1 / 32

Public Symposium: Challenges ahead on the Road to Cancun 16-18th June 2003 WTO, Geneva

Public Symposium: Challenges ahead on the Road to Cancun 16-18th June 2003 WTO, Geneva. The effects of environmental regulations on developing countries: what are the concerns and what can be done Veena Jha. UNCTAD. UNCTAD activities. UNCTAD/IDRC Project Standards and Trade

hector
Download Presentation

Public Symposium: Challenges ahead on the Road to Cancun 16-18th June 2003 WTO, Geneva

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Public Symposium: Challenges ahead on the Road to Cancun16-18th June 2003WTO, Geneva The effects of environmental regulations on developing countries: what are the concerns and what can be done Veena Jha UNCTAD

  2. UNCTADactivities • UNCTAD/IDRC Project Standards and Trade • Final meeting: Geneva, 16 and 17 May 2002 • UNCTAD Expert Meeting on Environmental Requirements and International Trade • Geneva, 2-4 October 2002 Papers http://www.unctad.org/trade_env/index.htm

  3. reports UNCTAD • An overview paper • Regional scoping paper on South Asia (Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Sri Lanka) • Regional scoping paper on Central America (in particular Costa Rica) • Regional scoping paper on Eastern Africa (Kenya, Mozambique, the United Republic of Tanzania and Uganda) • Scoping paper on organic agriculture (Costa Rica, India and Uganda)

  4. Case studies: South Asia

  5. Case studies: Central America

  6. Case studies: Africa

  7. Expert Meeting onEnvironmental Requirements and International Trade2-4 October 2002 • Environmental and health requirements (SPS measures) • Chairman’s summary (TD/B/COM.1/EM.19/3) • Commission on Trade (3-7 February 2003) http://www.unctad.org/trade_env/test1/meetings/envreq.htm

  8. Environmental requirements • Standards (voluntary) and technical regulations (mandatory) • Labelling requirements (either mandatory or voluntary, such as eco-labelling), • Packaging • Product taxes and charges • Take-back obligations • Informal (non-government) requirements • Quotas and Non Automatic Licensing (to implement MEAs)

  9. Environmental requirements • Voluntary measures and private sector standards appear to be much more frequent than Government environmental product regulations. These include: • Standards, codes and benchmarks • Supply chain management • There are only few international standards for environmental regulations

  10. More stringent and complex… • Environmental requirements are becoming more frequent • growing evidence of harmful environmental effects of certain substances • changes in consumer preferences

  11. More stringent and complex: examples… • Draft Strategy for a Future Chemicals Policy in the EU point to the imminent introduction of legislation that implements a precautionary approach Stakeholders' Conference on the Commission's White Paper on the Strategy for a Future Chemicals Policy, Brussels, 2 April 2002

  12. More stringent and complex: examples… • EU Directive 2000/53/EC on End-of-Life Vehicles • Aimed at sound management of scrapped vehicles • Implications for material selection, use of hazardous materials, the use of recyclable and/or bio-degradable material as well as design for recycling. • Japanese market, significant initiatives: • The recycling-oriented economy framework • Launch of the Green Purchasing Act

  13. Implications for market access Concerns of developing countries: • Many standards perceived as overly stringent or complex • Frequent changes (never catch up) • Scientific justification insufficient • Standardes often fail to take into account the conditions of developing countries • Way a measure is implemented may discriminate (GATT/WTO dispute settlement mechanism)

  14. Structural weaknesses • Lack of awareness • Management of information • Poor infrastructure • SMEs • Lack of finance • Lack of institutional capacity • Insufficient access to technology • “Standard-takers” rather than “standard-setters”

  15. Sectors Most studies done by UNCTAD refer to: • Agricultural and fisheries products • Leather and textiles • Forestry products • Electronics

  16. Agricultural products Drivers: • Advancements in food safety sciences and growing public awareness of health safety issues • Following food scares, consumers expect retailers, through their purchasing practices, to supplement Government regulations for ensuring food safety. • Consumers and retailers are demanding more transparency, traceability and quality assurance in the food chain

  17. Agricultural and fisheries products: concerns • HACCP (which has environmental aspects): may be expensive for small producers • Aflatoxin: compliance and testing may be very expensive (issues such as science and proportionality) • MRL levels in food products: too stringent for tropical conditions? • Developments in cut flowers • Fishery products: large funds required to establish infrastructure and build institutions

