{"id":48036,"date":"2021-06-17T14:48:00","date_gmt":"2021-06-17T14:48:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dev6.blazedream.in\/ICSF\/samudra\/need-for-vigilance"},"modified":"2021-08-22T02:53:53","modified_gmt":"2021-08-22T02:53:53","slug":"need-for-vigilance","status":"publish","type":"samudra","link":"https:\/\/www.icsf.net\/samudra\/need-for-vigilance\/","title":{"rendered":"Need for Vigilance"},"content":{"rendered":"

Document \/ Canada<\/p>\n

Need for Vigilance<\/strong><\/p>\n

The following is a summary of the study titled \u0093Globalization, Trade Treaties and the Future of the Atlantic Canadian Fisheries by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n


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This summary of an earlier published report is by Scott Sinclair <\/strong>(ccpa@policyalternatives.ca<\/a>), a senior research fellow with the national office of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, where he directs the Trade and Investment Research Project<\/em><\/p>\n


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International trade is vital to the economic well-being of the Atlantic Canadian fisheries. When properly regulated within sustainable ecological limits, trade creates opportunities for both fish harvesters and local communities. Unfortunately, the broad scope of new trade and investment treaties and the corporate-led globalization they facilitate pose considerable threats to many aspects of fisheries regulation.<\/p>\n

The next generation of trade and investment treaties, such as the Canada-European Union (EU) Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) and the TransPacific Partnership (TPP), deal with matters far beyond tariffs and trade. Just as the freezer trawlers that ply the world’s oceans today are far more extractive and destructive than earlier fishing vessels, so the latest trade and investment treaties are more intrusive than previous ones.<\/p>\n

The Canadian fisheries sector, because of its strong export performance and Canada’s already low tariffs on fish, is often touted as an unequivocal winner in the face of deeper trade liberalization. Yet fisheries is also a sensitive sector, with many domestic policies at risk from the far-reaching provisions of these new trade and investment treaties. At stake is the ability of Canadians to pursue public policies that curb domination of fisheries by large corporations. These policies help spread the benefits of fisheries more widely among smaller, independent fishers and coastal communities. They also allow the regulation of fisheries for conservation and other public purposes without fear of undue pressure from international corporations or the threat of challenge under unaccountable international trade treaty enforcement mechanisms.<\/p>\n

In recent years, demand for seafoodparticularly wild-captured fishhas risen beyond most countries’ available domestic supply. With some exceptions, tariffs on Canadian fish exports are modest and can be expected to fall in countries that depend heavily on fish imports to meet rising consumer demand.<\/p>\n

A straightforward agreement to reduce or eliminate tariffs would give Canadian producers an opportunity to sell their products in foreign markets at more competitive prices. The 2009 trade agreement between Canada and the European Free Trade Association is an example of a tariffs-only agreement which enhanced trade and market access while leaving regulatory authority over the fisheries largely unaffected.<\/p>\n

Conservation<\/strong><\/p>\n

But reducing foreign trade barriers is not the most fundamental challenge facing the Atlantic Canadian fisheries. Protecting Canada’s ability to regulate the fisheries for conservation purposes and to ensure that the benefits from fisheries are shared with independent fishers and coastal communities should be greater priorities. Canadians should not make significant concessions in ongoing trade and investment negotiations that might impair these higher priorities, in order to attain the modest, and diminishing, benefits available from reducing the remaining foreign tariffs on fish and fish products.<\/p>\n

The potential conflicts between trade and investment treaty rules and Canadian fisheries regulations are numerous and profound. For this reason, successive Canadian governments have endeavoured, through various exceptions and exclusions, to shelter domestic fisheries management policies from the full impacts of trade and investment treaties.<\/p>\n

National treatment is one of the core principles of international trade treaties. It requires that governments must extend the best treatment given to domestic goods, services or investors to their foreign counterparts. The Atlantic Canadian fisheries are built around policies and regulations that favour Canadians and must be shielded from the application of these non-discrimination rules.<\/p>\n

Policies that favour Canadians in the fisheries sector include:<\/p>\n