September 9, 2003
I want to thank all of you for coming today. I just
came from a meeting that I had with one of our advisory committees. This is our
Trade and Environment Policy Committee. It is a private sector advisory group
that we have. These advisory groups are set up by the Congress by law, and we
have been very delighted because our environmental group has been one of the
most active working with us. It includes members of civil society, private
sector, business, NGOs [nongovernmental organizations], academia. We rely on
these groups to help us in a number of ways. One is to give us some counsel and
advise as we go through the process of negotiating various agreements. And also
to help us try to figure out some new ways to try to connect trade and growth
with better environmental conditions in the United States, but also with our
trade partners.
We found, as in a number of areas of our trade
negotiations, that some of our work with individual countries or small regions
really provides laboratories for us to try to advance the state of work in some
of these cooperative areas, and this has been particularly true in the
environmental area with our free trade agreements. As probably most of you are
aware, as part of our negotiations of free trade agreements, we actually set
various environmental objectives and have various provisions for the enforcement
of those obligations. But we also try to promote some companion elements, some
of the agreements we do with the State Department or others, to try to focus on
cooperative aspects. And then we also try to connect this with some of the
capacity-building aspects where we get help from AID [U.S. Agency for
International Development] and others, in some cases to try to fund those
efforts, whether they be related to environment projects or whether they be
related to civic society participation or other elements.
Now, obviously,
most of our focus here is part of the Doha development agenda. A step forward in
this is trying to strengthen the network between the WTO [World Trade
Organization] and the multilateral environmental agreements, or the MEA's, which
have secretariats. And so one of the issues to be discussed here will be the
informal relationship that's developed. And just to give you a sense of how our
advisory committee process helps us, we had been in touch closely with a number
of the environmental secretariats in Geneva explaining some of the flaws and
formalities of the current interactions and we talked about some ways to try to
fix that.
A second topic that will be part of the Doha negotiations and
part of our discussions here will be the role of fish subsidies, because
obviously over fishing is bad economic policy and it is also very bad
environmental policy. And we're pleased that over the past couple of years
changes in the European Union have led the European Union to join us in a major
effort along with the Friends of Fish to try to prevent over fishing, which is
bad for the stocks as well as for the economics.
And another element that
we want to try to emphasize in the text is the focus on environmental goods and
services, to lower tariffs on some of the environmental goods and services. This
obviously helps boost trade but also can help lower the costs of environmental
protection and promotion.
Now, one other thing that we do with our
environmental advisory committees is refine the process of environmental
reviews. This is another concept that the United States has invited other
countries to consider as a way of strengthening the nexus between environment
and trade. So the United States does environmental reviews with each of our
trade agreements. These are a rolling process and they give us a guide to some
elements that we can try to do either in the trade agreement or ancillary to the
trade agreement. Just to give you an example of what this means in practical
terms, we've had an interim environmental review of a trade agreement that we
are doing with the five countries of Central America?and in fact it is posted on
our website for those of you that are interested in it. This identifies some
particular environmental/economic challenges of this trade agreement, focusing
on topics like migratory birds, since a number of the countries in Central
America are sort of major, not only nesting but transit sites between North and
South America. Wildlife conservation. Also marine pollution. And so we hope as
we move forward with that agreement to try to link it to a cooperative
mechanism.
Today, one of the things I am pleased with is that we have one
of the countries that we just completed a trade agreement with, Singapore, to
talk a little bit from Singapore's perspective about some of the cooperative
mechanisms that we are trying to develop in the environmental area. Singapore
already has some very strong environmental policies, so much of this is related
to things we can do, actually, in the region. As many of you know, or may not
know, even though Singapore is a very small country, it actually still has a
rain forest that was preserved, in Bukit Timah, as I recall.
And so there
are aspects where we can not only work with one another, but also promote some
things regionally.
What I also want to announce today is that because we
believe that over the next couple of days we will move forward the Doha
negotiations, as part of this environmental review process we will be putting
out a Federal Register notice right after these negotiations inviting public
comment for our Doha agenda environmental review on the developments of this
stage of work. So we already have an ongoing environmental review, but as we
hope to narrow and refine the issues, we would like to get public comment on
ideas on these negotiations?how they affect the environment of the United States
and others -- with the goal of trying to complete the interim environmental
review by early in the course of 2004.
So I was very pleased that my
former colleague, Nao Matsukata, agreed to chair this group. I will let him
introduce the panel. I also want to make sure that I have a particular
opportunity here to introduce Mark Linscott, who has recently been promoted to
be our Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for Environment, and helps us work on
these issues from the FTA [Free Trade Agreement] moreover. And also Pat Forkan,
from the Humane Society of the United States, who has been a very good partner
with us, and she can give in greater detail examples of some of the things
where, frankly, in Central America but elsewhere the Humane Society is not only
helping us work on projects related to transparency, but ways where people can
take advantage of consumer interests in different treatment of animal husbandry
in a way that adds a value-added product but also creates jobs and opportunities
in some of the developing countries.
So I want to thank all of the
panelists for joining us. I apologize for having to run, but it's kind of a busy
time. For of those of you in the press, since I see some of you, as you know, I
have a press conference a little bit later today. So, thank you very much.
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