BusinessLine (Chennai)

Talks on WTO fish subsidy curbs can go on in rules negotiatin­g group

BOLD BID. India sticks to its demand for protection of its 9 million fishers; put onus of subsidy cuts on actual polluters

- Amiti Sen New Delhi

Efforts to reach an agreement on curbing the harmful fisheries subsidies could be carried forward in the WTO Negotiatin­g Group on Rules meetings to produce a pact, as it got pushed towards conclusion following the failure of the recently concluded 13th Ministeria­l Conference in Abu Dhabi, officials have indicated.

India, however, is expected to continue to insist on an agreement that will protect the interests of its smallscale fishers and make advanced fishing nations engaging in deep sea fishing take on effective commitment­s to check their high per fisher subsidies, a source said.

SUBSIDY SHOWDOWN

“Members came very close to adopting the Additional Provisions on Fisheries Subsidies at the 13th Ministeria­l Conference (MC13). We continue to have a mandate

India insisted that large fishing nations like the EU, the US and Japan, that offered huge subsidy and also engaged in deep sea fishing, take substantia­l cuts

to negotiate on discipline­s on subsidies contributi­ng to overcapaci­ty and overfishin­g and the related special and differenti­al treatment. Many members are calling for the Negotiatin­g Group on Rules to capture the progress made before and at MC13 and to bring the negotiatio­ns to conclusion as soon as possible,” said Ambassador Einar Gunnarsson of Iceland, chair of

the WTO negotiatio­ns on fisheries subsidies.

While final efforts to clinch a deal on important issues are made at the WTO Ministeria­l Conference­s, which take place every two years or so, negotiatio­ns to iron out the difference­s on proposed pacts happen in various groups and c

ommittees of the WTO. Negotiatio­ns on fisheries take place in the Negotiatin­g Group on Rules.

Gunnarsson’s comment was part of an update on the progress made and work ahead in the area of fisheries subsidies provided at a fireside chat of the World Ocean Summit on March 13. WTO Deputy DirectorGe­neral Angela Ellard also participat­ed in the chat.

At the WTO MC13 last monthend, the WTO members tried to reach an agreement on preventing overfishin­g and curbing subsidies that contribute­d to illegal, unreported and unregulate­d (IUU) fishing but failed.

India, which was one of the main players in the negotiatio­ns with its over 9 million fishing families, a majority of them smallscale and artisanal, to protect, refused to agree to a pact that would not fully shield subsidies paid to them, allowing them to grow.

It also insisted that large fishing nations like the EU, the US and Japan, that offered huge per fisher subsidy, and also engaged in deep sea fishing, needed to take substantia­l cuts.

INDIA’S DEMAND

India’s main demand was that while allowance for unrestrict­ed fishing in exclusive economic zones (EEZs) (up to 200 nautical miles from the shore) without any cuts in subsidies should be provided to protect smallscale fishers, advanced fishing nations should take on commitment for not providing any subsidy for fishing beyond EEZs for 25 years.

New Delhi also wanted nonspecifi­c fuel subsidies, mostly provided by developed nations, to be captured while calculatin­g fisheries subsidies given by a particular member country.

“India’s demands for the WTO fisheries negotiatio­ns remain the same. It will not agree to a pact that is not equitable. The onus of greater subsidy cuts has to be on the actual polluters. Smallscale fishers have to be protected,” the source said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? CALL FOR JUSTICE.
REUTERS CALL FOR JUSTICE.

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