Business
‘WTO not place for discussing labour, environment issues’


By - 08 Feb 2024 10:05 PM
International trade experts have pointed out that developed nations have been pushing for non-trade issues in the garb of sustainability to reverse the growing trade deficit that it has with the developing nations. rules of the WTO but also have systemic implications for international law as a whole, since unilateral action undermines multilaterally negotiated rights and obligations of countries,” the official said.
Last year in May, India had submitted a paper in the WTO to express its concern over use of environmental measures as protectionist non-tariff measures emphasizing unilateral measures such as EU’s carbon tax and deforestation law could disrupt global trade. India has been joined by countries including Russia, and Brazil, who have also flagged similar concerns over European Union’s (EU) carbon tax and deforestation regulation in a meeting of the WTO in Geneva, arguing that these measures would affect their industries.
The EU has decided to impose a carbon tax CBAM on certain sectors like steel, cement, fertilizer, aluminum and hydrocarbon products from 2026. In 2022, India’s 27 per cent exports of iron, steel and aluminum products worth $8.2 billion went to the EU.
India’s exports of products like coffee, leather hides and paperboard worth $1.3 billion annually to the EU will get impacted due to the deforestation regulation adopted by the EU last year, as per think-tank Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI).