WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy will hold an on-line 'chat' session with up
to 500 questioners on December 18th on the prospects for saving the becalmed
Doha Round.
In July the five year Doha Development Round negotiations were suspended following
the collapse of Ministerial level negotiations in Geneva. Calls to resume the
negotiations as soon as possible have come from various forums around the world
but the future of the negotiations remains highly uncertain. What are the prospects
for 2007?
The chat session will take place from 17:00-18:00 Geneva time (that's EST plus
6 hours). Pascal Lamy will accept questions in English, French or Spanish on
the suspension, the prospects for relaunching the talks and the future of the
WTO and the global trading system.
To send advance questions that will be answered during the chat: dgchat@wto.org.
There are instructions for joining the live session at http://www.wto.org/english/forums_e/chat_e/dg_chat_dec06_e.htm.
Resumption of the WTO's Doha Round negotiations at a technical level in Geneva
recently has been welcomed, but Pascal Lamy still says that ministerial negotiations
would remain impossible until Members came forward with softened bargaining
positions, he re-started informal discussions on all issues in the stalled talks.
Lamy said that there seemed to widespread support among negotiators for multilateralising
their contacts and bringing them back to the negotiating groups. "In practice,"
said Lamy, "this means increasing the number of contacts in the various
negotiating areas and broadening them in the interest of transparency and inclusiveness."
Elliot Paige, Charge d’Affairs at the OECS Geneva Technical Mission
said: “The resumption means that OECS Countries can now reengage in a
very intense way in technical negotiations at the WTO. We very much support
and think that there is a lot for us to gain with the multilateral trading system.
We need to take part in the process with our capital based people at a maximum
level.”
However, Paige warned that negotiators should avoid the temptation to defer
consideration of the pricklier issues which are of particular importance to
developing countries: “There have been talks at maybe looking at the easier
issues first and maybe leaving those issues that may be more difficult to negotiate
such as development issues behind. We don’t believe that we should leave
anything behind. We should certainly have a horizontal approach to all issues
and to all areas of interest for all members of the WTO... We should negotiate
Development issues up front. This is why we are negotiating in this development
round," said Paige.
Lamy continues to remind negotiators of the limited time remaining for talks.
"There must be significant progress by the early spring if we are to have
a chance of finishing the round next year," he said last week. President
Bush is due to lose his 'fast-track' trade treaty authority next June. While
it is too late to complete the Doha Round by then, there remains a chance -
albeit a slim one now that Democrats are in charge in Congress - that his authority
might be extended for a few months to prevent a new treaty from being savaged
to death in the Senate.