World Trade Organization members said during an April 20 discussion under the Work Programme on Electronic Commerce that there is a need for more exchanges on the topic of the e-commerce moratorium, the WTO said. The exchanges should center in particular on the moratorium's "definition, scope, and implications on developing countries." During the discussion, Indonesia presented its draft regulation with provisions on imposing customs duties on electronically transmitted digital goods. Mauritius' Ambassador Usha Dwarka-Canabady, facilitator of the work programme and the e-commerce moratorium, noted that a workshop on the relevant international organizations will run June 1-2, the WTO said, giving an opportunity for members to discuss the four thematic sessions conducted under the work programme so far covering the moratorium, the digital divide, consumer protection, and legal and regulatory frameworks.
Dispute panels at the World Trade Organization released panel reports April 17 in cases brought by the EU, Taiwan and Japan and dealing with India's tariff treatment on certain goods in the information and communications technology sector, the WTO announced. In all three cases, the dispute panels found India's duties violated its WTO tariff commitments under the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties and Article II of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
Japan and China agreed to enter into arbitration under the World Trade Organization's Multi-Party Interim Appeal Arbitration Agreement, an alternative to the Appellate Body, related to a spat over China's antidumping duties on stainless steel products from Japan. Submitting a notice of agreed procedures for arbitration, Japan and China said they will take to arbitration, given that there are less than three AB members.
U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai officially signed the instrument of acceptance of the World Trade Organization fisheries subsidies deal struck at the 12th Ministerial Conference. With the signing, the U.S. became the fourth WTO member, and first large fishing nation, to formally accept the deal. Two-thirds of WTO members must accept the deal for it to take effect.
Australia will pause its World Trade Organization case against China on barley for three months while Beijing reviews its restrictions, Australia announced this week. China placed 80.5% duties on Australian barley in 2020. The parties recently carried out "constructive dialogue at all levels," leading to a three- to four-month reprieve in the WTO case, Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong said April 11.
World Trade Organization members agreed to scrap the Annex to the Draft Agreement on investment facilitation for development during a two-day negotiating round leading up to the April 5 plenary meeting, the WTO said. The Annex included three pending issues -- movement of businesspersons, definition of the term "enterprise," and a proposal to exclude "non-discriminatory measures of general application in the pursuit of monetary and related credit policies or exchange rate policies."
World Trade Organization members agreed to measures to increase the Council for Trade in Goods' transparency and efficiency and improve its functionality, the WTO said. Agreeing to the reform actions during the April 3-4 meeting of the council, the member nations agreed to include the integration of the council's data into the Trade Concerns Database and introduce the eAgenda into the council work, starting at its next meeting in July. The eAgenda lets members electronically add agenda items, raise specific concerns and upload statements before meetings. The council also elected a new chair, elevating Nigeria's Adamu Mohammed Abdulhamid to the role for the next year. The next council meeting is set for July 6-7.
Trade ministers from the U.S., Japan, the EU, Canada, the U.K., France, Germany and Italy said they will work for "necessary reform" at the World Trade Organization, including trying to reach an agreement to restore "a fully and well-functioning dispute settlement system accessible to all Members by 2024."
The Philippines notified the World Trade Organization on April 4 that it began a preliminary safeguard investigation on liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) cylinders. The investigation was initiated after a request by the country’s LPG steel cylinder industry, which said increased imports of the cylinders “cause serious injury to the domestic industry,” including “declining market share, production, sales, capacity utilization, employment profitability, incurred losses, and existence of price depression and price undercutting.” Interested parties can comment on the investigation by making submissions to the Bureau of Import Services via bis_irmd@dti.gov.ph within five days of April 4.
World Trade Organization members elected New Zealand's Clare Kelly to serve as the new head of the Committee on Regional Trade Agreements. Members at the March 27 meeting also reviewed five existing trade agreements, looking at the EU-U.K. RTA on goods and services, the economic partnership agreement between Eastern and Southern Africa states and the U.K., and the U.K.-Japan comprehensive economic cooperation and partnership agreement; the India-Mauritius CEPA; and the Turkey-Serbia free trade deal, WTO said. The next meeting is set for July 3-4.