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1999/2149(COS)

World trade Organisation WTO: the Union's approach to the Millenium Round, 3rd conference of Seattle

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1999/2149(COS) World trade Organisation WTO: the Union's approach to the Millenium Round, 3rd conference of Seattle
RoleCommitteeRapporteurShadows
Opinion AFET
Opinion AGRI CUNHA Arlindo (PPE-DE)
Opinion CULT O'TOOLE Barbara (PSE)
Opinion DEVE CORRIE John Alexander (PPE-DE)
Opinion ECON RANDZIO-PLATH Christa (PSE)
Opinion EMPL ETTL Harald (PSE)
Opinion ENVI ROTH-BEHRENDT Dagmar (PSE)
Lead ITRE SCHWAIGER Konrad K. (PPE-DE)
Opinion JURI WUERMELING Joachim (PPE-DE)
Lead committee dossier: ITRE/4/11110
Legal Basis RoP 119
Subjects
Links

Activites

  • 2000/07/07 Final act published in Official Journal
  • 2000/06/14 Committee of the Regions: opinion
  • 1999/11/18 Text adopted by Parliament, single reading
    • T5-0108/1999 summary
    • OJ C 189 07.07.2000, p. 0101-0213
  • 1999/11/17 Debate in Parliament
  • 1999/11/15 Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
  • 1999/11/15 Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
  • 1999/10/13 Committee draft report
    • PE231.700
  • 1999/10/04 Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
  • 1999/07/08 Non-legislative basic document published
    • COM(1999)0331 summary
  • 1999/07/08 Non-legislative basic document
    • COM(1999)0331 summary

Documents

History

(these mark the time of scraping, not the official date of the change)

