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PART III
XXV. Article XXIV
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A. Text
of Article XXIV
Article XXIV: Territorial Application — Frontier Traffic — Customs Unions and Free-trade Areas
1. The provisions of this Agreement shall apply to the metropolitan
customs territories of the contracting parties and to any other customs
territories in respect of which this Agreement has been accepted under
Article XXVI or is being applied under Article XXXIII or pursuant to the
Protocol of Provisional Application. Each such customs territory shall,
exclusively for the purposes of the territorial application of this
Agreement, be treated as though it were a contracting party; Provided
that the provisions of this paragraph shall not be construed to create
any rights or obligations as between two or more customs territories in
respect of which this Agreement has been accepted under Article XXVI or
is being applied under Article XXXIII or pursuant to the Protocol of
Provisional Application by a single contracting party.
2. For the purposes of this Agreement a customs territory shall be
understood to mean any territory with respect to which separate tariffs
or other regulations of commerce are maintained for a substantial part
of the trade of such territory with other territories.
3. The provisions of this Agreement shall not be construed to
prevent:
(a) Advantages accorded by any contracting party to adjacent
countries in order to facilitate frontier traffic;
(b) Advantages accorded to the trade with the Free Territory of
Trieste by countries contiguous to that territory, provided that such
advantages are not in conflict with the Treaties of Peace arising out of
the Second World War.
4. The contracting parties recognize the desirability
of increasing
freedom of trade by the development, through voluntary agreements, of
closer integration between the economies of the countries parties to
such agreements. They also recognize that the purpose of a customs union
or of a free-trade area should be to facilitate trade between the
constituent territories and not to raise barriers to the trade of other
contracting parties with such territories.
5. Accordingly, the provisions of this Agreement shall not prevent,
as between the territories of contracting parties, the formation of a
customs union or of a free-trade area or the adoption of an interim
agreement necessary for the formation of a customs union or of a
free-trade area; Provided that:
(a) with respect to a customs union, or an interim agreement leading
to a formation of a customs union, the duties and other regulations of
commerce imposed at the institution of any such union or interim
agreement in respect of trade with contracting parties not parties to
such union or agreement shall not on the whole be higher or more
restrictive than the general incidence of the duties and regulations of
commerce applicable in the constituent territories prior to the
formation of such union or the adoption of such interim agreement, as
the case may be;
(b) with respect to a free-trade area, or an interim agreement
leading to the formation of a free-trade area, the duties and other
regulations of commerce maintained in each of the constituent
territories and applicable at the formation of such free-trade area or
the adoption of such interim agreement to the trade of contracting
parties not included in such area or not parties to such agreement shall
not be higher or more restrictive than the corresponding duties and
other regulations of commerce existing in the same constituent
territories prior to the formation of the free-trade area, or interim
agreement as the case may be; and
(c) any interim agreement referred to in
subparagraphs
(a) and (b)
shall include a plan and schedule for the formation of such a customs
union or of such a free-trade area within a reasonable length of time.
6.
If, in fulfilling the requirements of subparagraph 5 (a), a
contracting party proposes to increase any rate of duty inconsistently
with the provisions of Article II, the procedure set forth in
Article
XXVIII shall apply. In providing for compensatory adjustment, due
account shall be taken of the compensation already afforded by the
reduction brought about in the corresponding duty of the other
constituents of the union.
7. (a)
Any contracting party deciding to enter into a customs union
or free-trade area, or an interim agreement leading to the formation of
such a union or area, shall promptly notify the CONTRACTING PARTIES and
shall make available to them such information regarding the proposed
union or area as will enable them to make such reports and
recommendations to contracting parties as they may deem appropriate.
(b)
If, after having studied the plan and schedule included in an
interim agreement referred to in paragraph 5 in consultation with the
parties to that agreement and taking due account of the information made
available in accordance with the provisions of subparagraph (a), the
CONTRACTING PARTIES find that such agreement is not likely to result in
the formation of a customs union or of a free-trade area within the
period contemplated by the parties to the agreement or that such period
is not a reasonable one, the CONTRACTING PARTIES shall make
recommendations to the parties to the agreement. The parties shall not
maintain or put into force, as the case may be, such agreement if they
are not prepared to modify it in accordance with these recommendations.
(c)
Any substantial change in the plan or schedule referred to in
paragraph 5 (c) shall be communicated to the CONTRACTING PARTIES, which
may request the contracting parties concerned to consult with them if
the change seems likely to jeopardize or delay unduly the formation of
the customs union or of the free-trade area.
8. For the purposes of this Agreement:
(a) A customs union shall be understood to mean the substitution of a
single customs territory for two or more customs territories, so that
(i) duties and other restrictive regulations
of commerce (except,
where necessary, those permitted under Articles XI, XII, XIII,
XIV, XV
and XX) are eliminated with respect to substantially all the trade
between the constituent territories of the union or at least with
respect to substantially all the trade in products originating in such
territories, and,
(ii) subject to the provisions of
paragraph 9, substantially the same
duties and other regulations of commerce are applied by each of the
members of the union to the trade of territories not included in the
union;
(b) A free-trade area shall be understood to mean a group of two or
more customs territories in which the duties and other restrictive
regulations of commerce (except, where necessary, those permitted under Articles
XI, XII, XIII,
XIV, XV
and XX) are eliminated on substantially
all the trade between the constituent territories in products
originating in such territories.
9. The preferences referred to in
paragraph 2 of Article I shall not
be affected by the formation of a customs union or of a free-trade area
but may be eliminated or adjusted by means of negotiations with
contracting parties affected. This procedure of negotiations with
affected contracting parties shall, in particular, apply to the
elimination of preferences required to conform with the provisions of
paragraph 8 (a)(i) and paragraph 8 (b).
10.
The CONTRACTING PARTIES may by a two-thirds majority approve
proposals which do not fully comply with the requirements of paragraphs
5 to 9 inclusive, provided that such proposals lead to the formation of
a customs union or a free-trade area in the sense of this Article.
11. Taking into account the exceptional
circumstances arising out of the establishment of India and Pakistan as
independent States and recognizing the fact that they have long
constituted an economic unit, the contracting parties agree that the
provisions of this Agreement shall not prevent the two countries from
entering into special arrangements with respect to the trade between
them, pending the establishment of their mutual trade relations on a
definitive basis.
12. Each contracting party shall take such reasonable measures as may
be available to it to ensure observance of the provisions of this
Agreement by the regional and local governments and authorities within
its territories.
B. Text of Ad Article XXIV
Ad Article XXIV: Paragraph 9
It is understood that the provisions of
Article I would require that,
when a product which has been imported into the territory of a member of
a customs union or free-trade area at a preferential rate of duty is
re-exported to the territory of another member of such union or area,
the latter member should collect a duty equal to the difference between
the duty already paid and any higher duty that would be payable if the
product were being imported directly into its territory.
Paragraph 11
Measures adopted by India and Pakistan in order to carry out
definitive trade arrangements between them, once they have been agreed
upon, might depart from particular provisions of this Agreement, but
these measures would in general be consistent with the objectives of the
Agreement.
C. Understanding on the Interpretation of Article XXIV of the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994
Members,
Having regard to the provisions of
Article XXIV of GATT 1994;
Recognizing that customs unions and free trade areas have greatly
increased in number and importance since the establishment of GATT 1947
and today cover a significant proportion of world trade;
Recognizing the contribution to the expansion of world trade that may
be made by closer integration between the economies of the parties to
such agreements;
Recognizing also that such contribution is increased if the
elimination between the constituent territories of duties and other
restrictive regulations of commerce extends to all trade, and diminished
if any major sector of trade is excluded;
Reaffirming that the purpose of such agreements should be to
facilitate trade between the constituent territories and not to raise
barriers to the trade of other Members with such territories; and that
in their formation or enlargement the parties to them should to the
greatest possible extent avoid creating adverse effects on the trade of
other Members;
Convinced also of the need to reinforce the effectiveness of the role
of the Council for Trade in Goods in reviewing agreements notified under
Article XXIV, by clarifying the criteria and procedures for the
assessment of new or enlarged agreements, and improving the transparency
of all Article XXIV agreements;
Recognizing the need for a common understanding of the obligations of
Members under paragraph 12 of Article XXIV;
Hereby agree as follows:
1. Customs unions, free-trade areas, and interim agreements leading
to the formation of a customs union or free-trade area, to be consistent
with Article XXIV, must satisfy, inter alia, the provisions of
paragraphs 5, 6, 7 and
8 of that Article.
Article XXIV:5
2. The evaluation under
paragraph 5(a) of Article XXIV of the general
incidence of the duties and other regulations of commerce applicable
before and after the formation of a customs union shall in respect of
duties and charges be based upon an overall assessment of weighted
average tariff rates and of customs duties collected. This assessment
shall be based on import statistics for a previous representative period
to be supplied by the customs union, on a tariff-line basis and in
values and quantities, broken down by WTO country of origin. The
Secretariat shall compute the weighted average tariff rates and customs
duties collected in accordance with the methodology used in the
assessment of tariff offers in the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade
Negotiations. For this purpose, the duties and charges to be taken into
consideration shall be the applied rates of duty. It is recognized that
for the purpose of the overall assessment of the incidence of other
regulations of commerce for which quantification and aggregation are
difficult, the examination of individual measures, regulations, products
covered and trade flows affected may be required.
