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China says grain subsidies meet WTO rules; 13 nations take aim at fishing subsidies
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 14, 2016


13 nations to take aim at fishing subsidies at WTO
Washington (AFP) Sept 14, 2016 - The United States and 12 other countries on Wednesday announced the start of a drive at the World Trade Organization to eliminate harmful fishing subsidies that contribute to ocean depopulation.

The announcement fell on the eve of an annual conference in Washington on ocean governance and environmental preservation.

In a joint statement, the representatives of the 13 nations, which included Australia, Norway, Singapore and landlocked Switzerland, said they would begin talks to develop a WTO agreement on transparency and reporting of fisheries subsidies.

Thirty-one percent of the world's fisheries are currently being harvested at biologically unsustainable levels and another 58 percent are fished at maximum levels which prevent growth, according to Food and Agriculture Organization figures cited by the statement.

"To address this urgent concern, we are taking action with the goal of eliminating harmful subsidies, including those subsidies that contribute to overfishing and overcapacity," as well as illegal and unregulated fishing, the statement said.

The United States imports more than 90 percent of its seafood, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The announcement did not say which countries might be targetted for alleged subsidies.

According to Greenpeace, China has nearly 2,500 fishing vessels at sea, 10 times as many as the United States. Greenpeace says unreported fuel subsidies to Chinese deepwater fishing fleets promote overcapacity.

China's rice, wheat and corn subsidies are in line with WTO rules, Beijing's commerce ministry said after Washington launched legal action against what it says are "unfair" trade incentives worth $100 billion.

The United States alleges China, the world's largest producer of wheat and rice, doled out "market price support" for the grains above levels agreed at the Geneva-based WTO, making Chinese farmers more competitive around the world.

Beijing's commerce ministry said it had received the US request for consultations under the World Trade Organization dispute settlement mechanism but insisted its policy was legal.

"Agriculture is a fundamental industry in any country and is key to the economic interests of the mass of agricultural producers," an unnamed commerce ministry official said in a statement posted late Tuesday.

Government support for the sector was a "common international practice", said the official.

According to US officials, China has been paying higher subsidy levels than the internationally agreed 8.5 percent above reference prices for grain commodities.

US Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said that "if China is willing to operate a WTO-consistent trade regime" US agricultural exports to China could rise above their current $20 billion a year level, which accounts for 200,000 US jobs.

Many of those jobs are in states like Iowa and Kansas which, because of peculiarities of the US electoral system, have an outsized role in deciding presidential elections.

The 2016 election race has seen Republican and Democratic presidential candidates take a much more protectionist line on trade.

China has been the target of particularly tough campaign rhetoric.

The latest dispute marked the 14th WTO case launched against the Asian giant since US President Barack Obama took office and Washington has won every case that has been decided.

The official quoted in the Beijing commerce ministry statement said China "regrets the US request for the consultation... and will actively protect China's industrial and trade interests".

"China has always respected WTO rules, consistently supported Chinese agricultural production and development in ways in line with the rules and maintained the international trading system of farm produces," the official added.


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