The main obsession in Brussels this week has been the EU-US trade spat. All eyes will be on the Group of Seven meeting in Canada. Mercosur and EU negotiators have been working until the time of writing on narrowing gaps on ‘geographical indications’ protection and Mercosur’s offer on autos (rules of origin …
Agriculture
Week ahead in EU trade: Mercosur, US duties, aluminium, G-7, Brexit, UNCTAD
There’s only one big event on the Brussels trade agenda this week – another negotiating round with Mercosur – but that doesn’t mean the coming days will be quiet. Between the start of US tariffs on European steel and aluminium, the EU’s decision to respond with a World Trade Organization …
Week in EU trade: EU retaliation, Australia and NZ, Mercosur, palm oil
This has been another big week in EU trade. Member states managed to cobble together a joint approach to US President Donald Trump’s steel and aluminium tariff threat. The EU lost two World Trade Organization cases – the big-ticket Airbus case and the more symbolic Pakistan plastic pellets case …
Comment: EU trade agreement agriculture quotas are of little use
Import quotas on sensitive agricultural products opened in the EU’s latest FTAs appear to be of little use to both exporters and importers. The last round of EU-Mercosur trade negotiations held last week ended in acrimony. Both EU agriculture market access – aka quotas on beef, sugar and ethanol …
In brief: EU starts monitoring aluminium imports, US beef quota noise
There are only a few days to go before the EU learns whether it will manage to sidestep US duties on steel and aluminium. In March, the Trump administration granted the bloc and five countries temporary exemptions from tariffs adopted on national security grounds until 1 May, hoping to extract …
Intense agriculture lobbying as Mercosur talks resume
There is intense lobbying in Brussels on beef, sugar and ethanol this week as dormant trade talks resume with Mercosur, the South American bloc.
Beyond Brussels: ‘Winds of change are blowing’ on WTO rules, Wolff says
Initiatives and discussions involving large groups of countries on issues such as electronic commerce and investment facilitation signal that global trade rules are set for a revamp, says Alan Wolff, deputy director-general of the World Trade Organization. “The WTO rulebook very likely will be updated to address current and …
Beyond Brussels: Trump targets ‘brutal’ EU in speech to farm-state officials
US President Donald Trump’s decision to study rejoining Trans-Pacific Partnership talks and his suggestion that a trade war with China could be averted if Beijing opened its market to more American goods grabbed the headlines yesterday. But he also had a few things to say – none of them very …
Beyond Brussels: Don’t get your hopes up about Indian mini-ministerial
Almost all of the more than 50 World Trade Organization members that India invited to next week’s “mini-ministerial” plan to attend, but the two-day meeting is expected to accomplish little to tackle problems that have dogged the WTO for years. India decided to hold the informal gathering after the …
A week in Brussels: Singapore, Mercosur, agriculture
This week’s main news was the announcement of new steps to make labour and environment provisions in EU free trade agreement have more bite, and the looming steel wars between Brussels and Washington. There’s been a lot of ASEAN activity going on as well (more soon). Below is what else is good …