3. The “reasonable length of time” referred to in
paragraph 5(c)
of Article XXIV should exceed 10 years only in exceptional cases. In
cases where Members parties to an interim agreement believe that 10
years would be insufficient they shall provide a full explanation to the
Council for Trade in Goods of the need for a longer period.
Article XXIV:6
4. Paragraph 6 of Article XXIV establishes the procedure to be
followed when a Member forming a customs union proposes to increase a
bound rate of duty. In this regard Members reaffirm that the procedure
set forth in Article XXVIII, as elaborated in the guidelines adopted on
10 November 1980 (BISD 27S/26-28) and in the Understanding on the
Interpretation of Article XXVIII of GATT
1994, must be commenced before
tariff concessions are modified or withdrawn upon the formation of a
customs union or an interim agreement leading to the formation of a
customs union.
5. These negotiations will be entered into in good faith with a view
to achieving mutually satisfactory compensatory adjustment. In such
negotiations, as required by paragraph 6 of Article
XXIV, due account
shall be taken of reductions of duties on the same tariff line made by
other constituents of the customs union upon its formation. Should such
reductions not be sufficient to provide the necessary compensatory
adjustment, the customs union would offer compensation, which may take
the form of reductions of duties on other tariff lines. Such an offer
shall be taken into consideration by the Members having negotiating
rights in the binding being modified or with drawn. Should the
compensatory adjustment remain unacceptable, negotiations should be
continued. Where, despite such efforts, agreement in negotiations on
compensatory adjustment under Article XXVIII as elaborated by the
Understanding on the Interpretation of Article
XXVIII of GATT 1994 cannot be reached within a reasonable period from the initiation of
negotiations, the customs union shall, nevertheless, be free to modify
or withdraw the concessions; affected Members shall then be free to
withdraw substantially equivalent concessions in accordance with Article
XXVIII.
6. GATT 1994 imposes no obligation on Members benefiting from a
reduction of duties consequent upon the formation of a customs union, or
an interim agreement leading to the formation of a customs union, to
provide compensatory adjustment to its constituents.
Review of Customs Unions and Free-Trade Areas
7. All notifications made under
paragraph 7(a) of Article XXIV shall
be examined by a working party in the light of the relevant provisions
of GATT 1994 and of paragraph 1 of this
Understanding. The working party
shall submit a report to the Council for Trade in Goods on its findings
in this regard. The Council for Trade in Goods may make such
recommendations to Members as it deems appropriate.
8. In regard to interim agreements, the working party may in its
report make appropriate recommendations on the proposed time-frame and
on measures required to complete the formation of the customs union or
free-trade area. It may if necessary provide for further review of the
agreement.
9. Members parties to an interim agreement shall notify substantial
changes in the plan and schedule included in that agreement to the
Council for Trade in Goods and, if so requested, the Council shall
examine the changes.
10. Should an interim agreement notified under
paragraph 7(a) of
Article XXIV not include a plan and schedule, contrary to paragraph 5(c)
of Article XXIV, the working party shall in its report recommend such a
plan and schedule. The parties shall not maintain or put into force, as
the case may be, such agreement if they are not prepared to modify it in
accordance with these recommendations. Provision shall be made for
subsequent review of the implementation of the recommendations.
11. Customs unions and constituents of free-trade areas shall report
periodically to the Council for Trade in Goods, as envisaged by the
CONTRACTING PARTIES to GATT 1947 in their instruction to the GATT 1947
Council concerning reports on regional agreements (BISD 18S/38), on the
operation of the relevant agreement. Any significant changes and/or
developments in the agreements should be reported as they occur.
Dispute Settlement
12. The provisions of Articles XXII and
XXIII of GATT 1994 as
elaborated and applied by the Dispute Settlement Understanding may be
invoked with respect to any matters arising from the application of
those provisions of Article XXIV relating to customs unions, free-trade
areas or interim agreements leading to the formation of a customs union
or free-trade area.
Article XXIV:12
13. Each Member is fully responsible under GATT 1994 for the
observance of all provisions of GATT 1994, and shall take such
reasonable measures as may be available to it to ensure such observance
by regional and local governments and authorities within its territory.
14. The provisions of Articles XXII and
XXIII of GATT 1994 as
elaborated and applied by the Dispute Settlement Understanding may be
invoked in respect of measures affecting its observance taken by
regional or local governments or authorities within the territory of a
Member. When the Dispute Settlement Body has ruled that a provision of
GATT 1994 has not been observed, the responsible Member shall take such
reasonable measures as may be available to it to ensure its observance.
The provisions relating to compensation and suspension of concessions or
other obligations apply in cases where it has not been possible to
secure such observance.
15. Each Member undertakes to accord sympathetic consideration to and
afford adequate opportunity for consultation regarding any
representations made by another Member concerning measures affecting the
operation of GATT 1994 taken within the territory of the former.
D. Interpretation and Application of Article XXIV
1. General
(a) Committee on Regional Trade Agreements
681. Pursuant to
Article IV:7 of the
WTO Agreement, on 6 February
1996, the General Council decided to establish the Committee on Regional
Trade Agreements.(966) With respect to the establishment of the
Committee, its rules of procedure and activities, including reports to
the General Council, see the Chapter on the WTO Agreement, Section
V.B.7(f).(967) Also, with respect to the activities of the Committee
concerning the examination of agreements notified under Article XXIV of
the GATT 1994, see Section
V.B.7(f)(iv).
(b) Enabling Clause
682. In 1979, the GATT Council adopted the Decision on Differential
and More Favourable Treatment Reciprocity and Fuller Participation of
Developing Countries (the “Enabling Clause”) to waive Article I of
the GATT for certain arrangements, with respect to, inter alia, “[r]egional
or global arrangements entered into amongst less-developed contracting
parties for the mutual reduction or elimination of tariffs”. For the
text of the Enabling Clause, see paragraph 29
above.
(c) Reference to GATT practice
683. With respect to GATT practice on this subject.
2. Article XXIV:4
(a) Relationship between paragraph 4 and paragraphs 5 to 9
684. In Turkey —
Textiles, the Appellate Body reviewed the Panel’s
finding that Article XXIV did not justify the imposition by Turkey of
quantitative restrictions on imports of certain textile and clothing
products from India upon the formation of a customs union with the
European Communities. Although the key provision in this dispute was
paragraph 5 of Article XXIV, the Appellate Body held that “paragraph 4
of Article XXIV constitutes an important element of the context of the
chapeau of paragraph 5”(968):
“According to paragraph
4, the purpose of a customs union is ‘to
facilitate trade’ between the constituent members and ‘not to raise
barriers to the trade’ with third countries. This objective demands
that a balance be struck by the constituent members of a customs union.
A customs union should facilitate trade within the customs union, but it
should not do so in a way that raises barriers to trade with third
countries. We note that [the preamble of] the Understanding on Article
XXIV explicitly reaffirms this purpose of a customs union, and states
that in the formation or enlargement of a customs union, the constituent
members should ‘to the greatest possible extent avoid creating adverse
affects on the trade of other Members’. Paragraph 4 contains
purposive, and not operative, language. It does not set forth a separate
obligation itself but, rather, sets forth the overriding and pervasive
purpose for Article XXIV which is manifested in operative language in
the specific obligations that are found elsewhere in Article
XXIV. Thus,
the purpose set forth in paragraph 4 informs the other relevant
paragraphs of Article XXIV, including the chapeau of
paragraph 5.”(969)
(b) “not to raise barriers to the trade of other contracting
parties”
685. On the issue of whether parties to a regional trade agreement
are required not to increase the barriers overall or rather not to raise
any barrier, the Appellate Body identified paragraph 4 as an important
element in the context of interpreting the text of the chapeau of
paragraph 5, and it stated:
“According to paragraph
4, the purpose of a customs union is ‘to
facilitate trade’ between the constituent members and ‘not to raise
barriers to the trade’ with third countries. This objective demands
that a balance be struck by the constituent members of a customs union.
A customs union should facilitate trade within the customs union, but it
should not do so in a way that raises barriers to trade with third
countries.”(970)
(c) Reference to GATT practice
686. With respect to GATT practice on this subject.
3. Article XXIV:5
(a) Chapeau
(i) Interpretation: the necessity test
687. The Panel on Turkey — Textiles had found that Turkey could not
justify a violation of Article XI by invoking
Article XXIV:5, because
Article XXIV:5, in the view of the Panel, does not apply to specific
measures adopted on the occasion of the formation of a new customs
union. Rather, the Panel found that Article XXIV:5 focuses on the
overall effect of a regional agreement. As a result, the Panel concluded
that there is no legal basis in Article XXIV:5(a) for the justification
of individual quantitative restrictions which are otherwise incompatible
with WTO law. Although the Appellate Body ultimately upheld the Panel’s
finding that Turkey’s measures could not be justified under Article
XXIV, it modified the Panel’s reasoning on Article
XXIV:5. The
Appellate Body began by emphasizing that the chapeau of Article XXIV:5
states that the provisions of GATT 1994 “shall not prevent” the
formation of a customs union and that this meant “that the provisions
of the GATT 1994 shall not make impossible the formation of a customs
union”:
“[I]n examining the text of the chapeau to establish its ordinary
meaning, we note that the chapeau states that the provisions of the GATT
1994 ‘shall not prevent’ the formation of a customs union. We read
this to mean that the provisions of the GATT 1994 shall not make
impossible the formation of a customs union. Thus, the chapeau makes it
clear that Article XXIV may, under certain conditions, justify the
adoption of a measure which is inconsistent with certain other GATT
provisions, and may be invoked as a possible ‘defence’ to a finding
of inconsistency.(971)
Second, in examining the text of the chapeau, we observe also that it
states that the provisions of the GATT 1994 shall not prevent ‘the
formation of a customs union’. This wording indicates that Article XXIV can justify the adoption of a measure which is inconsistent with
certain other GATT provisions only if the measure is introduced upon the
formation of a customs union, and only to the extent that the formation
of the customs union would be prevented if the introduction of the
measure were not allowed.”(972)
688. The Appellate Body then indicated the two conditions under which
a measure, otherwise incompatible with WTO law, could be justified by
virtue of Article XXIV:
“[I]n a case involving the formation of a customs union, this ‘defence’
is available only when two conditions are fulfilled. First, the party
claiming the benefit of this defence must demonstrate that the measure
at issue is introduced upon the formation of a customs union that fully
meets the requirements of sub-paragraphs 8(a) and
5(a) of Article XXIV.
