WTO Rules Mark Halle Minsk, 24 October 2008

Transcript of GMOs and the WTO Rules Mark Halle Minsk, 24 October 2008.

Page 1: GMOs and the WTO Rules Mark Halle Minsk, 24 October 2008.

GMOs and the WTO Rules

Mark HalleMinsk, 24 October 2008

Page 2: GMOs and the WTO Rules Mark Halle Minsk, 24 October 2008.

Scientific Organizations

• Codex Alimentarius: developing general principles for risk analysis for GM foods, and specific guidance on risk assessment

• Also examining analytical methods to detect GMOs in foods

• A joint FAO/WHO expert consultation is underway on safety aspects of GM foods

• Similar efforts in OIE and IPCC

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What are GMOs?

• GMOs are created by transferring genetic material from one organism to the other.

• Although there is a general agreement that GMOs must not pose a threat to human health or the environment, countries do not agree on the acceptable level of risk.

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Trade issues linked to GMOs• Trade problems arise when countries have

different regulations on testing and approval procedures for traded GM products…

• Or when they disagree on labelling and identification requirements

• Some countries ban the import and sales of GMOs and their products

• Others consider that separating GM from non-GM products is unnecessary and costly and that labelling requirements are an unnecessary trade barrier

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GMO-related WTO Agreements

• Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phyto-Sanitary Measures (SPS)

• Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT)

• Agreement on Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)

• General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)

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SPS Provisions• SPS measures are aimed to protect human or

animal life from risks arising from additives, contaminants, toxins or disease-causing organisms in their food, beverages or feedstuffs.

• Or to protect a country from damage caused by the entry, establishment or spread of pests

• First probably applies to GMOs; second is more doubtful

• If either applies, the measure would have to conform to SPS requirements for risk assessment and least trade-restrictive measures

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SPS Article 5.7

• GMO-related trade restrictions can be taken under 5.7 as “provisional measures” applied for a “reasonable time”

• Example of EU moratorium: dispute over state of scientific knowledge, but also about how long an interim arrangement could apply and still be considered “reasonable”.

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TBT Provisions

• TBT allows governments to take measures to protect health or environment, provided they are not more trade-restrictive than necessary…

• … and that they do not discriminate among “like products”. But are GMOs “like” products?

• Most TBT concern revolves around labelling requirements

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TRIPS Provisions

• TRIPS allows governments to exclude from patentability plants and animals and essentially biological processes for the production of plants and animals

• It also allows temporary exclusion from patentability when necessary to protect human, animal or plant life or health or to avoid prejudice to the environment

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GATT Provisions

• Article XX exceptions for measures necessary to protect human, animal and plant life or health

• But “like product” distinctions would likely arise. And it would have to demonstrate that it could pass the “necessity test”.

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Cartagena Protocol

• Rules for international trade in Living Modified Organisms (GMOs that have not been processed)

• LMOs exported “for international introduction into the environment” requires advance informed agreement

• LMOs for food, feed or processing require prior information through a “biosafety clearing house”

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Disputes over GMOs

• Can the EC and other WTO members install a regulatory system for GMOs that allows precautionary measures?

• How will the Cartagena protocol be used since the US is not a signatory?

• How will expert opinion be used?• Will SPS or TBT be invoked – i.e. will the cases

be on food safety or labelling requirements?

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