Arab Times

EU, Canada trade deal enters into force

Worries about impact on environmen­t, health remain

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BRUSSELS, Sept 21, (AFP): A landmark free trade deal linking EU and Canada went into effect on Thursday despite lingering opposition from activists worried about the pact’s consequenc­es on the environmen­t and health.

The EU is hailing the deal as one of its most ambitious ever that will set a new standard for future deals, including with Japan, Australia and New Zealand.

Observers have said the Comprehens­ive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) could set a model for future ties between Britain and the EU after Brexit.

Canada called the deal “one of the most progressiv­e ever” and lit the iconic CN Tower in Toronto with the EU’s official colours late Wednesday.

The deal “will brighten a prosperous future for our middle class,” Canadian Trade Minister Francois Philippe Champagne said in a tweet.

The EU and Canada formally signed the landmark free trade deal, which was seven years in the making, in October last year after overcoming lastminute resistance from a small Belgian region that nearly torpedoed the entire agreement.

“This agreement encapsulat­es what we want our trade policy to be — an instrument for growth that benefits European companies and citizens,” European Commission President JeanClaude Juncker said in a statement.

However, it is “also a tool to project our values, harness globalisat­ion and shape global trade rules,” he added.

CETA has been implemente­d on a provisiona­l basis pending approval by the EU’s 38 national and regional parliament­s, which could take years.

Only six countries have so far completed the process: Latvia, Denmark, Spain, Croatia, Malta and Portugal, which voted in favour on Wednesday.

The pact affects 510 million European consumers and 35 million Canadians and even provisiona­lly, eliminated customs duties between Europe and Canada on 98 percent of products as of Thursday.

Left out of the deal until the end of the ratificati­on process is a controvers­ial investment protection scheme, a usual component of internatio­nal trade deals.

Under the scheme, companies have recourse to legal arbitratio­n if they believe their rights have been violated by a change in government policy.

This provision raised huge concerns among activists groups that fear the rollback of European regulation on the environmen­t and health if faced with the opposition of powerful multinatio­nals.

“It is unacceptab­le for CETA to come into force before national parliament­s have had their say,” said Greenpeace trade campaigner Kees Kodde.

“Canada has weaker food safety and labelling standards than the EU, and industrial agricultur­e more heavily dependent on pesticides and GM crops,” he added.

It was these concerns that led the Belgian region of Wallonia, with a population of 3.6 million, to hold up the deal until it won concession­s for its farmers.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Protestors shout slogans as they wave flags reading ‘yes to developmen­t’. Miners and workers from the Canada’s Eldorado Gold mine in northern Greece demonstrat­e outside the company’s headquarte­rs in Athens on Sept 21, against the suspension of...
(AFP) Protestors shout slogans as they wave flags reading ‘yes to developmen­t’. Miners and workers from the Canada’s Eldorado Gold mine in northern Greece demonstrat­e outside the company’s headquarte­rs in Athens on Sept 21, against the suspension of...

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