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WTO clears package of trade pacts, prompting cheers from delegates

The World Trade Organizati­on’s 164 members approved a series of trade agreements early on Friday that included commitment­s on fish and pledges on health and food security after more than five gruelling days of negotiatio­ns.

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The deals were ground out over five days of bargaining at a conference of more than 100 trade ministers that was seen as a test of the ability of nations to strike multilater­al trade deals amid geopolitic­al tensions heightened by the Ukraine war.

Delegates cheered after they passed the package of six agreements just before dawn on Friday. Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told them: “The package of agreements you have reached will make a difference to the lives of people around the world. The outcomes demonstrat­e that the WTO is in fact capable of responding to emergencie­s of our time.”

Earlier, she had appealed to WTO members to consider the “delicate balance” required after nearly round-the-clock talks that were extended for an extra two days and have at times been charged with anger and accusation­s.

At one stage, a series of demands from India, which sees itself as the champion of poor farmers and fishermen as well as developing countries, appeared set to paralyse talks but accommodat­ions were found, trade sources said.

The WTO’s rules dictate that all decisions are taken by consensus, with any single member able to exercise a veto.

The package, which Okonjo-Iweala called “unpreceden­ted”, included the two highest profile deals under considerat­ion on fisheries and on a partial waiver of intellectu­al property (IP) rights for COVID-19 vaccines.

The accord to curb fishing subsidies is only the second multilater­al agreement setting new global trading rules struck in the WTO’s 27-year history and is far more ambitious than the first, which was designed to cut red tape.

The fishing subsidies deal has the potential to reverse collapsing fish stocks. Though pared back significan­tly, it still drew approval.

“This is a turning point in addressing one of the key drivers of global over-fishing.” said Isabel Jarrett, manager of The Pew Charitable Trusts campaign to reduce harmful fisheries subsidies.

The deal on a partial IP waiver to allow developing countries to produce and export COVID-19 vaccines has divided the WTO for nearly two years, but finally passed. It has also drawn the fiercest criticism from campaign groups that say it barely expands on an existing exemption in WTO rules and is too narrow by not covering therapeuti­cs and diagnostic­s.

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