Breaking: Leaked document reveals US-EU trade agreement threatens public health, food safety
WASHINGTON D.C. – A draft chapter
of the U.S-EU
trade agreement leaked today by the Institute for
Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP) reveals public health and food
safety could be at risk, according to an accompanying analysis.
The leaked chapter concerns Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS)
issues—those surrounding food safety and animal and plant health—in the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) currently being
negotiated. Only TTIP negotiators and security cleared advisors, mostly
corporate representatives, can read and comment on draft negotiating
texts.
According to the IATP analysis accompanying release of the leaked document,
“This leaked draft TTIP chapter doesn’t tell us everything about where
negotiations are headed on food safety, but it tells us enough to raise
serious concerns.”
While key details have not been disclosed to the public or remain to
be negotiated, the chapter clearly indicates negotiators continue to
subordinate SPS regulations to the object of maximizing trade. The text,
for example, supports the U.S. approach to not require port of entry
food inspections and testing, meaning food contamination outbreaks will
be harder to trace to their origin, and liability harder to assess—a win
for U.S. meat and food companies that could jeopardize food safety for
consumers. Further, the text indicates the trade agreement could make it
more difficult to restrict imports from countries with animal or plant
diseases, such as Mad Cow Disease or plant fungus outbreaks.
The leaked chapter
does acknowledge animal welfare but lacks enforceable language, meaning
a U.S. state or EU member state could pass mandatory laws or rules on
agriculture animal welfare, but such mandatory measures could not be
used to prevent import of products from abused animals. Alternatively,
unenforceable trade policy could further the misguided “Right to Farm”
legislation under consideration in several states.
“While many key details regarding things like GMOs are still hidden,
it’s clear public health is losing out to corporate interests in a big
way,” said IATP’s Dr. Steve Suppan, author of the analysis.
“Moreover, it’s an affront to democracy that the public need rely on
leaked documents to find out how these agreements could affect health
and safety.”
The draft chapter
would set up a Joint Management Committee to discuss concerns about
U.S. and EU SPS regulations. But the draft provides very little
information about how this committee or the yet to be negotiated TTIP
Oversight Body, to which the Committee reports, would function if
discussions did not resolve concerns about the effect of regulations on
trade. It is not clear whether the Oversight Body would refer unresolved
SPS concerns to the proposed and very controversial Investor State
Dispute Settlement mechanism. The ISDS would have a private tribunal of
trade lawyers, not a public court of law, decide whether U.S. or EU SPS
rules, laws or enforcement measures violated TTIP. If the tribunal
decided in favor of the complaining investor, the tribunal would
determine the compensation that the EU member state or U.S. governments
would have to pay investors for loss of anticipated benefits under TTIP.
Read the IATP analysis and the complete leaked chapter text for more information.
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