The EU/US Gothenburg Summit - June 14, 2001 - Letter to Presidents
Bush, Persson and Prodi from TACD
(please note that this letter was sent identically to all three
Presidents - Romano Prodi, President of the European Commission,
Swedish Prime Minister Göran Persson, President of the European
Council, and George W. Bush, President of the United States of America.
The letter below is the one that was sent to President Bush.)
George W Bush
President of the United States
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington DC 20500
USA
13 June 2001
Dear President Bush
The Transatlantic Consumer Dialogue (TACD), the forum of the major
consumer organizations in the United States and the European Union,
is looking forward to the outcome of the EU-US summit on June 14th
with much interest. We are, however, very disappointed to see that,
once again, no civil society dialogues are represented at the summit
- only business.
Despite our absence we hope you will consider several matters that
are of great concern to consumers on both sides of the Atlantic.
In particular, we hope that this summit will see agreement by the
US not to challenge the new EU labeling and traceability policies
on GMOs at the World Trade Organization (WTO). We hope the discussion
can be used to avert such a challenge because the EU proposals must
not be weakened. Consumers everywhere want such labeling and protection.
TACD would very much like to see a joint statement on making patents
developed with government funds available to the World Health Organization
in order to tackle the terrible problems in Africa concerning AIDS
and other treatable illnesses, with the aim of ensuring global access
to health care.
Finally, TACD urges the EU and US to take this opportunity together
to affirm that all future trade agreements should protect government's
ability to provide and regulate basic services, such as health services,
education and water.
These and other important issues were discussed at the very successful
4th annual meeting of the Transatlantic Consumer Dialogue that took
place at the beginning of May 2001. The Statement of that meeting
is attached to this letter.
We look forward to learning the outcome of these discussions on
issues of great importance to EU and US consumers.
Yours sincerely
Ben Wallis
TACD Coordinator
On behalf of the TACD Steering Committee
REPORT ON THE FOURTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE TACD IN BRUSSELS, MAY
2001
TACD, a forum of 65 US and EU consumer organizations representing
some 600 million consumers, met for its 4th annual assembly in Brussels,
May 2-4, 2001. The meeting was attended by leaders of all the major
consumer organizations from both sides of the Atlantic, and senior
government officials involved with consumer and trade policy from
the EU and the US. The meeting reviewed the recent achievements
of the TACD, and pursued further, with US and EU government officials,
issues of high priority to consumer organizations, such as the World
Trade Organization Negotiations on Services, access to medicines,
GM foods, private data protection and transparency in government.
TACD was formed in 1998 and in less than three years has become
an important voice for promoting the consumers interest in the multilateral
trading regime.
The 4th Annual Meeting in Brussels centered its discussions with
governments on TACD priority issues areas, both in the plenary session
and in the detailed working group discussions.
SAFETY AND HUMAN RIGHTS OF PROTESTERS
IN QATAR MUST BE ASSURED
Noting the lack of transparency in the operations of the WTO and
the significant consumer concerns about negative impacts of WTO
decisions on public health, consumer and environmental standards,
TACD called for a thorough assessment of WTO performance to date
before the launch of a new round in Qatar The TACD made it clear
that, the choice of Doha, Qatar, as the venue for the next WTO ministerial
meeting was a step backwards in the WTO's efforts to build its legitimacy
and improve transparency. During the discussions both governments
were not clear about practical and other facilities that would be
made available for the civil society in Qatar. The Qatari government
had announced that only a limited number of credentialed NGOs would
be allowed into the country, with strict procedures for accreditation.
Rhoda Karpatkin of the Consumers Union of the US, told the governments,
"As leaders of two great democracies, you have a special responsibility
to ensure that the voices of dissent are heard. The safety and human
rights of all credentialed and non-credentialed protestors must
be assured." Further, TACD asked the governments to ensure
that civil society had the visas, affordable housing, transportation
and other practical tools needed to enter Qatar and peacefully protest
and for civil society representatives be offered an opportunity
to address the Ministerial. Both governments committed to follow
up on this matter, and TACD welcomed the commitment of the EU to
bring NGO representatives as part of their delegation, as well as
plans to hold daily briefings with the NGOs in Qatar. However, the
US government gave no such assurances.
