The Japan Times - Deal or no deal as WTO talks grind into second sleepless night

EUR -
AED 3.813591
AFN 76.985366
ALL 98.903034
AMD 411.948585
ANG 1.872565
AOA 949.510873
ARS 1094.213888
AUD 1.650909
AWG 1.865773
AZN 1.750327
BAM 1.957274
BBD 2.097576
BDT 126.6999
BGN 1.958661
BHD 0.39135
BIF 3076.045549
BMD 1.038282
BND 1.403209
BOB 7.179544
BRL 5.964203
BSD 1.038957
BTN 90.886239
BWP 14.371613
BYN 3.400278
BYR 20350.321546
BZD 2.087001
CAD 1.484374
CDF 2959.102875
CHF 0.942495
CLF 0.025973
CLP 996.708416
CNY 7.567726
CNH 7.57345
COP 4281.333872
CRC 529.580864
CUC 1.038282
CUP 27.514465
CVE 110.344357
CZK 25.096284
DJF 185.023065
DKK 7.459598
DOP 64.465742
DZD 140.461699
EGP 52.219032
ERN 15.574226
ETB 132.954218
FJD 2.397964
FKP 0.855115
GBP 0.83365
GEL 2.901953
GGP 0.855115
GHS 16.053396
GIP 0.855115
GMD 74.756241
GNF 8982.373432
GTQ 8.033778
GYD 217.806642
HKD 8.08782
HNL 26.480044
HRK 7.66205
HTG 135.900355
HUF 404.999421
IDR 16919.527286
ILS 3.688527
IMP 0.855115
INR 90.902446
IQD 1361.078861
IRR 43698.68429
ISK 146.574843
JEP 0.855115
JMD 164.168066
JOD 0.736554
JPY 157.194825
KES 134.041768
KGS 90.797371
KHR 4174.182902
KMF 492.768852
KPW 934.453656
KRW 1503.203735
KWD 0.320435
KYD 0.865839
KZT 529.816136
LAK 22573.23422
LBP 93047.14656
LKR 308.852532
LRD 206.767665
LSL 19.151774
LTL 3.065776
LVL 0.628046
LYD 5.101669
MAD 10.395376
MDL 19.481386
MGA 4895.520761
MKD 61.532806
MMK 3372.298498
MNT 3528.081367
MOP 8.335795
MRU 41.611926
MUR 48.490134
MVR 15.992173
MWK 1801.595672
MXN 21.303988
MYR 4.610376
MZN 66.345733
NAD 19.151774
NGN 1559.239431
NIO 38.237131
NOK 11.628812
NPR 145.417982
NZD 1.829829
OMR 0.399747
PAB 1.038947
PEN 3.86114
PGK 4.173001
PHP 60.242083
PKR 289.941994
PLN 4.191697
PYG 8194.893604
QAR 3.788124
RON 4.975656
RSD 117.052815
RUB 100.677169
RWF 1464.953565
SAR 3.894131
SBD 8.766396
SCR 14.918689
SDG 624.007803
SEK 11.296723
SGD 1.401411
SHP 0.855115
SLE 23.781811
SLL 21772.248267
SOS 593.832792
SRD 36.448896
STD 21490.335146
SVC 9.091451
SYP 13499.738798
SZL 19.145954
THB 34.955821
TJS 11.371778
TMT 3.633986
TND 3.318198
TOP 2.431758
TRY 37.341132
TTD 7.04907
TWD 33.990752
TZS 2660.391281
UAH 43.06267
UGX 3815.321318
USD 1.038282
UYU 45.192502
UZS 13462.682093
VES 62.36417
VND 26278.910119
VUV 123.26689
WST 2.908047
XAF 656.457563
XAG 0.032012
XAU 0.000361
XCD 2.806008
XDR 0.796881
XOF 656.429091
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.53241
ZAR 19.064898
ZMK 9345.807334
ZMW 29.067444
ZWL 334.326287
  • RYCEF

