Archive

WTO must not force bad trade deal on poor

30 June, 2006
News that the major powers are trying to bypass negotiations in order to force through a trade deal at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) has met with an angry response from trade justice campaigners.

junho 30th

Geneva Talks Could Break Early As U.S. Shows No Flexibility

29 June, 2006
Within a day of starting their negotiations, ministers today (June 30) raised significant doubts about how much progress they could make on developing modalities for agriculture and non-agricultural market access this week.

As Ministerial starts, the question is “Who will move first?”

29 June, 2006
As various WTO groupings held their own meetings on Thursday to plan ahead of the mini-Ministerial Green Room the next day, and as some Ministers gave their previews to the media, the question being asked by delegates and observers alike is “Who will move first, or will no one move at all?”

WTO TRIPs Proposal Would Address Biopiracy

29 June, 2006
Poor countries want new rules for the WTO's intellectual property agreement that would protect their biological resources and traditional knowledge

Crossing Swords With the EU

29 June, 2006
New US Trade Representative Susan Schwab crossed swords with her European Union counterpart over Brussels

Sticking to Positions

29 June, 2006
Doha Development Agenda key players the United States, the European Union, Brazil, India and the Group-of-10 defensive coalition stuck tight to their positions yesterday on Doha Development Agenda agriculture and nonagricultural market access

No Breakthroughs On Doha, But U.S. Officials Still Hopeful

29 June, 2006
U.S. trade negotiators appear to have made no breakthroughs in the bilateral meetings leading up to the formal World Trade Organization's Doha round negotiating sessions scheduled to begin today in Geneva

Mr. Lamy’s Failed ‘20-20-20' Formula

29 June, 2006
World Trade Organization chief Pascal Lamy

WTO Mini-Ministerial becomes "Waiting for America"

29 June, 2006
The first day of the WTO 'mini-Ministerial' turned out to be a kind of 'Waiting for America' process as delegations and media in one meeting after another waited for the United States to proclaim on whether it was willing to improve its offer to cut agricultural domestic support.