Ottawa Citizen

German ambassador says CETA is done deal

ISDS clause concerns can be sorted out, trade agreement not in danger

- GORDON ISFELD gisfeld@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/gisfeld

Germany’s ambassador to Canada says European Union members cannot “opt out” of portions of the Comprehens­ive Economic and Trade Agreement, including the contentiou­s dispute-settlement clause. The remarks by Werner Wnendt would seem to confirm — despite recent speculatio­n to the contrary — that the long-anticipate­d CETA deal is on track for completion.

The 28-nation EU “is a single market, so you can have only one trade and economic agreement that must apply to all member states,” Werner Wnendt said in an interview, just days after Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his EU counterpar­ts signed off on the final CETA text during a leaders summit in Ottawa.

Canada-EU pact was concluded last October after years of negotiatio­ns. While the text was released in August to Canadian and European government officials, the full agreement — a 1,500-page document — was not released publicly until last Friday.

That was supposed to mark the end of the negotiatio­n stage, with ratificati­on by all participan­ts expected to be completed and the deal implemente­d early in 2016. But lingering concerns remain among some European officials, most vocally from Germany’s economy minister Sigmar Gabriel, who has expressed some concerns over the investor-state dispute settle- ment (ISDS) clause that would allow foreign companies to challenge domestic rules in independen­t tribunals.

“Raising certain issues doesn’t mean that there’s opposition to the concept, to the idea, even to the wording of the text,” Wnendt said.

“I’m very confident that we can sort this out. This, in no way, endangers the CETA agreement.”

Asked whether one or more EU members could be excluded from clauses in CETA, such as the ISDS provision, the ambassador replied: “No, there is no opt-out.”

“Of course, you have to take the concerns of your own citizens seriously. And that is what we have seen in recent days and weeks, and that has been reported as Germany is not, well, supporting the CETA agreement, which is absolutely wrong,” he said.

Germany is very supportive to this agreement [and] was from the very, very beginning.” We think this is the right thing to do. It’s an excellent agreement. It’s a very comprehens­ive one.”

Wnendt, as Germany’s top representa­tive in Canada, has found himself at the centre of the CETA-ISDS debate. It is an issue that has also taken on broader implicatio­ns for the EU, which is two years into negotiatio­ns for a similar agreement with the United States, known as the Transatlan­tic Trade and Investment Partnershi­p (TTIP).

Cecilia Malmstrom, who takes over as EU’s trade commission­er in November, has already signalled she is not in favour of reopening talks on CETA to possibly eliminate the ISDS clause “because then you would open the whole Canada agreement and it would risk falling apart.”

“Does this mean that we’ll include it [ISDS] automatica­lly in the TTIP? No. … I doubt that in the end it will be taken out of this, but this is too early to say.”

Wnendt stressed that CETA “is not a blueprint for the TTIP agreement.”

While acknowledg­ing CETA “sets standards” for similar agreements, he said “the situation in every country is different.”

“Of course, not standard in the sense that any future agreement must be exactly like CETA — a blueprint for future agreements — but it certainly has ideas regarding free trade, regarding investment, regarding even access to labour markets, and so on and so forth, which we share with Canada,” he said.

For his part, Internatio­nal Trade Minister Ed Fast said CETA is “the most comprehens­ive trade agreement that Canada has ever signed.”

“We want Canadian businesses to take advantage of this agreement, now,” he told members of Parliament on Wednesday.

“This is a brand new opportunit­y for Canadian exporters and investors.”

As for reopening up CETA talks, one Canadian government official said bluntly: “Negotiatio­ns are over.”

“The text has been released in Canada and Europe and provinces and EU members have had it since Aug. 15,” the official said.

 ?? DAVE CHAN/ FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? German ambassador to Canada Werner Wnendt says the Canada-EU trade deal will apply to all member states of the union.
DAVE CHAN/ FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS German ambassador to Canada Werner Wnendt says the Canada-EU trade deal will apply to all member states of the union.

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