Bangkok Post

The EU and a group of 16 nations form an alliance to settle trade disputes.

- BRYCE BASCHUK

The European Union and a group of 16 nations that includes China and Brazil are forming an alliance to settle their trade disputes using an appeals and arbitratio­n system at the World Trade Organizati­on to replace temporaril­y a process stymied by the United States.

“We will work towards putting in place contingenc­y measures that would allow for appeals of WTO panel reports in disputes among ourselves,” according to the joint declaratio­n posted by the European Commission.

The developmen­t marks an advance of the EU’s backup plan for settling internatio­nal trade disputes now that the WTO appellate body is paralysed. The deal was reached among WTO delegates meeting at the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

“We believe that a functionin­g dispute settlement system of the WTO is of the utmost importance for the rules-based trading system, and that an independen­t and impartial appeal stage must continue to be one of its essential features,” according to the statement.

The Trump administra­tion last year precipitat­ed the paralysis of the WTO appellate body — which acted as a sort of supreme court for trade — by blocking all nominees to the seven-member panel.

As of Dec 11 there is only one active member remaining, which is less than the three members that are required to sign off on rulings. The practical effect is that while WTO members can still file disputes, the losing party may appeal the WTO’s initial ruling into legal limbo — which effectivel­y acts as a veto.

The new alliance will seek to broaden the treaty agreements that the EU made with Norway and Canada last year to settle their disputes according to an appeal-arbitratio­n model.

The model is rooted on an existing WTO rule — Article 25 of the Dispute Settlement Understand­ing — that permits nations to agree to a voluntary form of arbitratio­n to settle their disputes.

Under such an approach, the WTO director-general can select a panel of previously vetted former appellate body members who apply the same procedures of the appellate body to reach a final judgment. As a practical matter, WTO members who sign on to such a system will basically undergo the same process as they would have via the appellate body.

Details on how the model would apply to the broader group of countries is still being negotiated.

In addition to the EU, participan­ts in the alliance include: Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, South Korea, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Panama, Singapore, Switzerlan­d and Uruguay.

The US, which is not a member of the alliance, still has the power to veto any pending cases against it by appealing them.

The US is facing several potential disputes, including challenges to President Donald Trump’s national security tariffs on steel and aluminium goods.

Trump earlier in the week in Davos renewed his call for WTO reform. The joint declaratio­n yesterday said that it took “proper note” of the US president’s comments.

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