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Fishery issues in the ACPEU negotiations

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Title: Fishery issues in the ACPEU negotiations


1
Fishery issues in the ACP-EU negotiations
  • Dr. Audun Lem
  • Accra, 16 February 2005

2
Outline
  • General trade context
  • World fish trade
  • Net export revenues
  • WTO and Fish
  • ACP-EU fish trade
  • Products and species
  • Exporting and importing countries
  • Some particular issues in ACP-EU trade
  • Duty preferences
  • Tuna
  • Rules of origin
  • Market access quality and safety
  • EPAs and FPAs
  • Fisheries access agreements
  • Fisheries management
  • Conclusions

3
WORLD FISH EXPORTS 58 BILLION (2002)
  • DEVELOPING COUNTRIES 50 OF WORLD FISH EXPORTS
  • 80 OF WORLD IMPORTS BY EU, USA, JAPAN
  • NET EXPORT REVENUES FROM FISHERIES CRUCIAL FOR
    MANY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES (US 18 BILLION PER
    YEAR)

4
World Fish Trade Export Value - in 1000 US -
5
Main exporters 2002 (value)
6
Main species exported in 2002 (value)
7
Net exports from commodities(dev.ing countries)
8
WTO and Fish
  • 148 members (99 of trade)
  • Uruguay Round Agreements
  • Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS)
  • Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT)
  • General reduction in import duties
  • Fish import duties 4.5 average in developed
    countries (but much higher in developing c.)
  • Fish in WTO is not subject to A. on Agriculture
  • Doha Development Round
  • Fisheries subsidies
  • Import duties

9
ACP-EU fish trade (2002)
  • ACP exports USD 2.1 billion
  • Canned/processed tuna USD 531 Mill. (25 )
  • Fish fillets USD 409 Mill. (20 )
  • Shrimp USD 355 Mill. (17 )
  • Fish chilled, whole USD 159 Mill. ( 8 )
  • Fish frozen, whole USD 109 Mill. ( 5 )
  • Octopus USD 102 Mill. ( 5 ) (acc. 80)
  • ACP imports USD 315 million
  • Yellow fin tuna USD 57 Mill. (18 )
  • Skipjack tuna USD 53 Mill. (17 )
  • Herring USD 51 Mill. (16 )
  • Mackerel USD 46 Mill. (15 ) (acc. 66 )
  • ACP net exports USD 1.8 billion

10
ACP fish exports to EU
11
ACP fish exporters to EU (2002)(16 largest in )
12
ACP fish imports from EU
13
ACP fish importers from the EU (2002) 16 largest
in US
14
Net fish exports ACP/EU(US 1.7-1.8 bill.)
15
West African catches 2002
  • Benin 41,000 tonnes
  • Cote dI. 80,000
  • Gambia 46,000
  • Ghana 371,000
  • Guinea 104,000
  • Guinea-Bissau 5,000
  • Liberia 11,500
  • Mauritania 78,000 (?)
  • Nigeria 83,000
  • Senegal 375,000
  • Sierra Leone 83,000
  • Togo 21,000
  • TOTAL 1,300,000 tonnes (min)

16
West African Fish Exports(total 2002)
  • Senegal US 229 mill
  • Cote dIvoire US 140 mill
  • Incl. canned tuna 47,000 t / 100 mill
  • Mauritania US 94 mill
  • Ghana US 92 mill
  • Incl. canned tuna 15,000 t / 35 mill
  • TOTAL 2002 US 632 mill
  • But total 1995 was US 771 mill

17
West African Fish Imports (2002)
  • Nigeria US 214 mill
  • Frozen mackerel 135,000 t - 70 million
  • Frozen herring 77,000 t - 38 milllion
  • Frozen sardines 76,000 t - 19 million
  • Cote dIvoire US 180 mill
  • Frozen mackerel 22,000 t - 12 million
  • Frozen sardines 48,000 t - 20 million
  • Yellowfin tuna 34,000 t - 33 million
  • Skipjack tuna 33,000 t - 22 million

18
West-African Fish Imports (cont.d.)
  • Ghana US 125 mill
  • Frozen mackerel 75,000 t - 32 million
  • Frozen sardines 19,000 t - 7 million
  • Yellowfin tuna 21,000 t - 12 million
  • TOTAL 2002 US 553 mill

