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wto trade deal: friends of the earth international in the media

At the end of July, 2004, the world's governments agreed the framework for a new trade system. This page shows extracts of media coverage of Friends of the Earth International's response to the deal.

august 1 2004

press association: trade deal does not go far enough
financial times: big nations hail wto breakthrough
reuters: europe lauds wto deal; china complains

august 2 2004

euractiv.com: doha round back on track
eu observer.com: world trade deal welcomed
oneworld us: international groups denounce world trade pact
the scotsman: trade talks no help to poor
gulf daily news: farm subsidy deal 'major step forward'
the toronto star: wto deal fails to win over everyone

August 1 2004

PRESS ASSOCIATION

'Trade Deal Does Not Go Far Enough'

Britain ’s charitable and environmental groups reacted with dismay today to plans to make world trade fairer for poor countries – arguing it did not go far enough.

But Friends of the Earth were unimpressed by the deal, saying it would prove unfair on the developing countries and damage the environment .

“Governments are trading away our environment at the WTO,” said Alexandra Wandel.

“Corporate lobby groups will be the big winners, the environment and the poor the big losers.”

Reprinted amongst others in the Scotsman newspaper: http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=3282980


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FINANCIAL TIMES

'Big trade nations hail WTO breakthrough'

Leading trading nations on Sunday applauded a breakthrough deal in the Doha global trade round, saying it would put the stalled talks back on track and revive confidence in the multilateral trading system.

Some charitable groups said the agreement did not go far enough. “The commitment to eliminate export subsidy credits is missing any substance as no end date is mentioned,” said Friends of the Earth.

http://news.ft.com/cms/s/838c6b94-e396-11d8-9f08-00000e2511c8.html


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REUTERS

'Europe Lauds WTO Deal; China Complains'

European economic giants Germany , Britain and France warmly welcomed a deal Sunday to salvage world trade talks but China complained developing countries were not satisfied and an environmental group hit at "empty promises."

friends of the earth criticism

Environmental group Friends of the Earth criticized as "empty promises" the concessions made by Washington and Brussels on agriculture.  

"The commitment to eliminate export subsidies credits is missing any substance as no end date is mentioned in the text," it said.

The group also called the talks secretive and undemocratic because non-government organizations and many countries were unable to sit at the negotiating table.


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August 2 2004

EURACTIV.COM

'Doha round back on track'

A breakthrough for global trade, or merely an agreement to agree? Opinions vary, but key nations did agree to eliminate controversial export subsidies on agricultural products on 29 June.

"This is really a good day for the world economy, for Europe and especially developing countries," said Commissioner for Agriculture Franz Fischler. However, the exact date is yet to be set, a fact underlined by NGOs such as Friends of The Earth.

"The commitment to eliminate export subsidy credits is missing any substance as no end date is mentioned," said a statement by Friends of the Earth.

http://www.euractiv.com/cgi-bin/cgint.exe?204&OIDN=1508096&-tt=cr


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EU OBSERVER.COM

'World trade deal welcomed'

After five long days of negotiation, trade talks on Sunday (2 August) came to an end with an agreement on further liberalisation of world trade.

Still others are not happy with the agreement at all.

"If the WTO proceeds on the course just laid out, these negotiations will pose a serious threat to people and the environment around the world", said David Waskow of Friends of the Earth US.

The organisation said that the deal had been reached after rich countries put intense pressure on developing countries.

http://www.euobserver.com/?sid=9&aid=17037


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ONEWORLD US

'International Groups Denounce World Trade Pact'

While negotiators from the United States and the European Union (EU) declared victory in rescuing global trade talks in the early hours on Sunday at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in Geneva, international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) denounced the results as a sell-out of poor countries and the environment.

Friends of the Earth International (FoEI) also complained about what it called "undemocratic procedures and intense pressure" from the U.S. and the EU in the rush to secure a final accord.

"Corporate lobby groups will be the big winners, the environment and the poor the big losers," said FoEI's Alexandra Wandel, point in particular to the agreement on Non-Agricultural Market Access (NAMA), a part of the framework accord which calls for the liberalization of all natural resources, particularly in fisheries, gems, and mining. NAMA would make it much more difficult for developing countries to protect these resources from foreign investors or collect revenue from their export.

"The NAMA agreement could further deepen the de-industrialization crisis in these countries, thus accelerating unemployment and poverty and forcing countries to rely heavily on unsustainable and harmful exports of natural resources."

At the same time, FoEI charged that the "so-called concessions" made by the EU and the U.S. in agricultural negotiations - a commitment to cut some farm subsidies by 20 percent - may "turn out to be empty promises."

"The commitment to eliminate export subsidies credits is missing any substance as no end-date is mentioned in the text," the Brussels-based group said. "On domestic support for agriculture, language in the framework agreement clearly opens the door for the EU and the U.S. to maintain nearly their entire level of current subsidies and to use these to continue the dumping of agricultural goods in developing-country markets. At the same time, developing countries could be forced to give up import protections used to achieve food sovereignty."

http://us.oneworld.net/article/view/91015/1/3319


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THE SCOTSMAN

'Trade talks no help to poor'

BRITAIN ’S charitable and environmental groups reacted with dismay yesterday to plans to make world trade fairer for poor countries - arguing it did not go far enough.

However, Friends of the Earth was unimpressed by the deal, saying it would prove unfair on the developing countries and damage the environment.

"Governments are trading away our environment at the WTO," said Alexandra Wandel, a spokeswoman.

"Corporate lobby groups will be the big winners, the environment and the poor the big losers."

http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=883832004


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GULF DAILY NEWS

'Farm subsidy deal 'major step forward''

European economic giants Germany , Britain and France warmly welcomed a deal yesterday to salvage world trade talks.

Environmental group Friends of the Earth criticised as "empty promises" the concessions made by Washington and Brussels on agriculture.

"The commitment to eliminate export subsidies credits is missing any substance as no end date is mentioned in the text," it said.

http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/Story.asp?Article=88249&Sn=BUSI&IssueID=27135


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THE TORONTO STAR

'WTO deal fails to win over everyone'

European economic giants Germany , Britain and France warmly welcomed a deal yesterday to salvage world trade talks but China complained developing countries were not satisfied and an environmental group hit at "empty promises."

Environmental group Friends of the Earth criticised as "empty promises" the concessions made by Washington and Brussels on agriculture.

 

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