MEDIA ADVISORY
Friends of the Earth International
For immediate release
24 July 2006
Geneva (Switzerland), 24 July 2006 -- Campaigners from Friends of the
Earth International today welcomed the collapse of the World Trade
Organisation (WTO)'s trade negotiations. This means that there is now
time to review and reconsider the multilateral trading system in its
entirety.
This will be welcome news to millions of people around the world who
feared that a WTO deal would have further impoverished the world's
poorest people and caused irreparable damage to the environment.
Developing countries, including India, also fear that a WTO deal would
cause immense harm to millions of small and subsistence farmers.
Alberto Villarreal, Trade Campaigner at Friends of the Earth in Latin
America, currently in Geneva, said "The collapse of these talks is good
news. The proposals on the table had been driven by certain governments
attempting to put the commercial interests of corporations before the
needs of workers, farmers, and the global environment."
Ronnie Hall, Trade Campaigner at Friends of the Earth International
added: "The delay created by the failure of the Doha negotiations must
be used to review past negotiations and analyse the flaws in the WTO
system as a whole. It will allow us to reflect on how to develop
multilateral governance systems that will genuinely promote fair and
sustainable societies that benefit everyone."
The so-called 'Doha Development Agenda' is not about development. Recent
World Bank and other studies [1] - and even government negotiators [2]
themselves - give witness to the fact that the current trade
liberalizing agenda is not working for the majority of people in the
developing countries. It is clear that the interests of the largest and
most powerful countries and their transnational companies continue to
dominate the WTO's agenda. [3]
Furthermore, consideration of the disastrous potential global
environmental impact of current negotiating proposals is virtually
non-existent within the WTO [4]. This is in spite of the fact that there
is increasing evidence elsewhere, including from studies commissioned by
the European Commission, that escalating international trade in natural
resources is likely to damage global biodiversity and local economies.
[5]
Indeed, if more natural resources are traded internationally instead of
being available for use locally - as certain countries and transnational
corporations wish - this could increase poverty for millions in the
world's poorest communities.[6]
For example, forests and fish and fish products are both sectors slated
for complete or exceptionally high levels of liberalization in the WTO's
current negotiations. Yet worldwide, some 60 million indigenous people
are almost completely reliant on forest resources for their livelihoods
– for food and fuel, medicines and materials - and some 36 million
people directly employed in small-scale artisanal fishing [7].
Similarly, current negotiations to expand international trade in
agricultural products could threaten the livelihoods of millions of
small and peasant farmers worldwide. In short, poverty could be
increased significantly by the WTO's negotiations. This would go
completely against the grain of governments' existing Millennium
Development commitment to halve world poverty by 2005.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
In Geneva, Alberto Villarreal, Trade Campaigner at Friends of the Earth
International:
Tel: +41 78 8389 504 (until july 29 only) or tel: +598 5228481, email
comercioredes@gmail.com
In London, Ronnie Hall, Trade Campaigner at Friends of the Earth
International:
Tel: +44 7967017281,
ronnieh@foe.co.uk
In Brussels, Sonja Meister, Trade Campaigner at Friends of the Earth
Europe: tel: +32 484 975107,
sonja.meister@foeeurope.org
Or Niccolo Sarno, Media Officer at Friends of the Earth International:
Tel: +31 20 622 1369 or
media@foei.org
NOTES TO EDITORS
[1] A study by the World Bank's Independent Evaluation Group (IEG)
released in March 2006 concluded that the World Bank's strategies on
trade have not delivered on employment and poverty reduction. World
Bank's Independent Evaluation Group Issues report Assessing Two Decades
of Global Trade Programs, IEG, World Bank, Washington DC, 22 March 2006,
www.worldbank.org/ieg/trade/docs/press_release_trade_evaluation.pdf.
In addtion, a 2006 study by the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace also suggests that the gains that have been predicted from world
trade are likely to be much more modest than has been portrayed, with
those countries particularly reliant on subsistence farming likely to be
harmed. Winners and Losers: Impact of the Doha Round on Developing
Countries, Sandra Polaski, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
Washington DC, 2006,
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/files/BWfinal.pdf
[2] For example, the Hon. Charles Savarin, Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Trade and Labour, Commonwealth of Dominica, has said: "In recent times,
the rules, norms and procedures of the multilateral trading system have
pushed the Caribbean to the precipice of disaster…Called the Doha
Development Round, these on-going trade talks are failing the Region."
Caribbean Regional Negotiating Machinery press release, No. 27/2005,
December 6, 2005. The G33 group of countries has also recently sent a
letter to Pascal Lamy stating that its members will not accept proposed
modalities for agriculture if these do not include modalities on special
products (SPs) and a special safeguard mechanism (SSM) that are key
aspects of special and differential treatment for developing
countries(Geneva, 20 April). These were agreed in Hong Kong but have now
been sidelined for attention at some later date.
[3] Some WTO papers are surprisingly explicit about engagement with
industry. For example: "This forest products proposal is driven by
industry interest. The Santa Catalina Group, which has industry
representatives from both developed and developing countries, has met
with NAMA negotiators on several occasions to discuss its members'
priorities" Market Access for Non-Agricultural Products, Tariff
Liberalization in the Forests Product Sector, Communication from Canada,
Hong Kong China, New Zealand, Thailand and the United States,
TN/MA/W/64, 18 October 2005 (05-4784), World Trade Organization, Geneva.
[4] The WTO's Committee on Trade and Environment is mandated to oversee
the environmental impacts of all the WTO's current negotiations but has
not done so. Indeed, there is an unwritten rule in the WTO that
multilateral environmental or sustainability impact assessments are not
permitted, because they are too controversial, as Pascal Lamy himself
confirmed in a meeting with civil society , 17 October 2005.
[5] The European Commission-financed sustainability impact assessment on
the forest sector, for example, demonstrates that there are likely to be
significant and irreversible impacts on forests and biodiversity in
'biodiversity hotspot' countries such as Brazil, Indonesia, countries in
the Congo Basin and Papua New Guinea. In addition, countries that
currently protect their forest industries using trade measures can
expect those industries to shrink and possibly collapse. Sustainability
Impact Assessment of Proposed WTO Negotiations: Final Report for the
Forest Sector Study, Marko Katila and Markku Simula, Savcor Indufor Oy,
Finland, in association with the Institute for Development Policy and
Management, University of Manchester, UK, with financial assistance from
the Commission of the European Communities, 19 June 2005
http://www.sia-trade.org/wto/final%20report%20page.shtml
[6] Worldwide, some 60 million indigenous people are almost completely
reliant on forest resources for their livelihoods – for food and fuel,
medicines and materials. Almost 40 million people are involved in
fisheries globally and 90 percent of these are employed in small-scale
artisanal fishing, For further details see FOEI's The Tyranny of Free
Trade: wasted natural wealth and lost livelihoods, December 2005,
http://www.foei.org/publications/index.html
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Niccolo' Sarno - Media Coordinator (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
niccolo@foei.org
-
http://www.foei.org/media - Tel:+31-20-6221369
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Friends of the Earth International (FoEI) is the world's largest
grassroots environmental federation with 71 national member groups in 70
countries and 1.5 million individual members and supporters
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