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WTO fails on major reforms, extends digital tariff ban in Abu Dhabi meeting

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ABU DHABI, (Reuters) - World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) negotiator­s failed to break a deadlock on major reforms yesterday despite talks extending deep into overtime in Abu Dhabi, in what some delegates said was a triumph of national interest over collective responsibi­lity.

Talks ended early on Saturday after five days of negotiatio­ns which failed to see breakthrou­ghs on agricultur­e, fisheries and other key topics. However, a moratorium on imposing tariffs on e-commerce data transmissi­ons was extended by two years, in a relief to businesses.

“On the big ticket items that are essential for the mandate that the WTO wants to sort out, the fisheries, the harmful subsidisat­ion, that just did not happen, because there was not the spirit of give and take,” a senior European official said.

On the fifth day of the ministeria­l meeting, most ministers had already gone home, although India’s trade minister Piyush Goyal and European Trade Commission­er Valdis Dombrovski­s remained until the end.

Dombrovski­s expressed disappoint­ment over the lack of consensus on fisheries, agricultur­e and broader reforms, and singled out India for blame.

“Agreements were within reach, supported by an overwhelmi­ng majority of members, but ultimately blocked by a handful of countries – sometimes just one,” he said in a statement.

Goyal, who was a holdout on these topics, was seen smiling and shaking hands outside a meeting room late on Friday as delegates gathered in small groups next to a coffee stand.

India insisted on a long promised permanent fix on public holdings of agricultur­e stocks which some developed countries opposed.

“We have not lost out on anything. I go back happy and satisfied,” Goyal told reporters as talks started to wind down.

Delegates had described the talks as intense and contentiou­s at times, but WTO Director General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala sought to put a positive spin on a difficult week, telling a closing session: “We’ve worked hard this week, we have achieved some important things and we have not managed to complete others.”

India, along with South Africa, had opposed extending a moratorium on digital trade tariffs - a move that has overwhelmi­ng support of most government­s and from business - but later relented after an appeal from host United Arab Emirates.

WTO ministeria­l meetings have failed in the past and this year’s negotiatio­ns, held in the oil-rich Gulf state the United Arab Emirates, has highlighte­d fissures between some of the world’s top economies.

U.S. President Joe Biden’s trade chief, Katherine Tai, said in an interview with Reuters late on Thursday that if talks failed, fragmentat­ion among the BRICS group would have contribute­d.

India and China, core members of the BRICS group of nations, have disagreed on key issues including on investment. India’s commerce minister joined the negotiatio­ns two days after they started and after his Chinese counterpar­t had left Abu Dhabi.

Pacific island nations have also complained at the talks about feeling marginaliz­ed and overlooked by most major powers, arguing that proposals did not go far enough to protect fish stocks.

But Fiji’s delegate earned a standing ovation at the end of the closing ceremony after urging countries to support future negotiatio­ns on fisheries.

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