And, second, that party must demonstrate that the formation of that
customs union would be prevented if it were not allowed to introduce the
measure at issue. Again, both these conditions must be met to have the
benefit of the defence under Article XXIV.
We would expect a panel, when examining such a measure, to require a
party to establish that both of these conditions have been fulfilled. It
may not always be possible to determine whether the second of the two
conditions has been fulfilled without initially determining whether the
first condition has been fulfilled. In other words, it may not always be
possible to determine whether not applying a measure would prevent the
formation of a customs union without first determining whether there is
a customs union.”(973)
689.
The Appellate Body reiterated its findings from
Turkey — Textiles, referenced in paragraphs 687-688
above, in its Report on
Argentina — Footwear (EC), when it examined the Panel’s finding that
Argentina had violated Article 2 of the Agreement on Safeguards by
including imports from all sources in its investigation of “increased
imports” of footwear products into its territory but excluding other
MERCOSUR member States from the application of the safeguard measures.(974)
(ii) Reference to GATT practice
690. With respect to GATT practice on this subject.
(b) Paragraph 5(a)
(i) Link with the chapeau
691. In Turkey —
Textiles, the Appellate Body held that “Article
XXIV can … only be invoked as a defence … to the extent that the
measure [at issue] is introduced upon the formation of a customs union
which meets the requirement in sub-paragraph 5(a)”:
“[I]n examining the text of the chapeau of Article
XXIV:5, we note
that the chapeau states that the provisions of the GATT 1994 shall not
prevent the formation of a customs union ‘Provided that’. The phrase
‘provided that’ is an essential element of the text of the chapeau.
In this respect, for purposes of a ‘customs union’, the relevant
proviso is set out immediately following the chapeau, in Article
XXIV:5(a). …
Given this proviso, Article XXIV can, in our view, only be invoked as
a defence to a finding that a measure is inconsistent with certain GATT
provisions to the extent that the measure is introduced upon the
formation of a customs union which meets the requirement in
sub-paragraph 5(a) of Article XXIV relating to the ‘duties and other
regulations of commerce’ applied by the constituent members of the
customs union to trade with third countries.”(975)
(ii) “General incidence” of duties
692. With respect to the requirements for a WTO-compatible customs
union, the Appellate Body in Turkey — Textiles noted that the term “general
incidence” of duties referred to the applied rates of duties:
“With respect to ‘duties’, Article XXIV:5(a) requires that the
duties applied by the constituent members of the customs union after the
formation of the customs union ‘shall not on the whole be higher …
than the general incidence’ of the duties that were applied by each of
the constituent members before the formation of the customs union.
Paragraph 2 of the Understanding on Article XXIV requires that the
evaluation under Article XXIV:5(a) of the general incidence of the
duties applied before and after the formation of a customs union ‘shall
… be based upon an overall assessment of weighted average tariff rates
and of customs duties collected.’(976) Before the agreement on this
Understanding, there were different views among the GATT Contracting
Parties as to whether one should consider, when applying the test of
Article XXIV:5(a), the bound rates of duty or the applied rates of duty.
This issue has been resolved by paragraph 2 of the Understanding on
Article XXIV, which clearly states that the applied rate of duty must be
used.”(977)
(iii) “Other regulations of commerce”
693. With respect to the term “other regulations of commerce”,
the Appellate Body held in Turkey — Textiles:
“With respect to ‘other regulations of commerce’,
Article
XXIV:5(a) requires that those applied by the constituent members after
the formation of the customs union ‘shall not on the whole be …
more
restrictive than the general incidence’ of the regulations of commerce
that were applied by each of the constituent members before the
formation of the customs union. Paragraph 2 of the Understanding on
Article XXIV explicitly recognizes that the quantification and
aggregation of regulations of commerce other than duties may be
difficult, and, therefore, states that ‘for the purpose of the overall
assessment of the incidence of other regulations of commerce for which
quantification and aggregation are difficult, the examination of
individual measures, regulations, products covered and trade flows
affected may be required.’(978)”(979)
(iv) “Economic test”
694. On the issue of increase of barriers
vis-à-vis third parties,
the Panel in the Turkey — Textiles case found that:
“What paragraph 5(a) provides, in short, is that the effects of the
resulting trade measures and policies of the new regional agreement
shall not be more trade restrictive, overall, than were the constituent
countries’ previous trade policies and that paragraph 5(a) provided
for an ‘“economic” test’ for assessing compatibility.”(980)
695. The Appellate Body on
Turkey — Textiles agreed with the Panel
that the test for assessing whether a specific customs union is
compatible with Article XXIV is an economic one:
“We agree with the Panel that the terms of Article
XXIV:5(a), as
elaborated and clarified by paragraph 2 of the Understanding on Article
XXIV, provide:
‘… that the effects of the resulting trade measures and policies
of the new regional agreement shall not be more trade restrictive,
overall, than were the constituent countries’ previous trade policies.’
and we also agree that this is:
‘an “economic” test for assessing whether a specific customs
union is compatible with Article XXIV.’”(981)
696. In Canada —
Autos, Canada invoked an Article XXIV exception
with respect to a certain import duty exemption, which was found
inconsistent with GATT Article I. The Panel, in a finding not reviewed
by the Appellate Body, rejected this defence, noting that the import
duty exemption was not granted to all products imported from the United
States and Mexico and that it was also granted to products from
countries other than the United States and Mexico:
“We recall that in our analysis of the impact of the conditions
under which the import duty exemption is accorded, we have found that
these conditions entail a distinction between countries depending upon
whether there are capital relationships of producers in those countries
with eligible importers in Canada. Thus, the measure not only grants
duty-free treatment in respect of products imported from the United
States and Mexico by manufacturer-beneficiaries; it also grants
duty-free treatment in respect of products imported from third countries
not parties to a customs union or free-trade area with Canada. The
notion that the import duty exemption involves the granting of duty-free
treatment of imports from the United States and Mexico does not capture
this aspect of the measure. In our view, Article XXIV clearly cannot
justify a measure which grants WTO-inconsistent duty-free treatment to
products originating in third countries not parties to a customs union
or free trade agreement.
We further note that the import duty exemption does not provide for
duty-free importation of all like products originating in the United
States or Mexico and that whether such products benefit from the
exemption depends upon whether they are imported by certain motor
vehicle manufacturers in Canada who are eligible for the exemption.
While in view of the particular foreign affiliation of these
manufacturers, the exemption will mainly benefit products of the United
States and Mexico, products of certain producers in these countries who
have no relationship with such manufacturers are unlikely to benefit
from the exemption. Thus, in practice the import duty exemption does not
apply to some products that would be entitled to duty-free treatment if
such treatment were dependant solely on the fact that the products
originated in the United States or Mexico. We thus do not believe that
the import duty exemption is properly characterized as a measure which
provides for duty-free treatment of imports of products of parties to a
free-trade area.”(982)
(c) Reference to GATT practice
697. With respect to GATT practice on this subject-matter, Article XXIV.
4. Article XXIV:7
(a) “Any contracting party … shall promptly notify the
Contracting Parties”
698. As of 31 December 2004, 310 regional trade agreements (RTAs) had
been notified to the GATT/ WTO(983). Of these, 253 RTAs were notified
under Article XXIV of the GATT 1947 or GATT 1994; 21 under the Enabling
Clause(984) (see paragraph 682 above); and 36 under
Article V of the GATS.