2012-02-10
activities added
  • date
    1999-07-08
    docs
    • url
      http://eur-lex.europa.eu/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexplus!prod!DocNumber&lg=EN&type_doc=COMfinal&an_doc=1999&nu_doc=0331
      text
      • PURPOSE : to present the case in favour of a new comprehensive Round of trade negotiations and to define a common negotiating framework.
        CONTENT : The European Community has been at the forefront of efforts to launch a Millennium Round of trade negotiations in the WTO in 2000. In its conclusions of 30 March, 30 April and 18 May 1998, and 21 June 1999, the Council unanimously supported such an aim. Frequent and substantive discussions on several occasions within the Council's 133 Committee have developed further the Community's position on the approach to, and possible scope of such a Round, enabling the EU to continue to exercise leadership in the WTO.
        This communication sets out the case for a new WTO trade round as an important means to improve the European economy, to foster global economic growth and development, and to ensure the successful management of globalisation. It argues that a comprehensive Round offers the best way to take account of the trade interests of the WTO membership as a whole.
        In addition, the Communication sets out the possible EU agenda for the Round, for which should, among other things, include further liberalisation or rule-making in the fields of agriculture and services, non-agricultural tariffs, investment, competition, trade facilitation, and trade environment. Results in all areas should support and contribute to sustainable development. The Communication sets out in addition the views of other trading partners on the question of a new round, noting that the support for this is growing. It also proposes a detailed agenda to ensure that the needs and interests of developing countries are concretely reflected in the negotiations, and suggests an approach to the question of labour standards and the WTO.
        The main guidelines which are proposed can be summed-up as :
        1) agriculture : some of the principles of the agreement concluded in the Uruguay Round should be kept, notably, the defence of the multifunctional role of agriculture, the preservation of human, animal and plant life or health, the relationship between trade and the environment, animal welfare, food safety and food quality and other consumer concerns relevant to agriculture. For the Commission, the reform of the CAP within the framework of Agenda 2000 would constitute essential elements in defining its negotiating mandate for the future multilateral negociations at the WTO;
        2) services : the Community should have an ambitious position for the further market opening coupled, where necessary, with regulatory disciplines. The aim is to achieve real and meaningful liberalisation, and ensure the development of a transparent and predictable domestic regulatory environment, justified on the basis of specific public policy objectives, which can provide legal certainty and confidence to service suppliers, investors, users and consumers;
        3) investment : the WTO represents the adopted framework for a negociation in this domaine including the developing countries who have been mostly in the role of host countries.
        A framework for multilateral rules for investment has to ensure the right conditions for international investment to be conducive to sustainable development. To this end, such a framework should, among other things, preserve the ability ofhost countries to regulate the activity of investors (whether foreign or domestic) on their respective territory, for the achievement of legitimate policy objectives;
        4) competition : the Commission have come to a firm decision in favour of a strict framework in this regard: the setting of common rules relating to competition and the active and effective enforcement of these rules, common approaches on anti-competitive practices with a significant impact on international trade and investment, provisions on international co-operation, provisions on notification, consultation and surveillance in relation to anticompetitive practices, introduction of concepts of negative and positive comity, uniform procedure of regulation of different opinions;
        5) trade facilitation : it is necessary to simplify and harmonise, automate procedures, reduce red tape and documentation, and increase transparency;
        6) tariffs on non-agricultural products : the Commission calls for the generalised reduction of tariffs on the non-agricultural products, with an important advantage for the least developed countries which should benefit from early tariff free treatment for nearly all of their products from now until 2003;
        7) trade and environment : trade and environment policies should play a mutually supportive role in favour of sustainable development. The WTO rules should be harmonious with existing and future multilateral environment agreements (MEAs). It is also necessary to maintain the right of WTO members to take precautionary action to protect human health, safety and the environment while at the same time avoiding unjustified or disproportionate restrictions;
        8) trade and core labour standards : the Commission does not consider sanctioning the countries where social conditions are considered as inadequate but it recommends a positive approach by encouraging the fixing of international rules within the ILO (in this regard, the Commission regrets that the efforts made by the Union to create a "social standards" working group within the WTO, came to nothing. The Commission underlines that the opposition of the developing countries remains strong and that it is not realistic to reach a consensus on the issue). The Commission advocates a five point strategy based on co-operation with the ILO and the convincing of its partners (by means of a regime of encouragement allowing third countries to obtain complementary trade advantages if they prove that they respect the main ILO conventions on work).
        The Commission's document also deals with the intellectual property rights, public procurement, technical barriers to trade, anti-dumping measures and other instruments of trade defence, electronic commerce as well as taking account of the public's concerns which are becoming more and more sensitive to the negative effects of the globalisation of work and the environment.
        The Commission calls on the Council to reach a position regarding its communication and to approve the general guidelines, in such a way that allows it (direct consultation with the Committee in Article 133) to prepare, along the lines indicated, for the Ministerial Conference in Seattle, which is to take place in November 1999.
