Archive - Jun 2006 - Article

June 17th

NAMA-11 developing countries submit comprehensive proposals for NAMA modalities

16 June, 2006
With just a few days to go before the draft NAMA modalities are scheduled to be produced by the Chair of the NAMA negotiations, the NAMA-11 group of developing countries on Thursday 15 June presented a comprehensive set of proposals at a NAMA meeting to ensure that their concerns are taken into account.

June 16th

Agriculture: Divisions evident in debate on Chair's market access paper

15 June, 2006
WTO members held a first discussion on Monday (12 June) on a paper suggesting modalities on agriculture market access issues that was issued by the chair of the WTO agriculture negotiations, Ambassador Crawford Falconer of New Zealand.

Positions remain unchanged in TRIPS/CBD consultations

15 June, 2006
An informal consultation held on 6 June at the WTO on the relationship between the TRIPS Agreement and the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) ended with positions among members remaining unchanged on the issue of disclosure of the source of origin of biological resources and associated traditional knowledge.

Agriculture: Talks on Chair's papers on Blue and Green Box subsidies

15 June, 2006
An informal open-ended agriculture meeting at the WTO Thursday 1 June discussed the Chair's latest reference papers on Blue Box and Green Box subsidies where members appeared to show some flexibility on the technical details but failed to converge on the major points, according to trade officials.

Angry responses to Developed Countries' latest NAMA proposal

15 June, 2006
Several developing countries have responded with anger and even outrage to the latest proposal in the WTO's non-agricultural market access (NAMA) negotiations by a group of developed countries that there be a difference of only five points in the two coefficients for developed and developing countries in the 'Swiss formula' for cutting tariffs.

US will take 'tough decisions' at trade talks

15 June, 2006
President George W. Bush said on Thursday that the Doha round of world trade talks had reached 'a critical moment' and that he would press for further progress when he meets European Union leaders in Austria next week.

June 13th

Malaysians protest against free trade talks with US

12 June, 2006
As Malaysia and the United States began their first round of talks on a bilateral free trade agreement (FTA), they were confronted by a group of Malaysian protesters concerned that the agreement will cause the country more harm than good.

June 9th

U.S. Negotiators Boxed into a Corner at WTO

8 June, 2006
A new economic simulation of the U.S. agriculture proposal at the World Trade Organization (WTO) confirmed what NGOs and developing countries have been saying for months: the proposal has so many loopholes it may actually increase the allowable amount of domestic agriculture spending in the U.S. The new simulation exposed not only the emptiness of the U.S. proposal, but also the limited space that U.S. negotiators find themselves in as the Doha Round moves forward.

New PANAP/PCFS Report Online: Bilateral Free Trade and Investment Agreements and the US Corporate Biotech Agenda

8 June, 2006
Bilateral free trade agreements are seen by the agricultural biotechnology industry as an important conduit for spreading genetically modified organisms (GMOs) around the world.

June 8th

Clash in NAMA talks on proposed export-tax rules

7 June, 2006
The WTO Negotiating Group on Market Access for Non-Agricultural Products (NAMA), at an informal consultation Wednesday (31 May), discussed proposals dealing with non-tariff barriers (NTBs).