By that same date, 160 agreements were in force (with the following
breakdown, respectively: 111/21/28).(985)
(986)
(b) Examination of agreements
699. Up to the establishment of the Committee on Regional Trade
Agreements in February 1996, the examination of RTAs in accordance with
paragraph 7 of Article XXIV of the GATT 1994 and of the Understanding on
the Interpretation of Article XXIV of the GATT 1994 was carried out by
individual working parties. As of the entry into force of the WTO, 14
working parties of the GATT 1947 were in existence;(987) from January 1995
up to February 1996, 12 additional working parties were established by
either the Council for Trade in Goods or the Council for Trade in
Services.(988)
700. With respect to the
GATT 1947 working parties, the decision
adopted by the General Council on 31 January 1995 on the Avoidance of
Procedural and Institutional Duplication states:
“2. The coordination procedures set out in
paragraphs 3 and 4 below
shall apply in the relations between the bodies referred to in
sub-paragraphs (a) to (d) below:
…
(c) The Working Parties established under the GATT 1947 to examine a
regional agreement or arrangement shall coordinate their activities with
Working Parties of the WTO that examine the same regional agreement or
arrangement.(989)
…
3. The bodies established under the GATT 1947 or a Tokyo Round
Agreement that are referred to in paragraph 2 above shall hold their
meetings jointly or consecutively, as appropriate, with the
corresponding WTO bodies. In meetings held jointly the rules of
procedure to be applied by the WTO body shall be followed. The reports
on joint meetings shall be submitted to the competent bodies established
under the GATT 1947, the Tokyo Round Agreements and the WTO Agreement.
4. The coordination of activities in accordance with
paragraph 3
above shall be conducted in a manner which ensures that the enjoyment of
the rights and the performance of the obligations under the GATT 1947,
the Tokyo Round Agreements and the WTO Agreement and the exercise of the
competence of the CONTRACTING PARTIES to the GATT 1947, the Committees
established under the Tokyo Round Agreements and the bodies of the WTO
are unaffected.”(990)
701. At its meeting on 11 July 1995, the General Council modified the
terms or reference for those working parties established under the GATT
1947 so that agreements would be examined in the light of the relevant
provisions of the GATT 1994, and that examination reports would be
submitted to the Council for Trade in Goods.(991) Similarly, the Committee
on Trade and Development modified the terms of reference for the
examination of MERCOSUR at its meeting on 14 September 1995, so that the
examination be carried out in the light of the relevant provisions of
the Enabling Clause and the GATT 1994. The Decision stated that the
examination report would be transmitted to the Committee on Trade and
Development for submission to the General Council, with a copy of the
report transmitted as well to the Council for Trade in Goods.(992)
702. The first terms of reference under the WTO
for the examination
of a regional trade agreement — Enlargement of the European
Communities (accession of Austria, Finland and Sweden) — was adopted
by the Council for Trade in Goods on 20 February 1995, along with an
understanding read out by the Chairman at that meeting.(993) Since then,
these terms of reference and Chairman’s understanding have been
standard for the examination of all regional trade agreements notified
under Article XXIV of the GATT 1994.
703. On 6 February 1996, the General Council established the
Committee on RTAs.(994) Under its terms of reference, the Committee is
mandated, inter alia, to carry out the examination of agreements in
accordance with the procedures and terms of reference adopted by the
Council for Trade in Goods, the Council for Trade in Services and the
Committee on Trade and Development, as the case may be.(995) With respect
to the establishment, terms of reference and rules of procedure of the
Committee, see the Chapter on the WTO Agreement, Section
V.B.7(f). With
respect to procedures for the examination of regional trade agreements,
see the Chapter on the WTO Agreement, Section
V.B.7(f)(iv).
704. On 31 December 2004, the Committee on RTAs had under examination
a total of 112 RTAs, of which 86 were in the area of trade in goods and
26 in trade in services.(996) By that same date, the Committee had already
completed the factual examination for 40 of these RTAs; 38 RTAs were
undergoing factual examination; for the remaining 34 RTAs, the factual
examination had not yet started (see, respectively, Annex I-Annex III
for the lists of RTAs notified under Article XXIV of the GATT 1994, and
the Chapter on the GATS, for the lists of RTAs notified under Article V
of the GATS).(997) At that same date, an additional ten agreements
notified under Article XXIV of the GATT 1994,
Article V of the GATS and
the Enabling Clause were yet to be considered by the relevant Councils
or Committee (see Annex IV below for those RTAs notified under
Article
XXIV of the GATT 1994 or under GATT 1947, and the Chapter on the
GATS,
for those RTAs notified under Article V of the GATS).
705. During 2004, the Committee on RTAs was informed that 65 RTAs
previously in force and notified to the GATT/WTO had been terminated as
a consequence of the enlargement of the European Union to include ten
new member States on 1 May 2004 (see Annex V below for those RTAs
notified under Article XXIV of the GATT 1994 or under GATT
1947, and the
Chapter on the GATS, for those RTAs notified under Article V of the
GATS)(998), and that the ten acceding countries had become, or were in the
process of becoming, parties to European Communities’ free trade
agreements and customs unions with third parties. At its 38th session
held on 11 November 2004, the Committee agreed to terminate the
examination process for these agreements.(999)
“The Committee on Regional Trade Agreement has conducted a series
of informal consultations regarding the examination of regional trade
agreements concluded by WTO Members with non-Members.”(1000)
(c) Absence of recommendation pursuant to Article XXIV:7
706. In Turkey —
Textiles, Turkey argued before the Panel that as
no Article XXIV:7 recommendation had ever been made to parties to a
customs union to change or abolish any import restrictions and, in
particular, that such recommendation had never been made in respect of
previous Turkey/EC trade agreements, this indicated that its measures
were WTO-compatible. Recalling that a similar argument had been made
before the GATT Panel in EEC — Imports from Hong Kong, the Panel cited
approvingly the findings of the GATT Panel in this case:
“[I]t would be erroneous to interpret the fact that a measure had
not been subject to Article XXIII over a number of years, as tantamount
to its tacit acceptance by contracting parties.”(1001)
(d) “Any substantial change in the plan and schedule … shall be
communicated to the Contracting Parties”
707. See
paragraph 715 below.
5. Article XXIV:8
(a) Article XXIV:8(a)(i)
708. In Turkey —
Textiles, the Appellate Body addressed the
internal trade aspect of a customs union, as set forth in Article
XXIV:8(a)(i):
“Sub-paragraph 8(a)(i) of Article XXIV establishes the standard for
the internal trade between constituent members in order to satisfy the
definition of a ‘customs union’. It requires the constituent members
of a customs union to eliminate ‘duties and other restrictive
regulations of commerce’ with respect to ‘substantially all the
trade’ between them. Neither the GATT Contracting Parties nor the WTO
Members have ever reached an agreement on the interpretation of the term
‘substantially’ in this provision. It is clear, though, that ‘substantially
all the trade’ is not the same as all the trade, and also that ‘substantially
all the trade’ is something considerably more than merely some of the
trade. We note also that the terms of sub-paragraph 8(a)(i) provide that
members of a customs union may maintain, where necessary, in their
internal trade, certain restrictive regulations of commerce that are
otherwise permitted under Articles XI through
XV and under Article XX of
the GATT 1994. Thus, we agree with the Panel that the terms of
sub-paragraph 8(a)(i) offer ‘some flexibility’ to the constituent
members of a customs union when liberalizing their internal trade in
accordance with this sub-paragraph. Yet we caution that the degree of
‘flexibility’ that sub-paragraph 8(a)(i) allows is limited by the
requirement that ‘duties and other restrictive regulations of commerce’
be ‘eliminated with respect to substantially all’ internal trade.”(1002)
709. In Turkey —
Textiles, the Appellate Body set out a two-prong
test for assessing whether Article XXIV may justify a measure
inconsistent with other WTO provisions: “First, the party claiming the
benefit of this defence must demonstrate that the measure at issue is
introduced upon the formation of a customs union that fully meets the
requirements of sub-paragraphs 8(a) and 5(a) of Article
XXIV. And,
second, that party must demonstrate that the formation of a customs
union would be prevented if it were not allowed to introduce the measure
at issue”.(1003) With respect to the second condition, Turkey argued
that “had it not introduced the quantitative restrictions on textile
and clothing products from India that are at issue, the European
Communities would have ‘exclud[ed] these products from free trade
within the Turkey/EC customs union’”.(1004) The Appellate Body found
that Turkey was not required to introduce the quantitative restrictions
at issue:
“As the Panel observed, there are other alternatives available to
Turkey and the European Communities to prevent any possible diversion of
trade, while at the same time meeting the requirements of sub-paragraph
8(a)(i). For example, Turkey could adopt rules of origin for textile and
clothing products that would allow the European Communities to
distinguish between those textile and clothing products originating in
Turkey, which would enjoy free access to the European Communities under
the terms of the customs union, and those textile and clothing products
originating in third countries, including India. … A system of
certificates of origin would have been a reasonable alternative until
the quantitative restrictions applied by the European Communities are
required to be terminated under the provisions of the ATC. Yet no use
was made of this possibility to avoid trade diversion. Turkey preferred
instead to introduce the quantitative restrictions at issue.
For this reason, we conclude that Turkey was not, in fact, required
to apply the quantitative restrictions at issue in this appeal in order
to form a customs union with the European Communities.”(1005)
710. In Turkey —
Textiles, the Panel did not agree with the
argument that a WTO right pertaining to a constituent member prior to
the formation of a customs union could be “passed” or “extended”
to other constituent members:
“[E]ven if the formation of a customs union may be the occasion for
the constituent member(s) to adopt, to the greatest extent possible,
similar policies, the specific circumstances which serve as the legal
basis for one Member’s exercise of such a specific right cannot
suddenly be considered to exist for the other constituent members. We
also consider that the right of Members to form a customs union is to be
exercised in such a way so as to ensure that the WTO rights and
obligations of third country Members (and the constituent Members) are
respected, consistent with the primacy of the WTO, as reiterated in the
Singapore Declaration.”(1006)
(b) Reference to GATT practice
711. With respect to GATT practice on this subject-matter.
(c) Article XXIV:8(a)(ii)
(i) Interpretation
712. In Turkey —
Textiles, the Appellate Body addressed the
requirement contained in Article XXIV:8(a)(ii) that constituent members
of a customs union apply “substantially the same” duties and other
regulations of commerce to their external trade with third countries.
