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Nations
bicker in Bali over ‘green’ goods trade
Foreign Desk Report
JIMBARAN (Indonesia)—Rich and poor countries failed on Sunday to agree
on a plan to open up trade in green goods, with Brazil fearing a major
U.S.-EU proposal raised on the fringes of climate talks in Bali was a
protectionist ruse.
At the end of two days of talks involving officials from 32 nations,
including 12 trade ministers, a final news conference descended into
farce as Brazil and the United States swapped recriminations.
The proposal involves cutting import tariffs on a list of 43
environmentally friendly goods, such as wind turbines and solar panels.
If widely supported, it could lead to a global cut in greenhouse gas
emissions blamed for climate change. “What there’s no agreement on is
the U.S.-EU proposal,” Brazils Minister of External Relations, Celso
Luiz Nunes Amorim, told reporters.
“I think this list is incomplete. It won’t do much for climate change.
It’s not proven what the effect it will have on climate change, maybe a
little bit here and there,” Amorim said. The trade officials were
meeting for the first time on the sidelines of an annual U.N. climate
conference, opening a new front in the global warming battle. About 20
finance ministers will also meet on Indonesia’s resort island of Bali on
Monday and Tuesday. But the result from Saturday and Sunday’s talks was
less than the United Nations and host Indonesia might have hoped.
Brazil was angry the proposal did not include biofuels. The country is
the world’s top producer of ethanol and the government suspected the
U.S.-EU measure’s real intention was to boost exports from rich nations.
“The protectionism is like the serpent’s head. The serpent will always
try put its head up,” Amorim said earlier on Sunday.
Amorim and U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab later argued in front
of the media over their respective positions about how to open markets
in environmentally friendly goods, which the Doha round of global trade
talks has been considering since 2001.
“The only single product whose effects on climate change is already
demonstrated — which is ethanol — is not part of the list,” said Amorim.
He estimated ethanol use in Brazil had avoided 670 million tonnes of
climate-warming carbon dioxide emissions in the past 30 years.
“We used a World Bank list because we didn’t want to appear to be
self-serving,” Schwab told reporters. “The U.S. is a net importer (of
these 43 goods). What’s complicated about ethanol is it shows up in
agricultural negotiations. Part of the confusion is where it shows up
technically.” She said the United States imported $18 billion of the
goods, while exports totalled $15 billion. Developing countries
including China, Mexico, Malaysia, Taiwan and Indonesia were all top
exporters of the goods on the list, she said.
About 190 countries are meeting at a luxury Indonesian beach resort in
Dec. 3-14 talks to try to launch negotiations on a broader climate
change pact to succeed or replace the Kyoto Protocol from 2013. Kyoto
only binds 36 industrialised countries to emissions curbs between
2008-2012.
World Trade Organisation chief Pascal Lamy said developing countries,
such as Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand, were leaders in some clean
technologies and would benefit from free trade in environmental goods.
He also said trade rules could be tweaked to help curb the output of
greenhouse gases, for example taking into account carbon taxes and
subsidies, or minimum environmental standards.
Trade ministers in Bali also called for the urgent and successful
conclusion of the Doha development agenda negotiations, including the
trade in environmental goods.
“There has to be a new complementary package which would include how to
facilitate technology transfer and adaptation for developing countries
(through) capacity building and aid for trade,” said Indonesia’s Trade
Minister Mari Elka Pangestu.
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