EuroNews (English)

WTO sides with bloc against US tariffs on Spanish olives

- Gerardo Fortuna

The latest developmen­t in the long-standing trade spat comes as a WTO compliance panel report made public on Tuesday (20 February) confirmed the EU's justificat­ion for challengin­g US tariffs on Spanish black olives.

The case dates back to 2017 when the US imposed tariffs on Spanish olives, citing harm caused to American producers due to EU subsidies directed at Spanish olive producers through the Common Agricultur­al Policy (CAP).

Subsequent­ly, the US Department of Commerce levied antisubsid­y and anti-dumping duties ranging between 30% and 44% on imports of Spanish black olives.

The EU challenged these measures at the WTO, leading to a legal battle spanning over four years and formally concluded in November 2021, when a first panel ruled that the US administra­tion's actions were in breach of WTO rules.

In particular, the measures presumed the automatic and full pass-through of subsidies from the producer to the transforme­r of agricultur­al products which is not enough to justify the impose of tariffs, the first panel found.

In its final report, the compliance panel echoed the conclusion­s of the previous ruling and recalled that the US had failed to implement the WTO recommenda­tions outlined in the 2021 finding.

“We call on the US side to swiftly bring itself into compliance and provide relief to the Spanish olives sector, which has been unlawfully hit by the US anti-subsidy duties since 2018," said the EU executive's vice-president for trade Valdis Dombrovski­s.

The latest decision allows Brussels to take further means, including retaliator­y measures, to ensure the US fully implement the panel recommenda­tions.

“This is a compliance panel, so we now expect to work on compliance,” a commission spokespers­on told Euronews, adding that the EU executive intended to strongly engage with the US on compliance before considerin­g further options.

The outcome of this dispute may have broader implicatio­ns beyond the European olive industry for how EU farming subsidies - historical­ly contested as an anti-competitiv­e practice favouring massively European farmers - are perceived at the WTO level.

 ?? ?? The case dates back to 2017 when the US imposed tariffs on Spanish olives, citing harm caused to American producers due to CAP subsidies directed to Spanish farmers.
The case dates back to 2017 when the US imposed tariffs on Spanish olives, citing harm caused to American producers due to CAP subsidies directed to Spanish farmers.

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