The Star Malaysia

Bid to save trade deal with US

EU leaders meet to salvage agreement amid calls to ‘walk away’

- BR AT I SL AVA

European trade ministers scrambled to salvage talks on a massive free trade deal with the US amid growing calls in key powers France and Germany to abandon negotiatio­ns.

Ministers from the EU’s 28 member states meeting in Bratislava will attempt to patch over deep difference­s after tens of thousands of demonstrat­ors thronged European cities this week angrily calling for the EU to walk away from the US accord.

Defending free trade deals has become increasing­ly fraught for leaders, with the rise of populists such as US presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump blaming globalisat­ion for stolen jobs and falling wages.

Also under fire in the Slovak capital is a trade deal with Canada that opponents say is an attempt to set a dangerous precedent before completing the much bigger accord with the US.

On its last gasp is the Transatlan­tic Trade and Investment Partnershi­p (or TTIP) – a free trade deal between the European Union and United States which would create the world’s biggest market of 850 million consumers stretching from Hawaii to Lithuania.

But the deal, under negotiatio­n since 2013, has become a hot potato as key elections approach in the United States, France and Germany, with the goal of sealing the agreement by the end of the Obama administra­tion all but abandoned.

TTIP “becomes less and less likely as time goes on,” said Cecilia Malmstroem, the EU commission­er for trade who will be in Bratislava.

“There will a treaty with the US but maybe after a natural pause to give time to a new administra­tion,” Malmstroem told RTBF radio in Belgium.

There are deep-seated fears in Europe that the deal would undercut the 28-nation bloc’s standards in key areas such as health and welfare.

TTIP is most firmly opposed by France, where Trade Minister Matthias Fekl said the socialist government no longer supports continuing negotiatio­ns and urges Europe to walk away.

Fekl complains that the US side has failed to offer anything “serious”, especially on sensitive issues such as protecting geographic­al labelling for renowned farm products, including Champagne or Roquefort cheese.

In Germany, TTIP has split the ruling coalition, with Chancellor Angela Merkel still the treaty’s biggest backer in Europe but her socialist partners, led by ViceChance­llor Sigmar Gabriel, dead set against it.

Hopes remain for CETA, however, the deal with Canada that has already been negotiated, but it has had to overcome unexpected hurdles in Germany, where Gabriel’s socialists put up last minute resistance.

Similar opposition has flared up in Austria and Belgium, but ministers backing the deal hope to greenlight the treaty so that it can be signed with Canadian Premier Justin Trudeau at an EU-Canada summit on Oct 27.

CETA would then go on for ratificati­on in national and regional parliament­s across the EU, a tricky and likely time consuming process.

“The failure of CETA would be a huge challenge to our credibilit­y in the world,” said Markus Beyer, head of the EU’s most powerful lobby, BusinessEu­rope.

“You simply will not find another place in the world that shares the same values to this degree,” he added.

Fears of a failure of CETA have waned since German socialists narrowly backed the deal at a party conference last week. — AFP

You simply will not find another place in the world that shares the same values to this degree. Markus Beyer

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