    -0.0800

    7.45

    -1.07%

  • BTI

    0.0250

    41.645

    +0.06%

  • GSK

    -0.2350

    36.145

    -0.65%

  • CMSC

    -0.0550

    23.385

    -0.24%

  • SCS

    -0.2740

    11.306

    -2.42%

  • VOD

    0.0850

    8.525

    +1%

  • NGG

    0.0900

    61.76

    +0.15%

  • RBGPF

    0.5100

    66.51

    +0.77%

  • RELX

    -0.3200

    50.08

    -0.64%

  • RIO

    -0.0700

    62.12

    -0.11%

  • BP

    0.4050

    32.365

    +1.25%

  • JRI

    -0.0650

    12.765

    -0.51%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    23.75

    -0.34%

  • AZN

    -0.0950

    72.265

    -0.13%

  • BCC

    -3.0410

    122.069

    -2.49%

  • BCE

    -1.2350

    22.285

    -5.54%

Deal or no deal as WTO talks grind into second sleepless night

Deal or no deal as WTO talks grind into second sleepless night

Marathon talks at the World Trade Organization aimed at stitching together a tit-for-tat deal went round the clock into Friday with a long-sought agreement on fishing subsidies still hanging in the balance.

Text size:

The talks were due to wrap up on Wednesday but went straight through into Friday, the sixth day, as the WTO tries to prove it still has a role in tackling big global challenges.

Delegations were frantically haggling over plans to curb harmful subsidies that promote overfishing -- the flagship issue being thrashed out at the global trade body's Geneva headquarters after 21 years of trying.

The top representatives from the WTO's 164 members were to meet at 3:00am (0100 GMT) to see if they could sign off on the post-midnight last-ditch bargaining.

Besides fishing subsidies, ministers have been discussing temporarily waiving the patents on Covid-19 vaccines, food security, agriculture, e-commerce, the WTO's response to pandemics, and reform of the organisation itself.

With ministers struggling to conclude agreements on each topic separately, countries have been making trade-offs which, they hope, could see several measures go through in a grand bargain.

"We came into this ministerial hoping that it would provide a launch pad to show the WTO is back in business," a Geneva-based diplomat told reporters late Thursday.

"I think it's going to fall short in terms of some of that, in terms of ambition."

- India upbeat -

Some delegations have accused India of being intransigent on every topic under discussion at the WTO -- where decisions can only pass with the agreement of every member.

But Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal sounded upbeat on the prospects for a deal.

"India is convinced that this will turn out to be one of the most successful ministerials that the WTO has seen in a long time," he told reporters.

"India is not a roadblock on anything... People are realising that we were the ones who actually helped create the sole consensus."

WTO chief Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who took over in March 2021, has hinged her leadership on breathing new life into the sclerotic organisation.

The former foreign and finance minister of Nigeria sold herself as someone who can bang heads together and get business done.

She wants no repeat of the last ministerial conference in Buenos Aires in December 2017, which failed to strike any heavyweight agreements.

EU trade commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis told AFP the last-minute Geneva negotiations were tricky.

"We are in a complicated geopolitical situation and also the views across different work streams are quite divergent," he said.

"But I would say we're working towards positive outcomes and hopefully we'll be able to reach (them)."

- Fish deal rotting? -

Negotiations towards banning subsidies that encourage overfishing and threaten the sustainability of the planet's fish stocks have been going on at the WTO for more than two decades.

Several sources close to the discussions said the draft agreement on the conference's flagship issue has been heavily watered down.

India had been pushing for a 25-year exemption but Goyal insisted New Delhi had compromised and accepted it was not going to get everything it wanted.

A coalition of African, Caribbean and Pacific countries contained some of the last countries holding out, a Geneva trade official said.

A source close to the negotiations said: "It's not looking particularly optimistic."

The second major issue on the table is the plan for a Covid-19 vaccine patents waiver.

Some countries that host major pharmaceutical companies, like Britain and Switzerland, were finding some of the draft wording problematic, while big pharma fears a deal strangling innovation.

But Britain's ambassador in Geneva, Simon Manley, told Okonjo-Iweala that after clarification and improvements were achieved, London was "now ready to join the consensus".

That left the United States and China as effectively the largest opposition to finalising a deal, with the two heavyweights yet to agree on whether China would be eligible to use the waiver.

The moratorium on imposing customs duties on electronic transactions, in place since 1998, looks set to be extended.

The United States said the moratorium had supported the growth of digital commerce, which had provided an "economic lifeline" during the Covid-19 pandemic, according to a Geneva trade official.

M.Ito--JT