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Customs

Progress made on Environmental Goods Agreement

Publish Date: 
06 Dec 2016

Where is South Africa, and for that matter Sacu and the SADC countries?

Ministers and senior officials from the 18 participants in the Environmental Goods Agreement (EGA) - representing 46 WTO members - met at the WTO headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland on the weekend, of 04 December to work towards liberalising trade on a range of important environmental goods.

The 18 participants representing 46 WTO members account for most of the global trade in environmental goods. Since January 2014 they have been engaged in negotiations to slash duties on products used in a variety of environmentally related functions including generating clean and renewable energy; improving energy and resource efficiency; reducing air, water and soil pollution; managing solid and hazardous waste; noise abatement; and monitoring environmental quality.

The EGA participants are: Australia; Canada; China; Costa Rica; the European Union (representing Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Republic of Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom); Hong Kong, China; Iceland; Israel; Japan; Korea; New Zealand; Norway; Singapore; Switzerland; Liechtenstein; Chinese Taipei; Turkey; and the United States of America.

Constructive talks were held and progress was made, but participants were not in a position to close the existing gaps at this point. The intensive discussions set the stage for further talk.

The WTO Director-General said:

“Participants negotiated in good faith and made good progress towards an agreement. I believe that the knowledge and understanding gained in these discussions will help us to move forward in the near future. I urge participants to show whatever flexibility they can to help conclude the deal.

This is not the usual kind of trade agreement as it is focused on protecting a common global good: the environment. The trading system should be in a position to make a positive and meaningful contribution towards tackling environmental degradation. I believe that all delegations involved in these discussions remain committed to this, and to building on recent achievements such as the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and the UN's 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda.”

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