EU-US trade deal ‘failed’: minister
GERMANY’S vice chancellor and economy minister, Sigmar Gabriel, said yesterday that negotiations on a massive trade between the European Union and the United States were effectively dead in the water.
“The talks with the US have de facto failed because we Europeans of course must not succumb to American demands,” he told public broadcaster ZDF. “Nothing is moving forward.”
Negotiators from the US and the EU are in talks to finalise the proposed Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) which would create the world’s largest free trade area.
But the negotiations have been bogged down over the terms of the agreement as well as Britain’s shock vote to leave the European Union and rising opposition to the deal in France and Germany.
The setbacks have raised serious doubts that it will be achieved by the end of the year as hoped.
Activists who have opposed TTIP since negotiations began in 2013 say the deal would only benefit multinationals and harm consumers.
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls has said it would be “impossible” for the two sides to conclude negotiations on a trade deal by the end of 2016.
The deal known as CETA was formally concluded in 2014 and requires the approval of 28 EU member states and European Parliament.