The Appellate Body agreed with the Panel that the term “substantially
the same” has both “qualitative and quantitative components”:
“Sub-paragraph 8(a)(ii) establishes the standard for the trade of
constituent members with third countries in order to satisfy the
definition of a ‘customs union’. It requires the constituent members
of a customs union to apply ‘substantially the same’ duties and
other regulations of commerce to external trade with third countries.
The constituent members of a customs union are thus required to apply a
common external trade regime, relating to both duties and other
regulations of commerce. However, sub-paragraph 8(a)(ii) does not
require each constituent member of a customs union to apply the same
duties and other regulations of commerce as other constituent members
with respect to trade with third countries; instead, it requires that
substantially the same duties and other regulations of commerce shall be
applied. We agree with the Panel that:
‘[t]he ordinary meaning of the term “substantially” in the
context of sub-paragraph 8(a) appears to provide for both qualitative
and quantitative components. The expression “substantially the same
duties and other regulations of commerce are applied by each of the
Members of the [customs] union” would appear to encompass both
quantitative and qualitative elements, the quantitative aspect more
emphasized in relation to duties.’(1007)”(1008)
713. The Appellate Body on
Turkey — Textiles further agreed with
the Panel that the phrase “substantially the same” in Article
XXIV:8(a)(ii) offered a “certain degree of flexibility”. However,
the Appellate Body objected to the standard of “comparable trade
regulations having similar effects” developed by the Panel and held
that this standard did not rise to the required standard of “sameness”:
“We also believe that the Panel was correct in its statement that
the terms of sub-paragraph 8(a)(ii), and, in particular, the phrase ‘substantially
the same’ offer a certain degree of ‘flexibility’ to the
constituent members of a customs union in ‘the creation of a common
commercial policy.’(1009) here too we would caution that this ‘flexibility’
is limited. It must not be forgotten that the word ‘substantially’
qualifies the words ‘the same’. Therefore, in our view, something
closely approximating ‘sameness’ is required by Article
XXIV:8(a)(ii).(1010) We do not agree with the Panel that:
… as a general rule, a situation where constituent members have ‘comparable’
trade regulations having similar effects with respect to the trade with
third countries, would generally meet the qualitative dimension of the
requirements of sub-paragraph 8(a)(ii).(1011)
Sub-paragraph 8(a)(ii) requires the constituent members of a customs
union to adopt ‘substantially the same’ trade regulations. In our
view, ‘comparable trade regulations having similar effects’ do not
meet this standard. A higher degree of ‘sameness’ is required by the
terms of sub-paragraph 8(a)(ii).”(1012)
(ii) Reference to GATT practice
714. With respect to GATT practice on this subject-matter.
6. Understanding on the Interpretation of Article XXIV of the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994
(a) Notification and reporting requirements in accordance with
paragraphs 9 and 11 of the Understanding
715. In November 1998, the Council for Trade in Goods approved the
recommendations adopted by the Committee on RTAs with respect to the
required reporting on the operation of regional trade agreements, any
significant changes and/or developments in the agreement or substantial
changes in the plan and schedule of interim agreements.(1013)
716. Schedules for the submission of biennial reports were presented
to the Committee on RTAs in December 1998, February 2001 and December
2003(1014) (see Annex below).
(b) Paragraph 12 on dispute settlement
717. With reference to the question of a panel’s jurisdiction to
assess the compatibility of regional trade agreements with WTO rules,
the Appellate Body, in Turkey — Textiles, stated:
“More specifically, with respect to the first condition, the Panel,
in this case, did not address the question of whether the regional trade
arrangement between Turkey and the European Communities is, in fact, a
‘customs union’ which meets the requirements of paragraphs 8(a) and
5(a) of Article XXIV. The Panel maintained that ‘it is arguable’
that panels do not have jurisdiction to assess the overall compatibility
of a customs union with the requirements of Article
XXIV. We are not
called upon in this appeal to address this issue, but we note in this
respect our ruling in India — Quantitative Restrictions on Imports of
Agricultural, Textile and Industrial Products on the jurisdiction of
panels to review the justification of balance-of-payments restrictions
under Article XVIII:B of the GATT
1994. The Panel also considered that,
on the basis of the principle of judicial economy, it was not necessary
to assess the compatibility of the regional trade arrangement between
Turkey and the European Communities with Article XXIV in order to
address the claims of India. Based on this reasoning, the Panel assumed
arguendo that the arrangement between Turkey and the European
Communities is compatible with the requirements of Article XXIV:8(a) and
5(a) and limited its examination to the question of whether Turkey was
permitted to introduce the quantitative restrictions at issue. The
assumption by the Panel that the agreement between Turkey and the
European Communities is a ‘customs union’ within the meaning of
Article XXIV was not appealed. Therefore, the issue of whether this
arrangement meets the requirements of paragraphs 8(a) and
5(a) of
Article XXIV is not before us.”(1015)
718. In Turkey —
Textiles, the Panel recalled the well-established
WTO rules on burden of proof, whereby “… (b) it is for the party
invoking an exception or an affirmative defense to prove that the
conditions contained therein are met and … (c) it is for the party
asserting a fact to prove it”, noting a third party’s argument that
“since Article XXIV was an exception invoked by Turkey, it was for
Turkey to bear the burden of proof”.(1016) In the same case, the
Appellate Body stated:
“[W]e would expect a panel, when examining such a measure [taken by
a party to a customs union], to require a party to establish that both
of these conditions [the customs union fully meets the requirements of
XXIV:8(a) and 5(a) and that without such measure that customs union
could not be formed] have been fulfilled.” (emphasis added)(1017)
E. Relationship with other Articles
1. Article I
719. On the major question of whether
Article XXIV should be
considered as a derogation from the MFN obligation under Article I of
the GATT 1994 only, or from other GATT 1994 provisions as well,
the Appellate Body on Turkey — Textiles stated:
“Article XXIV may justify a measure which is inconsistent with
certain other GATT provisions. However, in a case involving the
formation of a customs union, this ‘defence’ is available only when
two conditions are fulfilled. First, the party claiming the benefit of
this defence must demonstrate that the measure at issue is introduced
upon the formation of a customs union that fully meets the requirements
of sub-paragraphs 8(a) and 5(a) of Article
XXIV. And, second, that party
must demonstrate that the formation of that customs union would be
prevented if it were not allowed to introduce the measure at issue.
Again, both these conditions must be met to have the benefit of the
defence under Article XXIV.”(1018)
2. Article XI
720. In Turkey —
Textiles, the Panel found that the quantitative
restrictions imposed by Turkey on imports from India of a number of
textile and clothing products were inconsistent with Articles XI and
XIII of GATT 1994 (and consequently with Article 2.4 of the Agreement on
Textiles and Clothing). The Panel rejected Turkey’s defence that
Article XXIV:5(a) of GATT 1994 authorizes Members forming a customs
union to deviate from the prohibitions contained in Articles XI and
XIII
of the GATT 1994 (and Article 2.4 of the Agreement on
Textiles and Clothing).(1019) The Appellate Body upheld the Panel’s conclusion that
“Article XXIV does not allow Turkey to adopt, upon the formation of a
customs union with the European Communities, quantitative restrictions
… which were found inconsistent with Articles XI and
XIII of GATT 1994 and Article 2.4 of the ATC”.(1020) However, the Appellate Body stressed
that it was only finding that Turkey’s quantitative restrictions at
issue were not justified by Article XXIV but that it was not making a
“finding on the issue of whether quantitative restrictions will ever
be justified by Article XXIV”.(1021) See paragraphs 708-709
above.
3. Article XIII
721. See
paragraph 720 above.
