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Shrimp-Turtle A Case For Developing Countries Group 6: Alisha Sukhija Arnab Moitra Kamaldeep Singh Paritosh Saini Sanchit Gupta Sumit Kumar Jain

Shrimp - Turtle case at WTO

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Page 1: Shrimp -  Turtle case at WTO

Shrimp-Turtle A Case For Developing Countries

Group 6:Alisha SukhijaArnab MoitraKamaldeep SinghParitosh SainiSanchit GuptaSumit Kumar Jain

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(a)

• Why Did US Demand TED?• TED – Alternative

(b)

• Where US flouted rules• Other such cases

(c)

• Defense by Developing Countries• WTO Rulings & Implications

(d)

• Conclusion

Agenda

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1973 Endangered Species Act is approved

1987 Voluntary guidelines are issued for including turtle exclusionary devices

1989 & 1991

Legislation is negotiated to protect all sea turtles in American waters, including Central America and the Caribbean.

1996A full prohibition of all shrimp from any country that does not have sufficient precautions and regulatory measures

The Past…

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The Problem

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Solution to the problem by USTED systems

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Setback for developing countries

Requirements Expensive and they will have to compromise on the cost / comparative advantage Time difference in implementation (implementation to be done within 4 months)

Preferential treatment for some countries (ACP countries the main beneficiary)

Apart from TED, the US did not accept alternative methods of ensuring lower mortality for turtles

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India

Five of the seven species found in Indian coastal waters

The turtle considered an incarnation of Lord Vishnu

Indian Wildlife Protection Act (1972), Signatory of CITES since 1976

Orissa banned fishing, created sanctuaries, CMFRI operated a hatchery for sea turtles in Madras

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Malaysia (1/2)

Used hand retrieval nets

Sabah and Sarawak – Mating and Nesting areas

Active enforcing of fishery laws by the Department of Fisheries

Laws in place from 1932 (against killing of turtles), 1988 (Import / Export Prohibition)

The use of TED alone

could not absolutely ensure

the survival

of turtles

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Malaysia (2/2)

Page 10: Shrimp -  Turtle case at WTO

Pakistan

Culture - sinful to kill sea turtles

1950 - the Imports and Exports (Control) Act to protect endangered species

Sindh Wildlife Department engaged in protection programs in conjunction with WWF and IUCN

Unacceptable interference in policies

within Pakistan's sovereign

jurisdiction

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Thailand

1947 - the Fisheries Act prohibiting the catching, harvesting or harming of any sea turtle

Extensive sea turtle restoration programs: the Department of Fisheries, the Department of Forestry, and the Royal Thai Navy

1967 to 1996, no observed sea turtle killing in connection with shrimping

Suggested in ASEAN meetings of March 1997 to draft MOU jointly for the protection and conservation of sea turtles

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Is TED the only option?

Not the only and most effective device

Not a “multilateral environmental standard”

TED VS TSD

Not for larger sea turtles

Debris damaged TEDs

Increased transaction costs

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Can US dictate us what to do?

Look before you leap… Brother!

Page 14: Shrimp -  Turtle case at WTO

Ulterior Motives for US

Our tropical shrimps

had much more

demand than the

temperate shrimps in

the US market

The Asian countries had the

comparative

advantage of

providing shrimps at lower costs than were available

domestically

Protectionist

measures – saving its domestic industry

Adhering to richer lobbyists

representing

environmental and angling

interests

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Complainants

India

Articles

GATT Article XI

US Legislation

Section 609 of Endangered Species Act (ESA)

Shrimp Turtle WTO Case

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Dispute Settlement Process

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Advantages

The system is based on clearly-defined rules, with timetables

Adoption not by consensus but adoption by rejection of consensus

Panelists chosen in consultation with the countries in dispute

Appellate Body Member are individuals unaffiliated to any Government

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Oct 8th, 1996

4 nations (India, Malaysia, Pakistan & Thailand) jointly have consultations with the

U.S.