        The European Parliament will also be called upon to reach adecision on the contents of this communication and will be kept informed of the progress on each of the issues throughout the negotiating process.
      type
      Non-legislative basic document published
      title
      COM(1999)0331
    body
    type
    Non-legislative basic document published
  • date
    1999-07-08
    docs
    • url
      http://eur-lex.europa.eu/smartapi/cgi/sga_doc?smartapi!celexplus!prod!DocNumber&lg=EN&type_doc=COMfinal&an_doc=1999&nu_doc=0331
      text
      • PURPOSE : to present the case in favour of a new comprehensive Round of trade negotiations and to define a common negotiating framework.
        CONTENT : The European Community has been at the forefront of efforts to launch a Millennium Round of trade negotiations in the WTO in 2000. In its conclusions of 30 March, 30 April and 18 May 1998, and 21 June 1999, the Council unanimously supported such an aim. Frequent and substantive discussions on several occasions within the Council's 133 Committee have developed further the Community's position on the approach to, and possible scope of such a Round, enabling the EU to continue to exercise leadership in the WTO.
        This communication sets out the case for a new WTO trade round as an important means to improve the European economy, to foster global economic growth and development, and to ensure the successful management of globalisation. It argues that a comprehensive Round offers the best way to take account of the trade interests of the WTO membership as a whole.
        In addition, the Communication sets out the possible EU agenda for the Round, for which should, among other things, include further liberalisation or rule-making in the fields of agriculture and services, non-agricultural tariffs, investment, competition, trade facilitation, and trade environment. Results in all areas should support and contribute to sustainable development. The Communication sets out in addition the views of other trading partners on the question of a new round, noting that the support for this is growing. It also proposes a detailed agenda to ensure that the needs and interests of developing countries are concretely reflected in the negotiations, and suggests an approach to the question of labour standards and the WTO.
        The main guidelines which are proposed can be summed-up as :
        1) agriculture : some of the principles of the agreement concluded in the Uruguay Round should be kept, notably, the defence of the multifunctional role of agriculture, the preservation of human, animal and plant life or health, the relationship between trade and the environment, animal welfare, food safety and food quality and other consumer concerns relevant to agriculture. For the Commission, the reform of the CAP within the framework of Agenda 2000 would constitute essential elements in defining its negotiating mandate for the future multilateral negociations at the WTO;
        2) services : the Community should have an ambitious position for the further market opening coupled, where necessary, with regulatory disciplines. The aim is to achieve real and meaningful liberalisation, and ensure the development of a transparent and predictable domestic regulatory environment, justified on the basis of specific public policy objectives, which can provide legal certainty and confidence to service suppliers, investors, users and consumers;
        3) investment : the WTO represents the adopted framework for a negociation in this domaine including the developing countries who have been mostly in the role of host countries.
        A framework for multilateral rules for investment has to ensure the right conditions for international investment to be conducive to sustainable development. To this end, such a framework should, among other things, preserve the ability ofhost countries to regulate the activity of investors (whether foreign or domestic) on their respective territory, for the achievement of legitimate policy objectives;
        4) competition : the Commission have come to a firm decision in favour of a strict framework in this regard: the setting of common rules relating to competition and the active and effective enforcement of these rules, common approaches on anti-competitive practices with a significant impact on international trade and investment, provisions on international co-operation, provisions on notification, consultation and surveillance in relation to anticompetitive practices, introduction of concepts of negative and positive comity, uniform procedure of regulation of different opinions;
        5) trade facilitation : it is necessary to simplify and harmonise, automate procedures, reduce red tape and documentation, and increase transparency;
        6) tariffs on non-agricultural products : the Commission calls for the generalised reduction of tariffs on the non-agricultural products, with an important advantage for the least developed countries which should benefit from early tariff free treatment for nearly all of their products from now until 2003;
        7) trade and environment : trade and environment policies should play a mutually supportive role in favour of sustainable development. The WTO rules should be harmonious with existing and future multilateral environment agreements (MEAs). It is also necessary to maintain the right of WTO members to take precautionary action to protect human health, safety and the environment while at the same time avoiding unjustified or disproportionate restrictions;
        8) trade and core labour standards : the Commission does not consider sanctioning the countries where social conditions are considered as inadequate but it recommends a positive approach by encouraging the fixing of international rules within the ILO (in this regard, the Commission regrets that the efforts made by the Union to create a "social standards" working group within the WTO, came to nothing. The Commission underlines that the opposition of the developing countries remains strong and that it is not realistic to reach a consensus on the issue). The Commission advocates a five point strategy based on co-operation with the ILO and the convincing of its partners (by means of a regime of encouragement allowing third countries to obtain complementary trade advantages if they prove that they respect the main ILO conventions on work).
        The Commission's document also deals with the intellectual property rights, public procurement, technical barriers to trade, anti-dumping measures and other instruments of trade defence, electronic commerce as well as taking account of the public's concerns which are becoming more and more sensitive to the negative effects of the globalisation of work and the environment.