F. Relationship with other WTO Agreements
1. Agreement on Safeguards
(a) Footnote 1 to Article 2.1
722. In Argentina — Footwear
(EC), the Panel found that Argentina
violated Article 2 of the Agreement on Safeguards
by including imports
from all sources in its investigation of “increased imports” of
footwear products into its territory but excluding other MERCOSUR member
States from the application of the safeguard measures. The Appellate
Body reversed the Panel’s finding, holding that footnote 1 to Article
2.1 of the Agreement on Safeguards applied to the facts of the case
before it. The Appellate Body opined that “the footnote only applies
when a customs union applies a safeguard measure ‘as a single unit or
on behalf of a member State’”; in the case before it, the Appellate
Body found, MERCOSUR had not applied the safeguards measures at issue
(the measures had been imposed by the Argentine authorities).(1022)
723. In US — Wheat
Gluten, the Panel found that the United States
had acted inconsistently with Articles 2.1 and
4.2 of the Agreement on
Safeguards by including imports from all sources in its investigation,
but excluding imports from Canada from the application of the safeguard
measure. On appeal, the United States argued, inter alia, that the Panel
erred in failing to assess the legal relevance of footnote 1 to the
Agreement on Safeguards, and Article XXIV of the GATT 1994 to this
issue. The Appellate Body held:
“In this case, the Panel determined that this dispute does not
raise the issue of whether, as a general principle, a member of a
free-trade area can exclude imports from other members of that
free-trade area from the application of a safeguard measure. The Panel
also found that it could rule on the claim of the European Communities
without having recourse to Article XXIV or footnote 1 to the Agreement
on Safeguards. We see no error in this approach, and make no findings on
these arguments.”(1023)
(b) Article 2.2
724. The Appellate Body on
US — Line Pipe avoided ruling on whether
Article 2.2 of the Agreement on Safeguards “permits a Member to
exclude imports originating in member states of a free-trade area from
the scope of a safeguard measure”. Nevertheless, the Appellate Body
asserted that the latter question becomes relevant in two circumstances:
“The question of whether Article XXIV of the GATT 1994 serves as an
exception to Article 2.2 of the Agreement on Safeguards becomes relevant
in only two possible circumstances. One is when, in the investigation by
the competent authorities of a WTO Member, the imports that are exempted
from the safeguard measure are not considered in the determination of
serious injury. The other is when, in such an investigation, the imports
that are exempted from the safeguard measure are considered in the
determination of serious injury, and the competent authorities have
also
established explicitly, through a reasoned and adequate explanation,
that imports from sources outside the free-trade area, alone, satisfied
the conditions for the application of a safeguard measure, as set out in
Article 2.1 and elaborated in Article
4.2.”(1024)
2. Agreement on Textiles and Clothing
725. In Turkey —
Textiles, the Panel found that the quantitative
restrictions imposed by Turkey on imports from India of a number of
textile and clothing products were inconsistent with Articles XI and
XIII of the GATT 1994 and consequently with Article 2.4 of the Agreement on
Textiles and Clothing. The Panel rejected Turkey’s defence that
Article XXIV:5(a) of the GATT 1994 authorizes Members forming a customs
union to deviate from the prohibitions contained in Article 2.4 of the Agreement on
Textiles and Clothing (and Articles XI and
XIII of the GATT 1994).(1025) The Appellate Body upheld the Panel’s conclusion that “Article
XXIV does not allow Turkey to adopt, upon the formation of a customs
union with the European Communities, quantitative restrictions … which
were found inconsistent with Articles XI and
XIII of the GATT 1994 and
Article 2.4 of the ATC”.(1026) However, the Appellate Body stressed that
it was only finding that Turkey’s quantitative restrictions at issue
were not justified by Article XXIV but that it was not making a “finding
on the issue of whether quantitative restrictions will ever be justified
by Article XXIV”.(1027) In this regard, the Appellate Body recalled that
Article 2.4 of the Agreement on
Textiles and Clothing refers to the “relevant
GATT 1994 provisions” as an exception to the prohibition of new
restrictions to trade and that, therefore, “Article XXIV of
GATT 1994
is incorporated in the ATC and may be invoked as a defence to a claim of
inconsistency of Article 2.4 of the
ATC, provided that the conditions
set forth in Article XXIV for the availability of this defence are met.”(1028)
G. Annex I
1. List of RTAs notified under Article XXIV of the GATT 1994 for
which factual examination has been completed
|
Agreement |
Date of Notification |
Terms of Reference for the Examination |
WTO Document series |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Chile and
Costa Rica |
14-May-02 |
WT/REG136/2 |
WT/REG136 |
|
Agreement between New Zealand and Singapore on a Closer
Economic Partnership |
19-Sep-01 |
WT/REG127/2 |
WT/REG127 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the EFTA States and Mexico |
22-Aug-01 |
WT/REG126/2 |
WT/REG126 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Chile and
Mexico |
8-Mar-01 |
WT/REG125/2 |
WT/REG125
|
|
Free Trade Agreement between Israel and
Mexico |
8-Mar-01 |
WT/REG124/2 |
WT/REG124 |
|
Free Trade Area between the EFTA States and the Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia |
31-Jan-01 |
WT/REG117/2 and Corr.1 |
WT/REG117 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Turkey and the Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia |
22-Jan-01 |
WT/REG115/2 and Corr.1 |
WT/REG115 |
|
Euro-Mediterranean Agreement between the European Communities
and Israel |
7-Nov-00 |
WT/REG110/2 and Corr.1 |
WT/REG110 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between EFTA and
Morocco |
18-Feb-00 |
WT/REG91/2 |
WT/REG91
WT/REG91 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Bulgaria and the Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia |
18-Feb-00 |
WT/REG90/2 |
WT/REG90 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the Kyrgyz Republic and Moldova |
15-Jun-99 |
WT/REG76/2 |
WT/REG76 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Turkey and Bulgaria |
4-May-99 |
WT/REG72/2 |
WT/REG72 |
|
Central European Free Trade Agreement — Accession of Bulgaria |
24-Mar-99 |
WT/REG11/11 |
WT/REG11 |
|
Euro-Mediterranean Agreement between the European Communities
and Tunisia |
23-Mar-99 |
WT/REG69/3 |
WT/REG69 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Turkey and
Israel |
18-May-98 |
WT/REG60/2 |
WT/REG60 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Turkey and
Romania |
18-May-98 |
WT/REG59/2 |
WT/REG59 |
|
Customs Union between the European Community and the
Principality of Andorra |
9-Mar-98 |
WT/REG53/2 |
WT/REG53 |
|
Central European Free Trade Agreement — Accession of Romania |
8-Jan-98 |
WT/REG11/8 |
WT/REG11 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Romania and the Republic of
Moldova |
24-Sep-97 |
WT/REG44/3 |
WT/REG44 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Canada and
Chile |
26-Aug-97 |
WT/REG38/3 |
WT/REG38 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the Government of Canada and the
Government of the State of Israel |
23-Jan-97 |
WT/REG31/3 |
WT/REG31 |
|
Agreement between the Government of Denmark and the Home
Government of the Faroe Islands, on the one part, and the
Government of Norway, on the other part |
13-Mar-96 |
WT/REG25/2 |
WT/REG25 |
|
Agreement between the Government of Denmark and the Home
Government of the Faroe Islands, on the one part, and the
Government of Switzerland, on the other part |
8-Mar-96 |
WT/REG24/2 |
WT/REG24 |
|
Agreement between the Government of Denmark and the Home
Government of the Faroe Islands, on the one part, and the
Government of Iceland, on the other part |
23-Jan-96 |
WT/REG23/2 |
WT/REG23 |
|
Enlargement of the European Union — Accession of Austria,
Finland and Sweden |
20-Jan-95 |
WT/REG3/1 L/7614/Add.1 |
WT/REG3 |
|
Interim Agreement between Bulgaria and the European
Communities |
23-Dec-94 |
WT/REG1/2 |
WT/REG1 |
|
Interim Agreement between Romania and the European Communities |
23-Dec-94 |
WT/REG2/2 and Corr. 1 |
WT/REG2 |
|
Central European Free Trade Agreement
(CEFTA) |
30-Jun-94 |
WT/REG11/1 |
WT/REG11 |
|
EFTA — Bulgaria Free Trade Agreement |
7-Jul-93 |
WT/REG12/1 |
WT/REG12 |
|
EFTA — Romania Free Trade Agreement |
24-May-93 |
WT/REG16/1 |
WT/REG16 |
|
North American Free Trade Agreement |
1-Feb-93 |
WT/REG4/2 |
WT/REG4 |
|
EFTA — Israel Free Trade Agreement |
1-Dec-92 |
WT/REG14/1 |
WT/REG14 |
H. Annex II
1. List of RTAs notified under Article XXIV of the GATT 1994 under
factual examination
|
Agreement |
Date of Notification |
Terms of Reference for the Examination |
WTO Document series |
|
Singapore-Australia Free Trade Agreement |
1-Oct-03 |
WT/REG158/2 |
WT/REG158 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Turkey and Croatia |
8-Sep-03 |
WT/REG156/2 |
WT/REG156 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the EFTA States and Singapore |
24-Jan-03 |
WT/REG148/2 |
WT/REG148 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Canada and Costa Rica |
17-Jan-03 |
WT/REG147/2 |
WT/REG147 |
|
European Communities — Croatia Interim Agreement |
20-Dec-02 |
WT/REG142/2 |
WT/REG142 |
|
European Communities — Jordan Euro-Mediterranean Agreement |
20-Dec-02 |
WT/REG141/2 |
WT/REG141 |
|
Agreement between Japan and Singapore for a New-Age Economic
Partnership |
14-Nov-02 |
WT/REG140/2 |
WT/REG140 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the United States and Jordan |
5-Mar-02 |
WT/REG134/2 |
WT/REG134 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the EFTA States and Jordan |