Nov 19th, 1996 Consultations held without resolution

Jan 9th – Feb 25th , 1997

India, Malaysia, Pakistan & Thailand request DSB to

establish a panel to look into the US embargo on import of

shrimp & shrimp products

April 15th, 1997 DSB establishes 3 member panel

April 6th, 1998 Panel issues final report and ruling

July 13th, 1998 US appeals against the panel’s ruling

Oct 1998 Appellate Body gives its final report

Case Timeline

Page 19: Shrimp -  Turtle case at WTO

Argument by Plaintiff Nations

Embargo of shrimp and

shrimp products was against the

MFN principle of

Art I.I of GATT

Ban imposed by the US

was inconsistent with Art XI of GATT (Art XI limits the

use of import prohibitions

or restrictions)

Ban imposed by the US

was in contravention of Art XIII.I as the ban restricted

importation of like

products

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Argument by United States

US measures complied with the relevant

requirement of Art

XX

Measures to protect

sea turtles -

an endangered natural resource

Complainants did

not introduce effective shrimp /

turtle policies

US is in compliance with the

“WTO Agreemen

t”

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Panel Ruling: April 6th, 1998

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Appellate Body recommendation and

thereafter… 1• US and parties to the dispute reached

agreement on a 13 month compliance period which ended in December 1999

2

• The US Department of State guidelines for implementing Section 609 was revised and issued after providing notice and an opportunity for public comment

3

• US to provide financial and technical assistance (training in the design, construction, installation and operation of TEDs to any government requesting it)

4

• In October 2000, Malaysia requested the re-establishment of the original panel to examine whether the United States had in fact complied with the Appellate Body findings

5

• The implementation panel ruled in favor of the United States:•Appellate Body ruling was an obligation to negotiate•United States had indeed made serious “good faith” efforts to negotiate

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A few disputes at the WTO…

Source: http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dispu_e/dispu_status_e.htm

Disputes at WTO & GATT

US MEXICO CASE – Dolphin Safe TunaUS EC CASE- Meat without hormones

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Disputes involving the U.S.

Source: http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dispu_e/dispu_maps_e.htm

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“Poor countries hold 40 per cent of the world's population, but receive only 3 per cent of the world's income from trade. Rich countries make up 14 per cent of world population and yet get 75 per cent of the income from trade”

Rich countries force poorer countries to sell the same products at lower prices than rich countries, by charging exporters many times more import tax simply because they live in a poor country

Devil in disguise - Developed Countries

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Few examples of unfair trade practices

Discrimination in case of Cocoa by

US and EU. Higher the

addition of value by a poor, higher

the tariffs imposition

(Germany, Britain against Ivory Coast, Ghana)

Clothing, India's second largest

export to the US, is taxed by

Washington at 19 %. Imports from

countries such as France, Japan,

and Germany are charged at

between 0-1 %

The average tax rate on

Vietnamese goods entering the US is 8 per cent. For Dutch goods it is just

1%

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Developing nations in WTOAttractive opportunities due to free trade among nations

Domestic industry of developed nations faced competition

WTO has been used as a medium to enforce restrictions on the developing countries

e.g. Multi-Fibre Arrangement (MFA) for international trade in Textiles

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Future of WTO - Challenges before developing nations

Source: http://www.twnside.org.sg/title/td8.htm

Subjects and pattern of negotiations have become much more complex than in the past

The attitude and approach of developed countries appear to have changed in recent years by focusing on immediate gains from current opportunitiesDeveloped countries are now more coordinated in their objectives and methods in the WTO and no longer sensitive towards the developing nations in seeking their support

Reaching the stage of recommendations and findings in the dispute settlement process has become a very costly and time-intensive procedure

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The Hitch…

Is globalization a debt-trap for the developing and poor nations?

Should free trade be restricted in the name of environmental protection and to what extent?

WTO Members unilaterally adopting their own conditional market access measures - Does it not undermine the multilateral trading system?

Why can’t the consumer make the purchasing decision instead of the governments?

GLOBALIZATION

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Thank You!!!