        The Commission calls on the Council to reach a position regarding its communication and to approve the general guidelines, in such a way that allows it (direct consultation with the Committee in Article 133) to prepare, along the lines indicated, for the Ministerial Conference in Seattle, which is to take place in November 1999.
        The European Parliament will also be called upon to reach adecision on the contents of this communication and will be kept informed of the progress on each of the issues throughout the negotiating process.
      type
      Non-legislative basic document
      title
      COM(1999)0331
    body
    EC
    commission
      type
      Non-legislative basic document
    • date
      1999-10-04
      body
      EP
      type
      Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
      committees
    • date
      1999-10-13
      docs
      • type
        Committee draft report
        title
        PE231.700
      body
      EP
      type
      Committee draft report
    • date
      1999-11-15
      docs
      • url
        http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A5-1999-0062&language=EN
        type
        Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
        title
        A5-0062/1999
      body
      type
      Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
    • date
      1999-11-15
      docs
      text
      • The committee adopted the report by Konrad SCHWAIGER (EPP/ED, D) on the EU
        approach to the forthcoming WTO Millenium Round. The report endorsed the
        general negotiating approach outlined by the Commission and looked at a
        number of separate issues such as agriculture, where it expressed support
        for CAP reform and endorsed the idea that the precautionary principle should
        be explicitly included in the WTO rules so that the EU could continue its
        policy of strict food safety standards. On services, the committee agreed
        with the Commission and Council that further liberalisation was needed but
        also took the view that sectors and services with a specific social mandate,
        such as health and education, should be dealt with not in the context of the
        revision of the GATS agreement but exclusively in a framework laid down by
        the state concerned. The report also called for electronic commerce to be
        incorporated into the GATS agreement. The committee welcomed the idea of
        creating a multilateral legal framework for direct foreign investment and
        highlighted the need for continued reductions of tariffs on industrial
        products. It regretted that the work of the WTO in the area of the
        environment had so far failed to produce any tangible results, and called on
        the Commission to ensure that the question of processes and production
        methods was included in the negotiations. Particular attention should also
        be paid to transport-related environmental damage. On development, the
        committee recognised the need for developing countries to be given improved
        access to markets and called on the Commission to pay particular attention
        to development policy in all negotiating areas under the Millenium Round.
        Other points raised in the report included a call for the ILO's core labour
        standards to be incorporated into the WTO and the need for greater
        transparency and openness in the WTO's dispute settlement procedures.
        Lastly, the committee wanted to see Parliament kept fully informed of
        progress in the negotiations.
      body
      EP
      type
      Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
    • date
      1999-11-17
      body
      EP
      type
      Debate in Parliament
    • date
      1999-11-18
      docs
      body
      EP
      type
      Text adopted by Parliament, single reading
    • date
      2000-06-14
      docs
      body
      type
      Committee of the Regions: opinion
    • date
      2000-07-07
      type
      Final act published in Official Journal
    committees added
    • body
      EP
      responsible
      False
      committee_full
      Foreign Affairs, Human Rights, Common Security, Defense
      committee
      AFET
    • body
      EP
      responsible
      False
      committee
      AGRI
      date
      1999-09-01
      committee_full
      Agriculture and Rural Development
      rapporteur
      • group
        PPE-DE
        name
        CUNHA Arlindo
    • body
      EP
      responsible
      False
      committee
      CULT
      date
      1999-10-11
      committee_full
      Culture, Youth, Education, Media and Sport
      rapporteur
      • group
        PSE
        name
        O'TOOLE Barbara
    • body
      EP
      responsible
      False
      committee
      DEVE
      date
      1999-10-04
      committee_full
      Development and Cooperation
      rapporteur
      • group
        PPE-DE
        name
        CORRIE John Alexander
    • body
      EP
      responsible
      False
      committee
      ECON
      date
      1999-10-04
      committee_full
      Economic and Monetary Affairs
      rapporteur
      • group
        PSE
        name
        RANDZIO-PLATH Christa
    • body
      EP
      responsible
      False
      committee
      EMPL
      date
      1999-09-28
      committee_full
      Employment and Social Affairs
      rapporteur
      • group
        PSE
        name
        ETTL Harald
    • body
      EP
      responsible
      False
      committee
      ENVI
      date
      1999-09-22
      committee_full
      Environment, Public Health, Consumer Policy
      rapporteur
      • group
        PSE
        name
        ROTH-BEHRENDT Dagmar
    • body
      EP
      responsible
      True
      committee
      ITRE
      date
      1999-07-29
      committee_full
      Industry, External Trade, Research, Energy
      rapporteur
      • group
        PPE-DE
        name
        SCHWAIGER Konrad K.
    • body
      EP
      responsible
      False
      committee
      JURI
      date
      1999-10-13
      committee_full
      Legal Affairs and Internal Market
      rapporteur
      • group
        PPE-DE
        name
        WUERMELING Joachim
    links added
    other added
      procedure added
      dossier_of_the_committee
      ITRE/4/11110
      reference
      1999/2149(COS)
      title
      World trade Organisation WTO: the Union's approach to the Millenium Round, 3rd conference of Seattle
      legal_basis
      • Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 119
      stage_reached
      Procedure completed
      subtype
      Commission strategy paper
      type
      COS - Procedure on a strategy paper (historic)
      subject
      • 6.20.01 Agreements and relations in the context of the World Trade Organisation (WTO)