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+ + + + Beyond Kyoto Trade and Climate: Potential Conflicts and Synergies Prepared for the Pew Center on Global Climate Change by + Steve Charnovitz + + Relationship between trade and climate change • Positive interactions – Free trade promotes economic growth • More resources and public support for environmental protection – Free trade promotes efficiency • Fewer resources wasted • Examples – Reducing energy subsidies good from both a free trade and a climate perspective – Trading emission allowances reduces climate mitigation costs – Free trade promotes technology diffusion Relationship between trade and climate change • Negative interactions – Free trade promotes economic growth > higher emissions – Free trade undermines ability of national governments to regulate: race to the bottom + Main issues + • Are national and international climate change policies consistent with WTO rules? + + + + + WTO consistency/ permissibility of: – Domestic climate policies (carbon taxes, efficiency standards and emission trading systems)? – International climate policies (e.g., CDM)? – Trade measures against countries that are not taking action on climate change + + + + + + + Main issues • Are national and international climate change policies consistent with WTO rules? Examples: • How to promote greater harmony between trade and climate change regimes? –Saudi Arabia: countries could use climate policies to protect domestic interests –EU Parliament called for new initiatives to prevent nonparties from “obtaining unfair competitive advantages” –Venezuela: Kyoto implementation could run afoul of trade rules + World Trade Organization (WTO) + • Founded in 1995; 146 members • Umbrella agreement + 17 subsidiary agreements + + + + + – – – – General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (SCM) • Dispute settlement understanding (DSU) – Two levels: panels and appellate body – Decisions ordinarily binding – Sanctions: authorization of self-help by victim state + Basic GATT rules + • Basic limitations + + + – No quantitative restrictions (quotas, trade bans) (GATT art. XIII) – National treatment and most-favored nation treatment (GATT art. III, I) • No discrimination against imported products, or products from one country versus another • Must treat “like products” alike • Issue: what products are “like”? • Environmental exceptions (GATT art. XX(b), (g)) – Domestic measures ok + + • If necessary to protect human, animal or plant life • If related to conservation of exhaustible natural resources Domestic climate change policies I: Taxes • Examples – Fuel economy tax • Is tax on gas guzzling cars ok? – Fuel carbon tax • Can a country tax coal and natural gas differently, based on carbon content? – Process-based electricity tax • Can a country tax electricity generated from coal and from renewables differently? • Issues: – Are these “like products”? – If like products, can differential treatment be justified under Article XX? Domestic climate change policies II: Regulations • Examples – Fuel economy regulations – Climate-friendly labeling: e.g., GHGs emitted to produce the product • Issues – GATT: Are these “like” products? – TBT Agreement: Preference for international standards + International climate policies + • Emissions trading + + + + + – Is international emissions trading subject to WTO rules? • Are AAUs, CERs, ERUs “goods” or “services”? • CDM – Could climate regime disqualify operating entities and project developers from non-Kyoto parties? • Clean energy export credits – Could climate regime provide credits for exports of “clean energy” to non-Kyoto parties? + Trade measures + • Defensive national policies to protect competitiveness – Examples + + • Duties/tariffs on states that don’t have strong climate policies • Border tax adjustments • Multilateral trade measures – Examples + • Trade controls on non-parties to encourage participation • Trade controls as a sanction for non-compliance – Issues + + • Deference of WTO to MEAs? • Justification under Article XX exceptions? + Promoting synergies + • Catalyzing international standards • Facilitating taxes on energy • Opening markets for environmental goods and services • Eliminating harmful energy subsidies • Safeguarding eco-labeling • Improving trade and climate regime coordination + + + + +