Nov. 23, 2009 -- ACP Communique: At a time when European leaders are gathering to welcome the dawn of a new era with the coming into force of the Lisbon Treaty, this change may well prove to be more extensive than anticipated. The coming days could spell the end of the era when Europe considered the fight against poverty a priority.
In the ongoing discussions on the Banana Dossier, the ACP States have made numerous concessions in an effort towards finding a definitive and balanced solution.
In fact, analysis of the European banana market has shown that the customs tariff of €176/t that has been applied to banana imports from Central and South American countries (MFN countries) since January 2006, has sharply increased their presence on the EU market. There is no risk whatsoever, not now nor in the future, given the limited production capacity of the ACP countries that the European market will be “flooded” with ACP bananas. Just one MFN country, like Ecuador for example, could, single-handedly, if it so desired, supply the entire 27-country EU market which, let us not forget, is the only possible trade opening for ACP products.
As a result, it is difficult, at first glance, to understand what is at stake for the European Union when, to the detriment of its commitments to the ACP banana-producing countries, it has proposed that the MFN countries engage in even more extensive liberalization at a faster rate, and suddenly announced an imminent agreement with them.
The
ACP countries have repeatedly demonstrated that they fully understand
the current trade policy trend which is liberalization. They are
therefore in no doubt whatsoever that the trade preferences they
currently enjoy will continue to be eroded until they most likely
disappear. However, in highlighting the development programme included
in the WTO Doha Round negotiations they have merely called for WTO
Members to honour their commitments, stressing the need that for any
agreement to be balanced, it must necessarily include a transition
period with a moratorium, so as to enable the ACP banana-producing
countries to adapt to the new market conditions.
In the same
context, they recalled the undertaking of the same WTO Member States
whereby those among them who granted longstanding preferences must
provide financial and additional capacity-building assistance to help
remedy supply-side constraints and promote diversification of existing
production in the territories of the preference-recipient Members.
In their most recent submission, a pale reflection of their initial demands, the ACP States: