An EU-US trade deal should deepen EU access to the US market, but must
not undermine EU standards or the right to regulate in the public
interest, say Trade Committee MEPs in draft recommendations voted on
Thursday. Tools for resolving disputes between investors and states
should be reformed and improved, they add.
The recommendations to the
Commission negotiators on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment
Partnership (TTIP), approved in committee by 28 votes to 13 with no
abstentions, still need to be endorsed by Parliament as a whole.
Ambitious
but balanced deal needed
EU GDP is "heavily dependent on trade and
export”, so a "well-designed” deal with the US could help boost the
industry contribution to EU GDP by 15- 20% by 2020, as EU firms,
especially small, medium and micro enterprises, would benefit from a
market of 850 million consumers, says the text.
But at the same time,
contradictory study findings make the TTIP’s real benefits for the EU
economy hard to assess, note MEPs. They therefore stress that the talks
must be transparent, in order to deliver an "ambitious” but "balanced”
deal, with shared benefits across EU member states, leading to an
"effective, pro-competitive economic environment” and precluding
non-tariff trade barriers. High levels of protection for EU consumers
their data, health and safety must be guaranteed, and social, fiscal and
environmental dumping must be prevented, they add.
Investment protection reform
MEPs
say the TTIP must end the "unequal treatment of European investors in
the US”, by establishing a reformed and fair system for investors to
"seek and achieve redress of grievances”.
This new system should be
based on the recent "concept paper” on a reformed investor protection
system, as presented by Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmström to the EP
Trade committee on 6 May, and also on ongoing talks among EU trade
ministers. It should include a "permanent solution” with "publicly
appointed, independent judges”, "public hearings” and an "appellate
mechanism”, while respecting the jurisdiction of courts of the EU and
its member states. In the medium term, a public investment court could
be used to settle investor disputes, MEPs add.They also warn that the
right to regulate in the public interest needs to be protected and
frivolous claims prevented.Agriculture: "exhaustive list” of sensitive
products
While aiming to eliminate all customs tariffs, the two
partners should nonetheless negotiate an "exhaustive list” of "sensitive
agriculture and industrial products” which would either be exempted
from trade liberalisation, or subject to longer transitional periods,
say MEPs.
They ask the EU negotiators to "make every effort” to
insert a "safeguard clause”, reserving the right to close markets for
specific products in the event of import surges that threaten to cause
serious harm to domestic food production.
They also ask the European
Commission to encourage the US to lift its ban on EU beef imports and
include strong protection for the EU’s geographical indications system.
Public
health standards
Negotiators must aim to eliminate excessive procedures
for vetting imports on food and plant health grounds and there should be
"mutual recognition of equivalent standards”, say MEPs. At the same
time, EU standards should be safeguarded in areas where US ones are
"very different”, e.g. for authorising chemicals, cloning or
endocrine-disrupting chemicals. The EU "precautionary” principle must be
respected, they add.
More access to US energy resources
The TTIP
should abolish "any existing restrictions or impediments of export for
fuels, including LNG and crude oil” between the EU and the US, so that
the deal adds to EU energy security and reduces energy prices, say MEPs.
The TTIP deal should include a specific energy chapter, which must also
help maintain the EU's environmental standards and climate action
goals, they add.
Data protection not negotiable
EU data privacy rules
must not be compromised by the integration of the EU and US e-commerce
and financial services markets, say MEPs. A TTIP deal should explicitly
exempt all existing and future EU rules on personal data protection from
any concessions. Provisions on the flow of personal data could be
negotiated with the US only if the same data protection rules are
applied "on both sides of the Atlantic”, they add.
Open up US transport markets and public
procurement
The TTIP talks should remove current US restrictions on
foreign ownership of maritime and air transport services and airlines,
such as the "Jones Act” or the "Air Cabotage law”, which "seriously
hinder market access for EU companies” MEPs also call for more EU access
to US telecommunications markets”.
The wide disparity in the
openness of the two parties’ public procurement markets must be
remedied, say MEPs. TTIP should achieve a "significant opening” of the
US public procurement market at all levels of government, so that EU
firms, and particularly small and medium-sized ones, can bid for US
public contracts in the fields of construction services, civil
engineering, transport and energy, they add.MEPs also ask EU
negotiators to keep in mind the EU interests in penetrating the market
for the supply of "highly specialised services”, such as engineering and
other professional services, financial or transport services.
Exclude
public services
MEPs reiterate their wish to exclude public services
from the scope of the TTIP (including, but not limited to, water,
health, social services, social security systems and education).Keep an
eye on labour rightsMEPs ask EU negotiators to insist that the US
ratify, implement and enforce the eight International Labour
Organisation core conventions (it has so far ratified only two) and say
that US companies’ implementation of labour provisions should be
monitored more closely, by involving social partners and civil society
representatives.
More transparency for MEPs and public
MEPs urge that
the transparency of the TTIP talks should be further improved, by
making more texts available to the public and obtaining the US’s
permission to publicise more documents. MEPs warn that "Any refusal to
disclose a negotiating proposal” should be justified and also ask that
all MEPs be granted access to "consolidated texts” (chapters which
consolidate positions of the EU and the US).
Global role model
A deal
between the world’s two biggest economic blocs, which already "share
and cherish” similar principles and values has the potential to
establish global norms, and avoid the possibility that countries "with
different standards and values” might assume this role instead”, say
MEPs.