19
Summary 2002West African fish trade
  • Imports US 553 mill 863,000 t
  • Exports US 632 mill 309,000 t
  • Balance US 79 mill -554,000 t
  • West African region
  • net fish exporter in value
  • net fish importer in quantity

20
West Africa-EU fish trade 2002
  • West Africa exports to EU US 695 mill
  • 1995 US 772 mill
  • West Africa imports from EU US 201 mill
  • 1995 US 174 mill
  • Positive trade balance, but
  • West Africa is losing market share in EU market

21
CENTRAL AFRICAcatch 2002
  • Angola 260,000 t
  • Cameroon 120,000 t
  • Central A.R. 15,000 t
  • Chad 84,000 t
  • Congo Dem. Rep. 220,000 t
  • Congo Rep 43,000 t
  • Eq. Guinea 34,000 t
  • Gabon 40,000 t
  • S.Tome 4,000 t
  • Total 795,000 t

22
Central African exports2002
  • Angola 15,000 t US 35 mill
  • Gabon 2,300 t US 13 mill
  • Congo, Rep. 2,000 t US 3 mill
  • Total (region) 18,000 t US 52 mill

23
Central African imports2002
  • Angola US 18 mill 9,000 t
  • Cameroon US 14 mill 44,000 t
  • (2000 82,000 t, 2001 99,000 t.)
  • Congo Dem.R. US 39 mill 67,000 t
  • Congo, Rep. US 12 mill 10,000 t
  • Gabon US 13 mill 9,000 t
  • Total (region) US102 mill 143,000 t

24
Central Africa fish trade balance 2002
  • Exports US 52 mill 19,000 t
  • Imports US 102 mill 143,000 t
  • Balance US -50 mill -124,000 t
  • Central African region Net fish importer in both
    value and volume

25
Issues with specific relevance for West and
Central Africa
  • ACP negotiations with EU
  • Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs)
  • including Fisheries Partnership Agreements
    (FPAs)
  • Fishery access
  • Preference erosion

26
Background EU-ACP history
  • BILATERAL
  • Lomé I, II, III and IV
  • Cotonou (2000, ACP-EU Partnership Agreement)
  • Formal negotiations from late 2002
  • EPAs from 2008
  • 2000-2007 interim Lomé IV
  • Fisheries agreements (17 ongoing from 2001,
    2002, 2003, 2004)
  • FPAs, 2004 and beyond
  • MULTILATERAL
  • Uruguay Round 1986-1994
  • WTO foundation 1995
  • WTO Doha Round, 2001-

27
EU MARKET ACCESS FOR FISH
  • (worlds largest import market/main ACP export
    market
  • TARIFF MEASURES/BARRIERS
  • NON-TARIFF MEASURES/BARRIERS

28
EU tariffs
  • EU duties on ACP fish exports
  • Zero duty
  • Some conditions-requirements
  • Rules of origin
  • Crew
  • Fleet ownership
  • EU treatment of other exporters
  • LDC zero duty (EBA)
  • EU bilateral trade agreements
  • EU agreements on canned tuna

29
EU tuna import duties
  • General rule tuna loins for canning 24
  • - but 4,000 tons of loins at 6
  • General rule canned tuna 24
  • but Thailand, Philippines and Indonesia 25,000
    tons at 12
  • ACP and LDC zero duty (loins/cans)
  • Anti-drug concessions for Central America zero
    duty (loins/cans)

30
General Requirements for EU Preferences
  • Raw material from beneficiary country or from EU
    fleet
  • Processed in plants belonging to beneficiary

31
EU requirements to ACP exports(Rules of origin)
  • Raw material obtained from fishing conducted
    there
  • Raw material obtained from fishing by ACP or EU
    vessels
  • Vessel registered in ACP or EU
  • Vessel under flag of ACP or EU
  • Vessels owned 50 by nationals of ACP or EU, or
    by company with HQ in ACP or EU, and Chairman and
    50 of directors are ACP or EU nationals
  • For JVs 50 of capital belong to ACP or EU
  • 50 of crew nationals of ACP or EU

