TRADE WARS
EU sharpens labour, environment demands in trade deals
by AFP Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) June 22, 2022

The EU on Wednesday said it would impose stricter rules on protecting the environment and labour rights in future trade deals, as Brussels attempts to revive Europe's global trade ambitions.

Some EU member states are increasingly frustrated that trade negotiations with countries such as Australia and Indonesia have become bogged down amid doubts on the benefits of free trade in certain bloc countries, most notably France.

Critics of trade deals argue that the EU doesn't do enough to guarantee international standards on labour rights, or to ensure that commitments to the Paris climate agreement are adequately upheld in trade pacts.

To dispel doubts, the European Commission said it would from now on give itself the power to apply import tariffs on countries that violate trade deal provisions on labour rights or the Paris deal.

"We need to make sure that sustainability commitments in EU trade deals don't remain only on paper -- they must happen on the ground," said EU trade commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis.

"So if you sign a deal with us, we need to have the tools to ensure you will deliver on what you said," he added.

The provision would have to be accepted by both parties in the trade deal, which may be a big ask for countries the EU is currently engaged in talks with, including India, Indonesia, New Zealand and Australia.

The EU has struggled in recent years to secure the backing of all 27 member states on trade deals, which were once a central policy for the bloc.

Of particular concern in France is a negotiated deal with the South American trade bloc Mercosur that has yet to be signed as several countries demand concrete commitments from Brazil against the deforestation of the Amazon.

"We have blocked and continue to block the Mercosur deal because it is not to the sustainability standards we could expect," said French Trade Minister Franck Riester.

But Riester praised the commission's latest proposal that would allow the EU to look at future trade accords "with a new perspective".

"It is a way to engage our partners. It can have a leverage effect on our partners' policies," he said.

Fifteen member states at the urging of Sweden this week sent a letter to Dombrovskis warning that the slow advancement of trade deals among Asian countries threatened to leave Europe's economy behind, and that bilateral trade deals needed to be put back on track.

"We do hope that this will help to relaunch our free trade agreement agenda," an EU official said on condition of anonymity.


Related Links
Global Trade News

TRADE WARS
Apple Store workers vote to form first US Apple union
San Francisco (AFP) June 19, 2022
A majority of employees at a US Apple store have voted to form the tech giant's first union, in the wake of similar unionization drives at Starbucks and Amazon locations. Of the 110 employees at the Towson, Maryland shop, 65 voted in favor and 33 against, according to a live count broadcast Saturday by the federal agency overseeing the vote. The vote comes after a group of employees called AppleCORE (Coalition of Organized Retail Employees) campaigned for unionization, demanding a say in decidin ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

TRADE WARS
Freedom and fear: the foundations of America's deadly gun culture

UN working to get shelter, trauma care to Afghan quake scene

Iraqi migrant in UK fears Rwanda deportation, despite reprieve

One dead in Shanghai chemical plant explosion

TRADE WARS
Shaping the future of purification

Chile workers end strike at world's largest copper producer

Workers strike at world's largest copper producer, Chile's Codelco

Cities of the future may be built with algae-grown limestone

TRADE WARS
Drought hits Italy's hydroelectric plants

Swimming and surfing, Gazans savour a cleaner sea

An amazing symbiotic relationship in the deep sea

Dead rivers: The cost of Bangladesh's garment-driven economic boom

TRADE WARS
Warming climate upends Arctic mining town

The treaty drawn up between the sheets

Russia and China eye NATO's 'Arctic Achilles heel'

Subpopulation of Greenland polar bears found

TRADE WARS
Dutch farmers protest livestock cuts to curb nitrogen

Using firefly genes to understand cannabis biology

EU lays out plan to halve pesticide use, save bees

South Africa's latest hot export to China? Donkeys

TRADE WARS
Rescuers scramble to reach Afghan quake survivors as foreign aid arrives

Record floods threaten southern China

At least 1,000 killed in Afghan quake as rescuers scramble for survivors

Hundreds of thousands evacuated in China after heaviest rains in decades

TRADE WARS
Former Liberian army commander indicted in the US

Mali army strikes jihadists after massacre, army says

Guinea political group suspends call for protests

Tanzania accuses Kenyan Maasai of backing opponents to wildlife protection area

TRADE WARS
How humans evolved to get along

Healthy human brains are hotter than previously thought, exceeding 40 degrees

Are we born with a moral compass

Amazon's indigenous leaders make plea at Americas summit