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Big stakes in Canada-Europe trade talks, but little attention

Canadian Press

Big stakes in Canada-Europe trade talks, but little attention

By Julian Beltrame (CP)

26 April 2010

OTTAWA — It may well be the biggest and most important trade negotiation that most Canadians have never heard of.

While most of the news out of Europe of late has had to do with the Greek debt crisis and an ash-spewing volcano in Iceland, about 60 Canadian officials have been huddled in contentious trade talks with their European counterparts - at least video images of their counterparts - in what used to be Ottawa’s city hall by the Rideau.

There have been no demonstrators in front of the building denouncing a sell-off of Canadian sovereignty, and hardly a mention in the media or the House of Commons.

But if you listen to the critics, what is at stake is in some ways more troubling than the Canada-U.S. free trade talks of the late 1980s - over which an election was fought - or the NAFTA deal that followed.

"What we want is the most ambitious trade agreement we’ve ever had," federal Trade Minister Peter van Loan said in an interview with The Canadian Press.

"We’re looking for something that is deeper and broader than even NAFTA, and this is with the world’s largest economy."

The two sides are now in the third round of talks, with two more planned. If all goes well, Van Loan hopes to see ink on the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement or CETA by late next year.

Last week, Canadian and European negotiators largely communicated via video screens as all but five of the Europeans were unable to fly to Canada because of the Icelandic volcano. Because of the time difference, talks were restricted to half-days, and hence have been held over another week.

"It’s worked fairly well, partly because everybody knows each other. We’ve made quite a bit of progress," said Steve Verheul, Canada’s chief negotiator.

The talks involve practically everything it is possible for the two sides to place on the table - not just the usual stuff of tariffs and duties, but services, investment, agricultural subsidies, government procurement at the national and subnational levels, intellectual property, regulatory rules and labour mobility.

Given the size of the European Union market - 27 countries, 500 million people and $19 trillion in gross national product - Canada has been eager to get a deal done for years. The Europeans, not so much.

And that’s the problem, according to critics, who say Canada has appeared too eager in dealing with a savvy economic superpower.

"The Europeans could walk away without any negative political repercussions, whereas for our government, it has become a centrepiece of their foreign policy," said Scott Sinclair, a researcher for the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, who recently wrote a report on the negotiations.

Sinclair says the talks are not so much about freeing up trade, noting that tariffs on the more heavily traded items are already under three per cent, but about weakening the ability of governments on both sides of the Atlantic to regulate how multinationals operate.

The Europeans, he says, want to do away with Canada’s supply management system in dairy and poultry, along with the Wheat Board and the ability of provincial and municipal governments to favour local supplier in their procurements. One big prize Europe covets is Ontario’s green technology initiative, he says.

In return, he believes, Canada would get to send more raw materials to Europe.

Not so, says former Liberal finance minister John Manley, who now heads the Canadian Council of Chief Executives, the country’s most influential business lobby group.

Manley argues that with the U.S. economic star fading, Canada needs to diversity its trade and Europe, a prosperous and in many ways similar economy to Canada’s, would bring major benefits.


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