ATLANTA — Twelve countries including Canada appear on the verge of creating the world's largest regional trade zone.
After five days of around-the-clock negotiations, an announcement appears imminent on the Trans-Pacific Partnership which would cover 40 per cent of the world's economy.
Some national delegations have already begun briefing industry stakeholders on the contents. There was word of a late-afternoon press conference.
That sense of anticipation could be overheard even from people delivering stacks of pizza boxes to the floor at an Atlanta hotel where negotiators have been huddled for days: "It's getting close," one said.
The agreement would reduce or eliminate barriers in a wide range of sectors and could lead to more Canadian exports of pork, beef, canola, high-tech machinery and a variety of other products.
It would also entrench new international trade standards in Asia, setting a template should any other countries in that fast-growing region — like China — want to join.
Other parts could be controversial in Canada. It's expected to increase imports of foreign car parts and possibly dairy, which could mean lower prices and greater selection for consumers but also hurt some workers in both sectors.
The deal needs to be ratified in national parliaments, and the NDP's recent opposition to the TPP process is an early example of the political challenges it could face in several countries.
It's unclear when voters might see the fine print. One of the outstanding sources of uncertainty is when a legal review might be completed of the actual text of the deal.
More details on that front, and on the agreement itself, should become clearer after the late-afternoon news conference, tentatively scheduled for around 4 p.m. ET.
An agreement would complete a decade-long process that began with four countries in Asia, and spread to the United States and finally Canada — with the final announcement landing smack in the middle of a Canadian federal election.
Differences were being bridged Sunday on one major irritant, with the U.S. and Australia working to resolve a dispute over exclusivity rights for next-generation biologics medicines.
The final question mark involved dairy, and Canada. New Zealand, which helped create the TPP project a decade ago, wants to sell more butter in North America — especially in the United States.
But New Zealand has said in the past that the U.S. wouldn't budge on agriculture controls unless it also saw an opening from its northern neighbour.
Currently, 90 per cent of the Canadian dairy market is closed to foreign products. The system allows for stable incomes in farming communities, but limits options and drives up prices at the grocery store.
The Canadian government has insisted that it won't dismantle the supply-management system, and it faces political pressure not to do so from its opponents, provincial governments, and the dairy lobby.
The state of play was summarized by New Zealand's trade minister — who easily provided the most-memorable quote of the five-day meetings.
Under pressure to obtain foreign access for his own country's dairy, he told one of his country's newspapers that difficult compromises will have to be made.
He illustrated it with an unappetizing culinary metaphor.
"It's got the smell of a situation we occasionally see which is that on the hardest core issues, there are some ugly compromises out there," Tim Groser told New Zealand's Weekend Herald.
"And when we say ugly, we mean ugly from each perspective — it doesn't mean 'I've got to swallow a dead rat and you're swallowing foie gras.' It means both of us are swallowing dead rats on three or four issues to get this deal across the line."