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March 2002, Week 2

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Subject:
The Commons- Air, Ocean, and Genetic Inheritance
From:
Debbie Neustadt <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Iowa Discussion, Alerts and Announcements
Date:
Mon, 11 Mar 2002 21:10:58 -0600
Content-Type:
multipart/alternative
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (3097 bytes) , text/html (5 kB)
 CARL POPE; Executive Director, Sierra Club


In "The Greening of the WTO" (November/December 2001), Michael Weinstein

and Steve Charnovitz acknowledge, as most trade analysts do not, that it

is not increased trade that environmentalists object to; it is specific
agreements like the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the
World Trade Organization (WTO). However, they should have taken the
effort
to analyze the full environmental argument against these institutions
rather than asserting that the WTO is becoming environmentally benign.

Their analysis is wrong on several fronts. First, trade produces
environmental harm in importing countries because of pollution or public

health risks associated with the traded goods. Trade restrictions are
not
the right way to solve this problem. But protections against the sale of

polluting or potentially unsafe products, protections that apply equally

to domestic and imported goods, are not trade restrictions -- and should

not be under the purview of a trade agreement. When the United States
bans
the sale of narcotics, or Saudi Arabia bans liquor, no one accuses them
of
protectionism. A European ban on the sale of hormone-treated beef or
genetically engineered soybeans is not a trade restriction. It is a
consumer safety rule -- even if it is based on cultural or religious
preferences -- and should not be controlled by a trade body. Weinstein
and
Charnovitz disagree on the grounds that a precautionary principle aimed
at
protecting against potential threats to public safety would allow for
"environmental zealotry." But why do we need a global trade body to
protect each nation against environmental zealotry? Should we expand its

jurisdiction to religious extremism as well? The existing models for the

WTO talks constitute nothing less than an international regime
restricting
the rights of communities to regulate private property. Such a regime
can
only weaken the claims of communities against those of investors.
Environmentalists' experience under NAFTA has been that such rules are
used against environmental protections.

Trade can also harm the three great global environmental commons: the
atmosphere, the oceans, and the genetic inheritance of the biosphere.
The
authors assert that the world trade regime must somehow be protected
from
"unilateral attempts by some member governments to protect the
environment
through trade restrictions." Why? There are only two means by which the
global commons can be protected from overexploitation. One is through
international environmental agreements; the other is unilateral
sanctions
imposed by responsible commons users upon abusers. Trade sanctions
constitute one of the few tools nations have against those who would
exploit the global commons. Such actions constitute self-defense. If the

world's fisheries are overfished by a few nations, all nations suffer;
depletions in the ozone layer that cause skin cancer observe no national

boundaries.

If the WTO continues to interpret its rules as limiting the right of
nations to protect their interests in the global commons,
environmentalists will be forced to continue to oppose it.



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