22-Jan-02 |
WT/REG133/2 |
WT/REG133 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the EFTA States and Croatia |
22-Jan-02 |
WT/REG132/2 |
WT/REG132 |
|
Interim Agreement between the European Community and the Former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia |
21-Nov-01 |
WT/REG129/2 |
WT/REG129 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Georgia and Armenia |
21-Feb-01 |
WT/REG119/2
and Corr.1 |
WT/REG119 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Georgia and Azerbaijan |
21-Feb-01 |
WT/REG120/2
and Corr.1 |
WT/REG120 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Georgia and Kazakhstan |
21-Feb-01 |
WT/REG123/2
and Corr.1 |
WT/REG123 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Georgia and the Russian Federation |
21-Feb-01 |
WT/REG118/2
and Corr.1 |
WT/REG118 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Georgia and Turkmenistan |
21-Feb-01 |
WT/REG122/2
and Corr.1 |
WT/REG122 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Georgia and Ukraine |
21-Feb-01 |
WT/REG121/2
and Corr.1 |
WT/REG121
|
|
Free Trade Agreement between the Kyrgyz Republic and Armenia |
4-Jan-01 |
WT/REG114/2
and Corr.1 |
WT/REG114
|
|
Euro-Mediterranean Agreement between the European Communities
and Morocco |
8-Nov-00 |
WT/REG112/2 |
WT/REG112
|
|
Free Trade Agreement between the European Communities and
Mexico |
1-Aug-00 |
WT/REG109/2 |
WT/REG109 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus,
Georgia, Moldova, Kazakhstan, Russian Federation, Ukraine,
Uzbekistan Tajikistan and Kyrgyz Rep. |
1-Oct-99 |
WT/REG82/2 |
WT/REG82 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the Kyrgyz Republic and Kazakhstan |
29-Sep-99 |
WT/REG81/2 |
WT/REG81 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the Kyrgyz Republic and the
Russian Federation |
15-Jun-99 |
WT/REG73/2 |
WT/REG73 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the Kyrgyz Republic and Ukraine |
15-Jun-99 |
WT/REG74/2 |
WT/REG74 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the Kyrgyz Republic and Uzbekistan |
15-Jun-99 |
WT/REG75/2 |
WT/REG75 |
|
Agreement on Customs Union and Single Economic Area between the
Kyrgyz Republic, the Russian Federation, the Republic of Belarus,
the Republic of Kazakhstan and the Republic of Tajikistan |
21-Apr-99 |
WT/REG71/3/Rev.1 |
WT/REG71 |
|
Agreement between the European Community on the one part and
the Government of Denmark and the Home Government of the Faroe
Islands on the other part |
19-Feb-97 |
WT/REG21/2 |
WT/REG21 |
|
Customs Union between Turkey and the European Community |
22-Dec-95 |
WT/REG22/4 |
WT/REG22 |
I. Annex III
1. List of RTAs notified under Article XXIV of the GATT 1994 for
which factual examination has not yet commenced
|
Agreement |
Date of Notification |
Terms of Reference for the Examination |
WTO Document series |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Albania and Serbia Montenegro |
19-Oct-04 |
WT/REG178/2 |
WT/REG178 |
|
Euro-Mediterranean Association Agreement between the European
Community and Egypt |
4-Oct-04 |
WT/REG177/2 |
WT/REG177 |
|
Southern African Development Community Free Trade Area |
9-Aug-04 |
WT/REG176/3 |
WT/REG176 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Armenia and Turkmenistan |
27-Jul-04 |
WT/REG175/2 |
WT/REG175 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Armenia and Russian Federation |
27-Jul-04 |
WT/REG174/2 |
WT/REG174 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Armenia and Moldova |
27-Jul-04 |
WT/REG173/2 |
WT/REG173 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Armenia and Kazakhstan |
27-Jul-04 |
WT/REG172/2 |
WT/REG172 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Armenia and Ukraine |
27-Jul-04 |
WT/REG171/2 |
WT/REG171 |
|
Enlargement of the European Union |
30-Apr-04 |
WT/REG170/1 |
WT/REG170 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the Republic of Korea and Chile |
19-Apr-04 |
WT/REG169/2 |
WT/REG169 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Albania and the United Nations
Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) |
8-Apr-04 |
WT/REG168/2 |
WT/REG168 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Albania and Bulgaria |
31-Mar-04 |
WT/REG167/2 |
WT/REG167 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Croatia and Albania |
31-Mar-04 |
WT/REG166/2 |
WT/REG166 |
|
Central European Free Trade Agreement — Accession of the
Republic of Croatia |
3-Mar-04 |
WT/REG11/13 |
WT/REG11 |
|
EC — Chile Interim Agreement |
18-Feb-04 |
WT/REG164/3 |
WT/REG164 |
|
Free-Trade Agreement between Chile and El Salvador |
16-Feb-04 |
WT/REG165/3 |
WT/REG165 |
|
Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement between China and
Macao, China |
12-Jan-04 |
WT/REG163/2 |
WT/REG163 |
|
Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement between China and Hong
Kong, China |
12-Jan-04 |
WT/REG162/2 |
WT/REG162 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the United States and Singapore |
19-Dec-03 |
WT/REG161/2 |
WT/REG161 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the United States and Chile |
19-Dec-03 |
WT/REG160/2 |
WT/REG160 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina |
6-Oct-03 |
WT/REG159/2 |
WT/REG159 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Turkey and Bosnia and Herzegovina |
8-Sep-03 |
WT/REG157/2 |
WT/REG157 |
|
EC — Lebanon Interim Agreement |
4-Jun-03 |
WT/REG153/2 |
WT/REG153 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Bulgaria and Israel |
14-Apr-03 |
WT/REG150/2 |
WT/REG150 |
|
Trade, Development and Cooperation Agreement between the
European Community and South Africa |
21-Nov-00 |
WT/REG113/2 |
WT/REG113 |
|
Interim Agreement between the EFTA states and the Palestine
Liberation Organization for the benefit of the Palestinian
Authority |
21-Sep-99 |
WT/REG79/2 |
WT/REG79 |
|
Euro-Mediterranean Interim Association Agreement on Trade and
Co-operation between the European Community and the Palestine
Liberation Organization for the benefit of the Palestinian
Authority of the West Bank and Gaza Strip |
30-Jun-97 |
WT/REG43/2 |
WT/REG43 |
J. Annex IV
1. List of RTAs notified under Article XXIV of the GATT 1994 which
have not yet been considered by the Council for Trade in Goods
|
Agreement |
Date of Notification |
WTO Document series |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the United States and
Australia |
23-Dec-04 |
WT/REG184 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Albania and Moldova |
20-Dec-04 |
WT/REG183 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Albania and FYROM |
14-Dec-04 |
WT/REG182 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Albania and Bosnia and Herzegovina |
14-Dec-04 |
WT/REG181 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between Albania and Romania |
14-Dec-04 |
WT/REG180 |
|
Free Trade Agreement between the EFTA States and
Chile |
10-Dec-04 |
WT/REG179 |
K. Annex V
1. RTAs notified under Article XXIV of the GATT 1994 which have been
terminated following the Enlargement of the European Union on 1 May 2004
2. RTAs notified under the GATT 1947 which have been
terminated
following the Enlargement of the European Union on 1 May 2004
-
Association Agreement between the European Community and Cyprus
-
Association Agreement between the European Community and Malta
-
EFTA — Czech Republic Free Trade Area
-
EFTA — Slovak Republic Free Trade Area
-
Czech and Slovak Customs Union
L. Annex VI
1. Reports on the operation of agreements — 2004 Schedule
|
Agreement |
Document Reference |
CRTA Reference |
|
Australia-New Zealand Closer Economic Relations Trade Agreement
(ANZCERTA) |
not submitted |
… |
|
Australia-Papua New Guinea Agreement (PATCRA) |
not submitted |
… |
|
Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM) |
not submitted |
… |
|
Czech and Slovak Customs Union |
not submitted |
… |
|
European Free Trade Association |
WT/REG85/R/B/3 |
WT/REG/M/37 |
|
EFTA — Turkey Free Trade Area |
WT/REG86/R/B/3 |
WT/REG/M/37 |
|
EFTA — Czech Republic Free Trade Area |
not submitted |
… |
|
EFTA — Slovak Republic Free Trade Area |
not submitted |
… |
|
General Treaty on Central American Economic Integration |
WT/REG93/R/B/2 |
WT/REG/M/37 |
|
Agreement between the European Communities and Switzerland |
WT/REG94/R/B/3 |
WT/REG/M/37 |
|
Agreement between the European Communities and Iceland |
WT/REG95/R/B/3 |
WT/REG/M/37 |
|
Association of Certain Overseas Countries and Territories
Europe with the European Community |
WT/REG106/R/B/3 |
WT/REG/M/37 |
|
Agreement between the European Communities and Norway |
WT/REG137/R/B/2 |
WT/REG/M/37 |
|
Co-operation Agreement between the European Community and
Algeria |
not submitted |
… |
|
Association Agreement between the European Community and Cyprus |
not submitted |
… |
|
Co-operation Agreement between the European Community and Egypt |
not submitted |
… |
|
Association Agreement between the European Community and Malta |
not submitted |
… |
|
Co-operation Agreement between the European Community and Syria |
not submitted |
… |
|
Free Trade Area Agreement between Israel and the United States |
not submitted |
… |
Also covers the 2001 schedule of reports.
2. Reports on the operation of agreements — 2001 Schedule
XXVI. Article XXV
back to top
A. Text of Article XXV
Article XXV: Joint Action by the Contracting Parties
1. Representatives of the contracting parties shall meet from time to
time for the purpose of giving effect to those provisions of this
Agreement which involve joint action and, generally, with a view to
facilitating the operation and furthering the objectives of this
Agreement. Wherever reference is made in this Agreement to the
contracting parties acting jointly they are designated as the
CONTRACTING PARTIES.
2. The Secretary-General of the United Nations is requested to
convene the first meeting of the CONTRACTING PARTIES, which shall take
place not later than March 1, 1948.
