The Honorable J. Dennis Hastert
Speaker
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515
Dear Mr. Speaker:
At the direction of the President, I am pleased to notify the 
Congress of the United States’ ongoing negotiations with Chile on a free trade agreement (FTA). 
This notification is in accordance with section 2106(b)(2)(A) of the Trade Act of 2002. It 
is crucial that we move forward on this and other trade agreements in order to restore 
America’s leadership on trade.
The Administration is committed to bringing back trade agreements 
that open markets to benefit our farmers, workers, businesses, and families. With the Congress’ 
continued help we can move promptly to advance America’s trade interests. Concluding our 
ongoing negotiations with Chile is an important first step.
The origins of an agreement with Chile date back to the 
Administration of President George H. W. Bush, when the first discussions were held regarding a possible 
Chile FTA. In 1994, the Clinton Administration announced its interest in extending the 
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) to include Chile. Since that time our NAFTA 
partners, Canada and Mexico, have concluded free trade agreements with Chile. President 
Clinton initiated talks with Chile in December 2000, and the agreement is nearing 
completion.
In my letter of August 22, 2002, to the Congressional leadership 
and trade committees, I outlined the reasons that it is in the United States’ interest to pursue an 
FTA with Chile. The agreement will help foster economic growth, improve living standards, and 
create higher paying jobs in the United States and Chile by reducing and eliminating bilateral 
barriers to trade and investment. The agreement will create improved market opportunities for U.S. 
goods and services exports. An FTA will also serve the United States’ broader economic 
interests. It will assist U.S. efforts to create competition among countries for liberalization in the 
Western Hemisphere, thus furthering our efforts to establish a Free Trade Area of the 
Americas (FTAA). Finally, an FTA will assist Chile’s efforts to continue implementing the free 
market economic policies that have made Chile a model for its Latin American neighbors.
The negotiations on this FTA have been conducted in a transparent 
manner to ensure that businesses, labor organizations, non-governmental organizations, 
state and local governments, and the public are kept informed and have ample opportunity to 
provide views. We have completed a draft environmental review of the agreement and 
accepted public comment. We have consulted extensively with Members of Congress since 
initiation of the negotiations with Chile, and we believe that there is broad bipartisan interest in 
such an agreement. The
Administration will continue to consult closely with Congress, 
including the new Congressional Oversight Group.
Our specific objectives for the negotiations with Chile are as 
follows:
• Trade in Goods:
– Seek to eliminate tariffs and other duties and charges on trade 
between Chile and the United States on the broadest possible basis, subject to 
reasonable adjustment periods for import-sensitive products.
– Seek to ensure that full market access liberalization is 
achieved for products covered by Chile’s price bands, such as wheat and vegetable 
oils.
– Seek to ensure that Chile’s rules for administering tariff-rate 
quotas on agricultural products are not restrictive.
– Seek to address Chilean practices that adversely affect 
perishable or cyclical agricultural products, while improving U.S. import relief 
mechanisms as appropriate.
– Pursue a mechanism with Chile that will support achieving the 
U.S. objective in the WTO negotiations of eliminating all export subsidies on 
agricultural products, and in the FTAA negotiations of eliminating agricultural export 
subsidies on trade in the Hemisphere, while maintaining the right to provide 
bona fide food aid and preserving U.S. agricultural market development and export credit 
programs.
• Customs Matters, 
Rules of Origin, and Enforcement Cooperation:
– Seek rules to require that Chile’s customs operations are 
conducted with transparency, efficiency, and predictability and that its customs 
laws, regulations, decisions, and rulings are not applied in a manner that would 
create unwarranted procedural obstacles to international trade.
– Seek rules of origin, procedures for applying these rules, and 
provisions to address circumvention matters that will ensure that preferential 
duty rates under the FTA apply only to goods eligible to receive such treatment, 
without creating unnecessary obstacles to trade.
– Seek terms for cooperative efforts with Chile regarding 
enforcement of customsand related issues, including trade in textiles and 
apparel.
• Sanitary and 
Phytosanitary (SPS) Measures:
– Seek to have Chile reaffirm its WTO commitments on SPS measures 
and eliminate any unjustified SPS restrictions, including those that 
have blocked market access for U.S. meat, dairy, poultry, and other 
products.
– Seek to strengthen bilateral collaboration in implementing the 
WTO SPS Agreement and cooperation with Chile in relevant international 
bodies on developing international SPS standards, guidelines, and 
recommendations.
• Technical Barriers 
to Trade (TBT):
– Seek to have Chile reaffirm its WTO TBT commitments and 
eliminate any unjustified TBT measures.
– Seek to strengthen bilateral collaboration in implementing the 
WTO TBT Agreement and create a procedure for exchanging information with 
Chile on TBT-related issues.
• Intellectual 
Property Rights:
– Seek to establish standards that build on the foundations 
established in the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPs 
Agreement) and other international intellectual property agreements, such as 
the World Intellectual Property Organization Copyright Treaty and 
Performances and Phonograms Treaty, and the Patent Cooperation Treaty.
– Seek to enhance the level of Chile’s protection for intellectual 
property rights beyond TRIPS in new areas of technology, such as internet service 
provider liability.
– In other areas, such as patent protection and protection of 
undisclosed information, seek to have Chile apply levels of protection and 
practices more in line with U.S. law and practices, including appropriate 
flexibility.