PROTECT PUBLIC SERVICES AND DOMESTIC REGULATIONS
IN WTO SERVICES NEGOTIATIONS
The important issue of the ongoing WTO services negotiations was
the focus of an animated dialogue with Trade Minister Pascal Lamy
in the full plenary. TACD expressed its grave concern that these
negotiations that were taking place behind closed doors had the
potential to impact a wide variety of public services, such as health
services, education and water, and domestic regulations connected
to the delivery of these services. "Despite repeated assurances
from our governments that we need not fear the outcome of the highly
secret negotiations, we continue to see evidence of WTO staff and
negotiators pursuing liberalization as an end in itself" -
said Niel Ritchie of the Minnesota Institute of Agriculture and
Trade Policy - "a type of holy grail that will inevitably lead
us all to a rationalized, balanced and competitive global economy
where almost all needs will be met by the private sector. In a perfect
world this might be possible, but as we know our world is not perfect
and never will be".
TACD issued a series of recommendations on this topic, calling
for the right of governments to regulate in the public interest
to be broadly asserted as a new article in the WTO General Agreement
on Trade in Services (GATS). Such an article could prevent the wholesale
privatisation and deregulation of government services that many
consumer and environmental groups fear under the GATS. Both EU and
US governments stated that no new article was necessary, that they
thought that the preamble language in the GATS was sufficient for
these purposes. However TACD strongly believes that this article
is needed, not least because of a new EU position which calls for
a 'proportionality test' (balancing regulatory goals with the objective
of liberalizing trade); in addition, the EU wants language asserting
that service regulations not be "more burdensome than necessary"
to ensure quality of service. TACD feels great concern about any
such tests that will leave to a closed WTO tribunal to decide which
domestic regulations are in the public interest and which are barriers
to trade.
The US government indicated at the meeting that it does not support
such a necessity test - news welcomed by the consumer advocates.
However, the US government does support measures that would require
countries to notify and justify to other WTO governments any new
service regulations that could impact trade and the government supports
"cluster negotiations" in the environmentally sensitive
area of energy.
NO GM OR LABELLING CHALLENGES IN THE WTO
In the roundtable discussion with David Byrne, Commissioner for
Health and Consumer Protection, as well as during detailed discussions
with both governments in the Food Working Group, TACD pressed its
detailed recommendations linked to consumer choice (labeling) and
safety (approval of GM foods). Consumer advocates were encouraged
by US assurances that, following the Starlink corn incident, approval
would not be given for animal feed use only of GM corn, but disappointed
that the US could not re-iterate its assurance, given to TACD in
February 2000, that it would not bring challenges in the WTO on
the issue of GM food labeling. "The Starlink incident - where
corn intended for animal feed penetrated the human food chain -
shows that current measures are not enough and our demands are fully
justified. We therefore welcome the EU report of its follow up to
the EU-US Forum on Biotechnology" stated Sue Davies of the
UK Consumers Association "which amongst its 23 recommendations
calls for mandatory labeling and pre-market approval. We note that
the EU are keen to maintain a dialogue on this issue and look forward
to a similar response from the new US administration."The EU
updated the consumer representatives on its plans to review labelling
of GM foods and the possibility of extending current provisions
to include labelling of all GM derivatives in line with TACD recommendations.
The US remained unconvinced of the need for mandatory labelling.
One of the TACD priority items for 2001 is reducing the use of
antibiotics in animal and food production. In October 2000 the US
proposed a ban on the use of a group of antibiotics called fluoroquinolones
to treat diseases in poultry, because such use is a cause of resistant
Campylobacter infections in humans. Although the EU has taken steps
to control antibiotics in feed, it has not addressed the issue of
fluoroquinolones to treat disease in poultry. At the May meeting,
TACD called upon the EU to follow the US action. The EU responded
that it was reviewing its policy on fluoroquinolones, and TACD asked
the EC to report on the status of this review by October. In addition,
TACD called upon the US government to follow the EU's lead and consider
a broader ban on antibiotics in animal feed.