3. Each contracting party shall be entitled to have one vote at all
meetings of the CONTRACTING PARTIES.
4. Except as otherwise provided for in this Agreement, decisions of
the CONTRACTING PARTIES shall be taken by a majority of the votes cast.
5. In exceptional circumstances not elsewhere provided for in this
Agreement, the CONTRACTING PARTIES may waive an obligation imposed upon
a contracting party by this Agreement; Provided that any such decision
shall be approved by a two-thirds majority of the votes cast and that
such majority shall comprise more than half of the contracting parties.
The CONTRACTING PARTIES may also by such a vote
(i) define certain categories of exceptional circumstances to which
other voting requirements shall apply for the waiver of obligations, and
(ii) prescribe such criteria as may be necessary for the application
of this paragraph(1).
(footnote original)
1 The authentic text erroneously reads “subparagraph”.
B. Interpretation and Application of Article XXV
726. With respect to decision-making by the WTO, see Chapter on the
WTO Agreement, Sections V.B.1(d) and
X.B.1 and X.B.3.
1. Reference to GATT practice
727. With respect to GATT practice on this subject-matter, Article XXV.
Footnotes:
966. WT/GC/M/10, para.11. The decision can be
found in WT/L/127. back to text
967. WT/REG/M/2, para. 11. The text of the
rules of procedures can be found in WT/REG/1. See also WT/REG/M/2, para.
12. back to text
968. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 56. back to text
969. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 57. back to text
970. WT/DS34/AB/R, paras. 55-56. back to text
971. (footnote original) We note that legal
scholars have long considered Article XXIV to be an “exception” or a
possible “defence” to claims of violation of GATT provisions. An
early treatise on GATT law stated: “[Article XXIV] establishes an
exception to GATT obligations for regional arrangements that meet a
series of detailed and complex criteria.” (emphasis added) J. Jackson,
World Trade and the Law of GATT (The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1969), p.
576. See also J. Allen, The European Common Market and the GATT (The
University Press of Washington, D.C., 1960), p. 2; K. Dam, “Regional
Economic Arrangements and the GATT: The Legacy of Misconception”,
University of Chicago Law Review, 1963, p. 616; and J. Huber, “The
Practice of GATT in Examining Regional Arrangements under Article XXIV”,
Journal of Common Market Studies, 1981, p. 281. We note also the
following statement in the unadopted panel report in EEC — Member
States’ Import Regimes for Bananas, DS32/R, 3 June 1993, para. 358:
“The Panel noted that Article XXIV:5 to 8 permitted the contracting
parties to deviate from their obligations under other provisions of the
General Agreement for the purpose of forming a customs union …”.
(emphasis added)
The chapeau of paragraph 5 refers only to the
provisions of the GATT 1994. It does not refer to the provisions of the ATC. However,
Article 2.4 of the ATC provides that “[n]o new
restrictions … shall be introduced except under the provisions of this
Agreement or relevant GATT 1994 provisions.” (emphasis added) In this
way, Article XXIV of the GATT 1994 is incorporated in the ATC and may be
invoked as a defence to a claim of inconsistency with Article 2.4 of the
ATC, provided that the conditions set forth in
Article XXIV for the
availability of this defence are met. back to text
972. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, paras. 45-46. back to text
973. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, paras. 58-59. back to text
974. Appellate Body Report on
Argentina — Footwear (EC), para. 109. back to text
975. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, paras. 51-52. back to text
976. Paragraph 2 of the Understanding on
Article XXIV further states that “this assessment shall be based on
import statistics for a previous representative period to be supplied by
the customs union, on a tariff-line basis and in values and quantities,
broken down by WTO country of origin.” back to text
977. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 53. back to text
978. (footnote original) In paragraph 43 of
its appellant’s submission, Turkey argues that this provision must be
interpreted as allowing the constituent members of a customs union to
introduce GATT/WTO inconsistent quantitative restrictions upon the
formation of the customs union. We see no basis for such an
interpretation. back to text
979. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 54. back to text
980. WT/DS34/R, para. 9.121. back to text
981. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 55. back to text
982.
Panel Report on Canada — Autos, paras.
10.55-10.56. back to text
983. This figure corresponds to notifications
of new RTAs, as well as accessions to existing RTAs. back to text
984. Differential and More Favourable Treatment, Reciprocity and Fuller Participation of Developing
Countries,
Decision of the GATT 1947 CONTRACTING PARTIES of 28 November 1979. back to text
985. The trade-related aspects of a
considerable number of RTAs previously in force were abrogated in 2004
as a consequence of the enlargement of the European Union to include ten
new Member States on 1 May 2004. back to text
986. Updated figures on the basis of WT/REG/14,
Report (2004) of the Committee on RTAs. back to text
987. Working Parties established to examine the
following 14 regional trade agreements: Interim Agreements between the
European Communities and the Czech Republic, Slovak Republic, Hungary
and Poland (in one single WP); Free-Trade Agreements between the EFTA
States and Israel, Romania, Bulgaria, Poland and Hungary; Free-Trade
Agreements between Switzerland and Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania;
MERCOSUR; the Central European Free-Trade Agreement; the North American
Free-Trade Agreement; and the Free-Trade Agreements between Slovenia and
the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic. back to text
988. The Council for Trade in Goods established
ten Working Parties to examine the following agreements: European
Communities and Bulgaria, Estonia, Faroe Islands, Latvia, Lithuania,
Romania and Turkey; Enlargement of the European Communities (EC-15);
Hungary-Slovenia; and EFTA-Slovenia. The Council for Trade in Services
established two Working Parties to examine the North American Free-Trade
Agreement and the Enlargement of the European Communities. See WT/GC/W/125 and G/L/134. back to text
989. (footnote original) The Working Parties
of the WTO include Working Parties originating from decisions of the
CONTRACTING PARTIES to the GATT 1947 that were adopted before the entry
into force of the WTO Agreement and therefore form part of the GATT
1994. back to text
990. WT/L/29, paras. 2-4. back to text
991. WT/GC/M/5, item 11. back to text
992. WT/COMTD/M/3. back to text
993. G/C/M/1, paras 7.1-7.12, and WT/REG3/1.
back to text
994. WT/GC/M/10, Section 11. back to text
995. WT/L/127, para. 1(a). back to text
996. RTAs terminated at the occasion of the
enlargement of the European Union on 1 May 2004 are excluded from
figures contained in this paragraph. back to text
997. Updated figures on the basis of WT/REG/14
and WT/REG/14/Corr.1/Rev.1, Report (2004) of the Committee on RTAs to
the General Council. back to text
998. See documents WT/REG/GEN/N/2 and
WT/REG/GEN/N/3. back to text
999. WT/REG/M/38. back to text
1000. WT/REG/14, para. 9. A list of those RTAs
is included in document WT/REG/14/Corr.1/Rev.1. back to text
1001. Panel Report on EEC — Quantitative
Restrictions against Imports of certain Products from Hong Kong, adopted
on 12 July 1983 (BISD 30S/129), para. 28, and Panel Report on Turkey — Textiles, adopted on 19 November 1999 (WT/DS34/R), paras. 9.172-9.174.
back to text
1002. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 48. back to text
1003. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 58. back to text
1004. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 61. back to text
1005. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, paras. 62-63. back to text
1006. WT/DS34/R, paras. 9.183-184. back to text
1007. (footnote original) Panel Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 9.148. back to text
1008. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 49. back to text
1009. (footnote original) Panel Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 9.148. back to text
1010. The Appellate Body rejected the following
finding of the Panel, para. 9.151 of its report:
… as a general rule, a situation where constituent
members have “comparable” trade regulations having similar effects
with respect to the trade with third countries, would generally meet the
qualitative dimension of the requirements of sub-paragraph
8(a)(ii).
back to text
1011. (footnote original) Panel Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 9.151. back to text
1012. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 50. back to text
1013. G/L/286. The text of the adopted
Committee’s recommendation can be found in WT/REG/6. back to text
1014. WT/REG/W/33, WT/REG/W/42 and WT/REG/W/48,
respectively. The lists of the reports submitted are contained in the
Committee’s annual reports, WT/REG/9, 11 and 14. back to text
1015. Appellate Body Report, adopted on 19
November 1999 (WT/DS34/AB/R), para. 60. back to text
1016. WT/DS34/R, paras. 9.57 and 9.58.
back to text
1017. WT/DS34/AB/R, para. 59. (See also
paragraph 32 below.) back to text
1018. WT/DS34/AB/R, para. 58. That reversed the
Panel finding that Article XXIV did not authorize a departure from
GATT/WTO obligations other than Article I of the GATT
(WT/DS34/R, paras.
9.186-9.188). back to text
1019. Panel Report on Turkey — Textiles,
para. 10.1. back to text
1020. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 64. back to text
1021. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 65. back to text
1022. Appellate Body Report on
Argentina — Footwear (EC), paras. 106-108. back to text
1023. Appellate Body Report on US — Wheat Gluten, para. 99. back to text
1024. Appellate Body Report on US — Line Pipe, para. 198. back to text
1025. Panel Report on Turkey — Textiles,
para. 10.1. back to text
1026. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 64. back to text
1027. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, para. 65. back to text
1028. Appellate Body Report on Turkey — Textiles, footnote 13 to para. 45. back to text
|