Pacific Trade Deal “Backtracking” on Environment Safeguards
http://www.ipsnews.net/2014/01/pacific-trade-deal-backtracking-environment-safeguards/
Illegally logged timber seized by the Ayun villagers in Pakistan's Chitral district. A ban on trade in illegally harvested timber, wildlife and fish is omitted from the current fast-track legislation in the U.S. Congress.
Pacific Trade Deal Backtracking on Environment Safeguards
By Carey L. Biron
WASHINGTON, Jan 16 2014 (IPS) - An accord that would be the largest trade agreement ever negotiated appears to be rolling back environmental safeguards that have been a key part of U.S.-led trade deals for much of the past decade.
For four years, negotiators for 12 proposed Pacific-area member countries have been trying to come to agreement on a sweeping deal for what is being called the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). While few details of the talks have been made public, WikiLeaks on Wednesday released a negotiating text for the environment chapter as well as a round-up of related country-level positions.
The documents allow the public a first-time glimpse of where talks stand on green issues, and some of the details have worried civil society. WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange suggested Wednesday that the environment chapter is little more than a toothless public relations exercise.
The U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) may be forced to back down from historic negotiating positions on environmental protections, Larry Cohen, president of Communications Workers of America, a trade association, told a Senate hearing on Thursday, referring to media analysis of the leaked documents.