Consumer advocates were also encouraged by a commitment made by
both EU and US officials to hold at least one joint meeting per
year to coordinate regulatory enforcement efforts aiming at prohibiting
false and misleading claims on food packages. Bruce Silverglade,
of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, stated that "Multinational
companies sometimes engage in the same deceptive practices on both
sides of the Atlantic - it makes sense that the EU and US enforcement
officials share information and coordinate their efforts to prevent
fraud."
PUBLICLY DEVELOPED PATENTS FOR MEDICINES
MUST BE PUT TO PUBLIC USE
On the issue of the WTO, Intellectual Property and Access to Medicines
TACD welcomed progress on both sides of the Atlantic but asserted
that much more remained to be done. Two of TACD's recommendations
were the focus of discussion during the meeting: James Love, of
the Consumer Project on Technology based in Washington D.C., asked
both governments to find ways to ensure that patents developed with
public monies be used in the public interest; and Ann Davison, outgoing
EU Trade Chair, noted that patents for medicines such as TAXOL (an
anti-cancer treatment) were developed with public monies, yet priced
too high for many consumers. TACD further recommended that the US
and the EU enter into agreements with the WHO and other international
public health organisations, which would allow these groups to use
patents developed with public funds to expand access to health care
in poor countries.
In addition, TACD urged the US government to withdraw its WTO suit
against a provision in Brazilian law that helps the country produce
needed medicines. TACD asked the US if there was not some other
developed country that has the same law. "We are told this
challenge relates to a provision in Brazil's law that requires medicines
producers to manufacture locally, and would not affect Brazil's
successful anti-AIDS program. We believe however that a super-power
pursuing a developing country, especially one that has done such
an exceptional job in addressing the HIV/AIDS crisis, sends the
wrong message - we urge the US to drop this suit," said Felix
Cohen of the Dutch Consumer Association.
CONSUMER RIGHTS MUST BE PROTECTED IN HAGUE CONVENTION ON E-COMMERCE
TACD called upon the delegates to the June Diplomatic Conference
on the proposed Hague Convention on Jurisdiction and Foreign Judgments
to protect the right of consumers to seek redress in the courts
where they live, to exclude intellectual property, and to address
concerns regarding unfair terms in non-negotiated contracts.
"Depriving consumers of access to their own courts in the
case of cross-border disputes is effectively denying them their
right to redress via the public justice system," said Dirk
Klasen, of the German Consumers Organization. TACD also called upon
the governments to ensure that the Hague Convention exclude intellectual
property from the convention, as cross-border recognition and enforcement
of Internet-based intellectual property judgments raises the prospect
of reduced public rights to fair use of such property, contrary
to the public interest. In addition, concerns were raised about
the definition of consumer transactions in the Hague Convention,
because "individuals who purchase [for example] airline tickets
or computer software for business purposes under non-negotiable
contract terms are not protected under the current draft Convention."
PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IN REGULATORY
DECISION-MAKING MUST BE ASSURED
Just in time to impact the release of the EU White Paper on Governance
due out in July, TACD sponsored a plenary forum on the topic of
open government and transparency. "Any form of regulation must
meet the requirements of legitimacy, efficacy, consumer confidence
and coherence", said Jim Murray of BEUC, the European Consumers
Organisation. "Self-regulation cannot meet these requirements.
Nor will co-regulation alone, without a clear legal framework and
back-up. Mandatory regulation will always be necessary in some areas.
The White Paper on Governance must ensure a proper level of mandatory
regulation in sensitive areas and must guarantee public participation
in decision-making".
In the plenary dedicated to Open Government, consumer advocates
learned about the differing systems of governance in the US and
the EU and the strong laws promoting public participation in decision
making in the United States. Participants expressed disappointment
at what seemed to be a very qualified support for transparency in
the in the presentation by Jerome Vignon, the EU Chief Advisor on
the White Paper on Governance.
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