32
Impact of EU rules of origin
  • Advantage to EU capital/vessels/crew/EU-owned
    processing plants
  • Disadvantage to third-country vessels/capital/crew
    /processing plants for exports to EU market
  • Disadvantage to third-country raw-material for
    processing in ACP countries
  • Precludes third-country capital from setting up
    capacity in ACP for exports to EU

33
Fishery Partnership Agreements
  • Negotiated from 2002
  • 17 existing fishery agreements
  • Access agreements
  • Total average annual payment Euro 150 million
  • Current payments potentially vulnerable to future
    WTO fishery subsidy rules from Doha

34
Preference erosion
  • ACP-EU agreements guarantee duty-free access
  • Erosion through EBAs, general liberalization,
    bi-lateral concessions
  • Main product canned tuna

35
Strategy to counter erosion
  • Longer implementation period
  • Compensation for losses
  • Change product-mix
  • Add value of product
  • from canned to more fresh/frozen products
  • more to catering sector
  • Market diversification
  • Major markets low-growth, price-focused
  • Growth in China, Asia, non-traditional markets

36
NON-TARIFF MEASURES
  • FOR FISH MOSTLY RELATED TO QUALITY AND SAFETY
  • 24 EU-approved ACP countries
  • WTO AGREEMENTS ON SPS AND TBT

37
NON-TARRIFF BARRIERS(for fish often more
important than duties)
  • Importance of Agreements on
  • Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) and
  • Sanitary and Phytosanitary issues (SPS)
  • (these are not on the Doha agenda)

38
Market access quality and safety
  • Market access only if quality/safety requirements
    to exporters are fulfilled
  • 24 ACP countries approved for exports to EU
  • http//forum.europa.eu.int/irc/sanco/vets/info/dat
    a/listes/ffp.html
  • EU project for ACP EURO 54 million
  • PMU Olivier Ledoux ole_at_cde.int

39
CODEX
  • International reference standards for food
  • Voluntary, but Voluntarism under duress
  • Commodity committee on fish and fish products
  • (also relevant for fish trade Committees on
    hygiene, veterinary drugs, import/export
    inspection and certification).
  • Importance of developing country participation in
    CODEX work
  • Regional co-operation on CODEX

40
Subsidies
  • Negotiations in WTO
  • Classification in red/green boxes
  • Implications for access-agreements ?
  • ? linked payments
  • ? payments for fisheries management
  • ? industry development
  • Special case SIDS ?

41
Access agreements
  • Current problems (EC review 2000)
  • Multi-year agreements lack flexibility to respond
    to stock-variations
  • Political/financial concerns in ACP and EU may
    override resource concerns
  • Quality of data on catches and state of stocks ?
  • Inadequate monitoring, surveillance and control
    (MSC)
  • Conflict small-scale vs. industrial fisheries

42
EC response to problems
  • FPAs as solution to problems cited
  • FPAs integral part of EPAs
  • Preserve EU fleet and employment
  • Provide support for ACP
  • Contribute to sustainable fisheries in ACP
    waters
  • Linking support to fisheries management

43
Suggested ACP Fisheries Response
  • Co-ordination among recipients
  • Agree framework for use of money from EU
  • National and regional plans for
    priorities/needs/implementation
  • Regional/sub-regional co-operation on MSC/IUU
  • Include in access agreements specifics on catch
    reporting/sanctions
  • Negotiate more flexible rules on Country of Origin

44
Conclusions I
  • ACP-EU Fisheries Partnership Agreements
  • Integral part of CFP
  • Emphasis on fisheries management and development
    of sector
  • Payments for access redefined and redirected for
    specific fisheries-related purposes

45
Conclusions II
  • Fish trade important to developing countries as
    exports () and imports (food - small pelagics)
  • ACP has important duty-preferences in EU, but
    these are being eroded
  • ACP large fish export surplus with EU (1.8-2
    bill)
  • FPAs fishery access agreements
  • Linked payments
  • Fisheries management
  • Sustainable fisheries
  • Any alternative ?
  • Goal Long-term sustainability of fish trade
    through improved fisheries management

46
THANK YOU
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