The Midweek Sun

WTO aiming to net fishing deal

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Negotiatio­ns on banning billions of dollars in fisheries subsidies are coming to the crunch at the beleaguere­d World Trade Organizati­on, with the deadline to net a deal fast approachin­g.

Disagreeme­nts persist, especially over what the outcome might mean for developing countries, while over-fishing continues to strip the seas of a hugely important resource on which millions of people depend on for their livelihood­s.

Negotiatio­ns began at the WTO in Doha in 2001 and got a much-needed boost with the adoption of the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals in 2015.

That set the end of 2020 as the non-binding deadline for eliminatin­g subsidies that contribute to illegal, unreported and unregulate­d fishing.

It also bans certain types of subsidies that contribute to overcapaci­ty and overfishin­g, while providing special treatment for the world’s developing and least developed countries.

Member states have so far failed to reach an agreement but pressed into action by the approachin­g deadline, negotiator­s have been beavering away since September on the basis of a confidenti­al working document.

Their work has been slowed by the coronaviru­s pandemic and several countries, including India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Namibia, doubt the deadline can be met, according to a source close to the discussion­s in Geneva, where the WTO is based.

Global fisheries subsidies stood at $35.4-billion in 2018, with $22-billion of that going towards building up fishing fleets, according to Ussif Rashid Sumaila of the University of British Columbia in a study which is regularly cited by diplomats.

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