Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
International

The world is watching Canada and EU iron out trade-deal kinks: WTO head

The Canadian Press , 11 Oct, 2014 01:42 PM
    TORONTO - The director of the influential World Trade Organization says nations around the planet are keeping a close eye on how Canada and the European Union overcome the stumbling blocks of their ambitious trade agreement.
     
    WTO chief Roberto Azevedo shared his thoughts about the Canada-EU pact in a recent interview and weighed in on concerns that some European countries might still try to sink the agreement.
     
    Azevedo said obstacles in Canada-EU negotiations are to be expected, plus he believes they can provide teaching moments for trading nations around the globe.
     
    "The world is watching," Azevedo told The Canadian Press.
     
    "They may help other negotiations and other negotiators in figuring out similar ways to move forward."
     
    Last month in Ottawa, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and EU leaders announced their five years of difficult negotiations had been completed. They insisted all 28 EU countries supported the agreement, even though a handful of them continued to grumble over the deal.
     
    European diplomats said there was concern Romania and Bulgaria could prevent its ratification if Canada failed to lift visa requirements for travellers from the two countries.
     
    The discontent followed reports that surfaced in the summer and again this fall about opposition in Germany to an investor-state dispute-settlement mechanism, which would give corporations the right to sue for damages stemming from new legislation that hurts their bottom lines.
     
    When asked about the obstacles, Azevedo said hurdles like these are common in trade talks, particularly when negotiations involve so many countries.
     
    "(European countries) all have different views about these things, so it's common that the European Union has a hard time negotiating amongst themselves before they even get to the table to negotiate with the other countries," he said, adding the Canada-EU deal is more innovative than older trade agreements and breaking new ground.
     
    "I think everybody's going to be looking at the results to see whether they inspire ... other negotiations — bilateral or multi-laterally in Geneva."
     
    The Canada-EU deal is an agreement outside of the WTO, which is a 20-year-old multilateral trading system with 159 member states.
     
    One international trade consultant said the reason the world is watching Canada and the EU so closely is actually because of another much bigger deal: the proposed U.S.-EU trade pact.
     
    "It's the precursor to the big show," Laura Dawson, president of Ottawa-based Dawson Strategic, said of the Canada-EU deal. 
     
    Dawson said while Canada is a much smaller economic player by comparison, its negotiations are seen as a "practice round" for the EU as it seeks common ground with the Americans.
     
    Canada, she added, provides Europeans with a model of North American trade practices, especially in areas like intellectual property, genetically modified organisms and investor-state dispute settlements.
     
    Dawson said the U.S.-EU deal has even replaced the WTO as the trade agreement the world is paying attention to.
     
    "It's a clash of the titans," she said. 
     
    "And so, we're all just going to sit around and see how that plays out. And how that plays out will really shape how the rest of us trade in the future."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Unending school shooting: Obama says America should be ashamed

    Unending school shooting: Obama says America should be ashamed
    As America witnessed its 74th school shooting this week since the "massacre of innocents" at an elementary school 18 months ago, President Barack Obama said he was ashamed that America can't put a stop to them. 

    Unending school shooting: Obama says America should be ashamed

    Shiite cleric urges Iraqis to take up arms

    Shiite cleric urges Iraqis to take up arms
    An influential Shiite cleric Friday called on Iraqis to take up arms against insurgent groups that have taken control of large parts of the country, his representative said.

    Shiite cleric urges Iraqis to take up arms

    Ukraine offers compromise in gas price with Russia

    Ukraine offers compromise in gas price with Russia
    Ukraine is ready to compromise to resolve its natural gas supply dispute with Russia, Naftogaz Andrey Kobolev, head of the state-run energy company, said here Friday.

    Ukraine offers compromise in gas price with Russia

    EU to combat sexual violence against minors during World Cup

    EU to combat sexual violence against minors during World Cup
    A campaign to raise awareness against sexual exploitation of minors in Brazil during the 2014 FIFA World Cup was launched Thursday by European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso.

    EU to combat sexual violence against minors during World Cup

    Protests erupt in Sao Paulo ahead of World Cup kick-off

    Protests erupt in Sao Paulo ahead of World Cup kick-off
    Protestors in Sao Paulo clashed with the police in an anti-World Cup demonstration Thursday, hours before the city plays host to the tournament opener, a media report said.

    Protests erupt in Sao Paulo ahead of World Cup kick-off

    Recession led to 10,000 suicides in Europe, US

    Recession led to 10,000 suicides in Europe, US
    The economic slump in Europe and the US has led to more than 10,000 suicides, a media report said Thursday.

    Recession led to 10,000 suicides in Europe, US