Medicine Hat News

U.S. proposing to de-fang NAFTA’s enforcemen­t systems

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ARLINGTON, United States The United States has requested a drastic weakening of the systems that enforce the North American Free Trade Agreement by settling disputes, sources said Saturday of the latest American proposals that would drasticall­y overhaul NAFTA.

The U.S. wants to strip down the three sections that settle disputes: Chapter 11 that lets companies sue government­s, Chapter 19 that allows companies to fight to overturn duties, and Chapter 20 on country-to-country disputes.

The American proposals would render all of them toothless. Chapter 11 would become voluntary, with countries being allowed to opt out. Chapter 19 would be eliminated entirely, after a phase-out period. And Chapter 20's panels would become an advisory body.

This would have a major effect on the trade agreement as all the bodies meant to act as its watchdogs would be de-fanged, said a source familiar with the talks, asking to remain anonymous.

“It’s very much NAFTA-minus,” he said.

The biggest anticipate­d fight is over Chapter 19. Canada walked out of the original freetrade negotiatio­ns with the U.S. in 1987, refusing any agreement without a mechanism that allows companies to fight antidumpin­g duties. Over time, Canadian companies have used it in softwood-lumber cases, and could use it again if the Bombardier-versus-Boeing dispute drags on.

Members of President Donald Trump’s team describe these panels as a violation of sovereignt­y, where foreign, unelected courts make judgments on how domestic law should be applied. It echoes a longstandi­ng argument made by groups on the left critical of trade deals.

An example of one case that has raised the ire of NAFTA critics involves U.S. company Bilcon — now seeking US$101 million after it won a suit against the federal and provincial government­s under Chapter 11, after its plans for a quarry and marine terminal were blocked in Nova Scotia.

One prominent trade analyst suggests Canada might easily let Chapter 11 die.

The Canadian government has occasional­ly lost suits, like Bilcon, while the U.S. is undefeated, a dominant track record that has some baffled over why the U.S. would want to weaken it.

“Dropping this would not be difficult for Canada to agree,” said a paper earlier this year from Dan Ciuriak, former deputy chief economist of Canada's foreign-affairs department, and leader of its modelling division.

“All in all, the demise of NAFTA Chapter 11 should be accepted by Canada.”

But Chapter 19 is a different story — his paper points out this chapter was deemed critical for Canada entering NAFTA in the first place.

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