  18. Agricultural and fisheries products: concerns • Cuba, honey and coffee: lack of in-country technical capacity to verify compliance with the very low MRL limits required under EU regulation 2377/EC. • Peru: traditional foods are now subject to complex import regulations (EU regulation 258/97 on Novel Food and Novel Food Ingredients)due simply to their exogeniety • Caribbean countries: similar problems in exporting certain traditional food products to the US market, because MRL levels have not been defined

  19. Leather and textiles, concerns India • Bans on products containing traces of azo dyes, pentachlorophenol (PCP), other harmful amines and other substances • Eco-labels, based on life cycle analysis, buyer’s requirements and ISO standards • Animal rights issues (leather) Pakistan • With phasing out quantitative restrictions, quality standards and environment-related requirements of buyers in developed countries become more stringent

  20. Leather and textiles, implications South Asian • Problems of SMEs India: • Substitutes 2.5 times more expensive than azo dyes • Azo-free dyeing 15 to 20 per cent more expensive • High Costs of testing Nepal: • Weak regulatory and institutional framework to address problems faced by the export industry

  21. Leather and textiles, national responses India • The Government of India (GoI) has banned 112 harmful azo dyes. • pro-active role of Pollution Control Boards: norms for effluent treatment. • Dissemination of information and development of eco-standards. • The GoI has established a Technology Upgradation Fund, strengthened testing laboratories and been assisting textile units in securing certification

  22. Leather and textiles, national responses Pakistan • Pakistan National Environmental Quality Standards and Environmental Improvement Plans • Environment Technology Programme for Industry of the Federation of Pakistan Chamber of Commerce and Industries (FPCCI) Nepal • Joint initiative with the Governments of Finland to improve environmental performance and promote environmental labelling in certain export industries.

  23. Electronics EU:  • The Waste from Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Directive • The Restriction of the use of certain Hazardous Substances in electrical and electronic equipment (RoHS) Directive • Integrated Product Policy (IPP) • Green Purchasing Law (GPL) • The Draft Strategy for a Future Chemicals Policy Japan • Recycling regulations

  24. Electronics: implications • Since manufacturing of electronics components and other products are being increasingly outsourced to developing countries, companies and governments in these countries need to promote pro-active policies with regard to information gathering/management and product engineering/design • Developing country companies should also seek cooperation with transnational corporations and obtain information from customers

  25. Electronics Thailand • A high-level subcommittee set up under the National Committee for International Trade and Economic Policy to monitor the development of the EU WEEE and RoHS directives and propose a plan of action • The subcommittee has commissioned a study to investigate the specific implications and adjustment requirements

  26. Developmental aspects • Environmental requirements that adversely affect market access can have a negative effect on development and poverty alleviation • There can be longer term advantages from trade-induced shifts to more stringent standards in terms of greater resource efficiency, higher occupational safety, improved health conditions and less environmental pollution • There may be trade-offs especially in resource-constraint countries

  27. Developmental aspects • SME development • WTO issues • Special and differential treatment (S&D) • Technical assistance • Notification • Transfer of technology

  28. Action at national level • Raise awareness (gov., private sector) • Dissemination of standard-related information, early warning system • Strengthen national and regional institutions to conduct risk analysis and testing; monitor enforcement of standards and carry out certification. • R&D, innovation and enterprise development • Promote business partnerships • SMEs

  29. Action international community and WTO Bilateral cooperation Participation and adequate time to adjust Information dissemination Promoting harmonization and mutual recognition of product standards and regulations based on equivalence in the WTO Standards developed without involvement of producing and consuming countries should have a default assumption of being discriminatory to trade.

  30. Aid agencies • Strengthen capacities and assist developing countries to become standard setters • Assist developing countries in their participation in the work of international standardization bodies • National/regional cooperation • Cases where developing countries have successfully enhanced their participation? • Best practices on appropriate involvement of key trading partners in setting of environmental standards and regulations • Early warning systems

  31. Technical assistance • Large range of programmes • Piecemeal? • Often emerges when developing countries face problems in meeting requirements of importing countries • Long-term • Link TC/CB to enhance capacities to comply with environmental standards with broader TC/CB to enhance export comptetiveness

  32. Consultative mechanism To support: • Research on new trends in environmental requirements and likely implications for products of export interest to developing countries • Information management and dissemination • Pro-active adjustment strategies in exporting developing countries • Strategies for SMEs • Reliable statistical information to facilitate support policy-oriented research

More Related