The Freeman

Phl seeks to speed up WTO talks on fisheries subsidies

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MANILA—Leading the Philippine delegation at the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) Virtual Trade Negotiatio­ns Committee Ministeria­l-level Meeting on Fisheries Subsidies on 15 July 2021, Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez and Agricultur­e Secretary William Dar encouraged trade and agricultur­al ministers to speed up negotiatio­ns to come up with new discipline­s to eliminate subsidies that contribute to illegal, unreported and unregulate­d (IUU) fishing, overfished stocks, and overcapaci­ty and overfishin­g in time for the 12th WTO Ministeria­l Conference (MC12) to be held by December this year.

“The Philippine­s stands together with other members who are committed to deliver an outcome in the fisheries subsidy negotiatio­ns ahead of MC12. This will only be possible if there is solid political will and diplomatic flexibilit­y in the negotiatio­ns,” Trade Secretary Lopez said in his statement during the meeting.

The current draft text of the agreement contains a carve-out that if a prohibited subsidy occurs in disputed waters, it will not be addressed by a WTO panel. As this will provide a loophole for countries involved in maritime disputes to be exempted from the discipline­s, Agricultur­e Secretary Dar urged the WTO members to reconsider the current language.

“Issues of territoria­l claims or delimitati­on of maritime boundaries or zones are of the highest concern for the Philippine­s but nothing must prohibit a duly constitute­d Panel from hearing a case,” Secretary Dar stressed. He also emphasized that flexibilit­y and exemptions for poor and vulnerable artisanal fishers in developing country and least-developed countries should not create a permanent exception from effective discipline­s to address overcapaci­ty and overfishin­g. Declining fish stocks threaten to worsen poverty and endanger coastal communitie­s that rely on fishing. According to the WTO, based on the latest data from the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on, fish stocks are at risk of collapsing in many parts of the world due to overexploi­tation. An estimated 34% of global stocks are overfished compared with 10% in 1974, reflecting a pace of exploitati­on where the fish population cannot replenish itself.

 ?? DTI.GOV.PH ?? DTI Secretary Ramon M. Lopez sits alongside DA Secretary William Dar while they lead talks on fishery subsidies.
DTI.GOV.PH DTI Secretary Ramon M. Lopez sits alongside DA Secretary William Dar while they lead talks on fishery subsidies.

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