– Seek to strengthen Chile’s procedures to enforce intellectual 
property rights, such as by ensuring that Chilean authorities seize suspected pirated 
and counterfeit goods, equipment used to make such goods or to transmit pirated 
goods, and documentary evidence. Seek to strengthen measures in Chile that 
provide for compensation for right holders for infringements of intellectual 
property rights and to provide for criminal penalties under Chilean law that are 
sufficient to have a deterrent effect on piracy and counterfeiting.
• Trade in 
Services:
– Pursue disciplines to address discriminatory and other barriers 
to trade in Chile’s services markets. Pursue a comprehensive approach to market 
access, including any necessary improvements in access to the financial services, 
transportation and other sectors.
– Seek improved transparency and predictability of Chilean 
regulatory procedures, specialized disciplines for financial services, and additional 
disciplines for telecommunication services and other sectors as necessary.
• Temporary Entry of 
Business Persons:
– Seek appropriate provisions to ensure that Chile will facilitate 
the temporary entry of U.S. business persons into its territory, while ensuring that 
any commitments by the United States are limited to temporary entry provisions and 
do not require any changes to U.S. laws and regulations relating to permanent 
immigration and permanent employment rights.
• Investment:
– Seek to establish rules that reduce or eliminate artificial or 
trade-distorting barriers to U.S. investment in Chile, while ensuring that Chilean 
investors in the United States are not accorded greater substantive rights with 
respect to investment protections than U.S. investors in the United States, 
and to secure for U.S. investors in Chile important rights comparable to those that 
would be available under U.S. legal principles and practice.
– Seek to ensure that U.S. investors receive treatment as 
favorable as that accorded to domestic or other foreign investors in Chile and to address 
unjustified barriers to the establishment and operation of U.S. investments in Chile. 
Provide procedures to resolve disputes between U.S. investors and the 
government of Chile that are in keeping with the trade promotion authority goals 
of being expeditious, fair and transparent.
– Seek to have Chile reaffirm its WTO TRIMs commitments and 
eliminate WTOinconsistent measures.
• Electronic 
Commerce:
– Seek to affirm that Chile will allow goods and services to be 
delivered electronically and seek to ensure that Chile does not apply 
customs duties to digital products or unjustifiably discriminate among products 
delivered electronically.
• Government Procurement:
– Establish rules that enable the suppliers of U.S. goods and 
services to compete, on a non-discriminatory basis, for a broad range of government 
procurement contracts.
– Impose disciplines based on the WTO Agreement on Government 
Procurement and the NAFTA that require Chile’s procurement rules to provide 
transparency and predictability throughout the entire procurement process, 
particularly in the establishment of supplier qualifications and tender 
specifications, the evaluation of tenders, and the award of the contract.
– Ensure access to timely and effective procurement review 
procedures in Chile.
• Transparency/Anti-Corruption/Regulatory Reform:
– Seek to make Chile’s procedures for administering trade-related 
measures fairer and more transparent, including by ensuring that interested 
parties can have timely access to information on these measures and Chile’s 
procedures for administering them. Seek rules that will permit timely and 
meaningful public comment before Chile adopts trade-related measures.
– Seek to ensure that Chile enforces its prohibitions on corrupt 
practices affecting international trade.
• Trade Remedies:
– Provide a bilateral safeguard mechanism during the transition 
period.
– Make no changes in U.S. antidumping and countervailing duty 
laws.
• Competition:
– Address such issues as anticompetitive business conduct, state 
monopolies, and state enterprises. Seek cooperation and consultation provisions 
that foster cooperation on competition law and policy, and that provide for 
consultations on specific problems that may arise. Seek to negotiate a bilateral 
antitrust cooperation agreement with Chile.
• Environment:
– Seek to promote trade and environment policies that are mutually 
supportive.
– Seek an appropriate commitment by Chile to the effective 
enforcement of its environmental laws.
– Establish that Chile will strive to ensure that it will not, as 
an encouragement for trade or investment, weaken or reduce the protections provided for 
in its environmental laws.
– Help Chile strengthen its capacity to protect the environment 
through the promotion of sustainable development, such as by establishing 
consultative mechanisms.
• Labor, including 
Child Labor:
– Seek an appropriate commitment by Chile to the effective 
enforcement of its labor laws.
– Establish that Chile will strive to ensure that it will not, as 
an encouragement for trade or investment, weaken or reduce the protections provided for 
in its labor laws.
– Establish procedures for consultations and cooperative 
activities with Chile to strengthen its capacity to promote respect for core labor 
standards, including compliance with ILO Convention 182 on the worst forms of child 
labor, building on ongoing technical cooperation programs with the U.S. Department 
of Labor.
• State-to-State 
Dispute Settlement:
– Encourage the early identification and settlement of disputes 
through consultation.
– Seek to establish fair, transparent, timely, and effective 
procedures to settle disputes arising under the agreement.
In addition, the FTA will take into account other legitimate U.S. 
objectives including, but not limited to, the protection of legitimate health or safety, 
essential security, and consumer interests.
We are committed to concluding these negotiations with timely and 
substantive results for U.S. workers, ranchers, farmers, businesses, and families and will seek 
these specific objectives, as we pursue the overall and principal U.S. negotiating objectives 
and priorities set out in the TPA Act. We look forward to continuing to work with the Congress as we 
move forward in our negotiations with Chile and bring them to a successful 
conclusion.
Sincerely,
Robert B. Zoellick