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Policy Options for Open Borders in Relation to Animal and Plant Protection and Food Safety. Maury Bredahl Spencer Henson. Outline. Sanitary and phytosanitary measures Are SPS measures a problem? Overcoming trade effects of SPS measures Problems with negotiations Implications.
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Policy Options for Open Borders in Relation to Animal and Plant Protection and Food Safety Maury Bredahl Spencer Henson
Outline • Sanitary and phytosanitary measures • Are SPS measures a problem? • Overcoming trade effects of SPS measures • Problems with negotiations • Implications
Voluntary Standards • Product compatibility • Closely related to consumer preferences • Compliance with mandatory standards • De facto mandatory
Are SPS Measures a Problem within NAFTA? • Incidence data • Border detention data • Specific examples
Incidence of SPS Measures, 2000 • Incidence of SPS measures high for agricultural and food products • Differences in types of SPS measures applied and product coverage by country • High incidence of multiple measures applied to single tariff lines • Problems of differences in definitions and taxonomies between countries
Overcoming Trade Effects of SPS Measures Co-ordination Mutual Recognition Harmonisation
NAFTA AgreementChapter 7 • ‘Appropriate level of protection’ • Justification: • Scientific principles • Risk assessment • Harmonisation • Equivalence • Regionalisation • Transparency
NAFTA Committee on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures • Enhancement of food safety/SPS conditions • Activities pursuant to international standards and equivalency • Technical co-operation • Consultation on bilateral issues
NAFTA Committee on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures, 1994-99 • Party: • Mexico: 14 • United States: 5 • Canada: 1 • Type of measure: • Plant health: 10 • Food safety: 6 • Animal health: 4
Technical Working Groups • Animal health • Dairy, fruits, vegetables and processed foods • Fish and fishery product inspection • Food additives and contaminants • Packaging, labelling and food standards • Meat, poultry and egg inspection • Pesticides • Plant health, seeds and fertiliser • Veterinary drugs and feeds • NAPPO
Co-ordination • FDA/CFIA Action Plan on Food Safety • Principles for mutual support in animal health emergencies • Joint US-Canada review of pesticides • Co-ordination of positions in Codex: • Committee on Food Additives and Contaminants • Committee on Residues of Veterinary Drugs in Food
Mutual Recognition • US-Canada MRA on seafood inspection • US-Canada equivalence agreement on molluscan shellfish inspection programme • Equivalency of greenhouse certification • Recognition of accredited laboratories for seed certification • US recognition of Mexican poultry slaughter system
Harmonisation • US-Canada potato grading scheme • US-Canada food additives regulations • Policies on BSE and TSEs • Data requirements for residue chemistry, seed treatments, terrestrial food uses etc. • US-Canada nutrition labelling and nutrient content claims regulations • Japanese beetle regulations
Constraints • Competency • Trust • Science • ‘Appropriate level of protection’ • Traditions • Regulators
Impact of NAFTA / WTO Dispute settlement V Policy-making
US Potato Imports from Prince Edward Island (PEI) • Justified? • Settled quickly? • Less likely to happen in future?
Problems with Negotiations Relating to SPS Measures • SPS capacity • Assessing the impact of SPS measures • Institutional factors: • Fragmentation of responsibilities • Expertise • Agendas • Inter-agency negotiations • Trade issues V domestic policy objectives • Minute detail matters
Problems with Negotiations Relating to SPS Measures • SPS capacity • Assessing the impact of SPS measures • Institutional factors: • Fragmentation of responsibilities • Expertise • Agendas • Inter-agency negotiations • Trade issues V domestic policy objectives • Minute detail matters
Implications • SPS measures a major issue for exporters • Problems assessing the impact of SPS measures • Negotiations are time consuming and costly • Need for institutional development and reform • Need for system-based approaches • Risk assessment: ‘Trading science’ • Importance of SPS capacity • Role of domestic pressure
Implications • Are penalties adequate? • Reward v penalty-based system • Role for private certification?