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Shrimp-Turtle
Case
A case for the developing
countries



Section B, Group 6:
Alisha Sukhija        (11PGDM066)
Arnab Moitra          (11PGDM076)
Kamaldeep Singh       (11PGDM086)
Paritosh Saini        (11PGDM097)
Sanchit Gupta         (11PGDM107)
Sumit Kumar Jain      (11PGDM117)
Shrimp-Turtle Case

Table of Contents

Introduction............................................................................................................................................. 2
The history ...............................................................................................................................................3
The real problem .....................................................................................................................................3
TED - Turtle Excluder Device ...................................................................................................................4
Setback for developing countries ............................................................................................................4
Conservation and management of sea turtles in the developing nations ..............................................5
Is TED the only option? ...........................................................................................................................9
The environmental “standards” of US ..................................................................................................10
Ulterior motives of US ...........................................................................................................................12
The WTO Case Timeline ........................................................................................................................13
Argument by Plaintiff Nations ...............................................................................................................13
Argument by US ....................................................................................................................................14
Panel Ruling: 6th April 1988 ..................................................................................................................14
Aftermath of the ruling .........................................................................................................................15
Other Disputes at WTO .........................................................................................................................15
Disputes involving the US ......................................................................................................................16
Developed Nations: Devils in disguise? .................................................................................................17
Developing Nations in WTO ..................................................................................................................18
Future of WTO - Challenges before developing nations .......................................................................18
Conclusion ............................................................................................................................................. 20
Annexure ............................................................................................................................................... 21
References ............................................................................................................................................. 23
Shrimp-Turtle Case

Introduction
Seven species of sea turtles have been identified till date. They are distributed around the world in
subtropical and tropical areas. They spend their lives at sea, where they migrate between their
foraging and nesting grounds.

Sea turtles have been adversely affected by human activity, either directly (their meat, shells and
eggs have been exploited), or indirectly (incidental capture in fisheries, destruction of their habitats,
pollution of the oceans).

In early 1997, India, Malaysia, Pakistan and Thailand brought a joint complaint against a ban
imposed by the US on the importation of certain shrimp and shrimp products. The protection of sea
turtles was at the heart of the ban.

The US Endangered Species Act of 1973 listed as endangered or threatened the five species of sea
turtles that occur in US waters, and prohibited their “take” (meaning harassment, hunting, capture,
killing or attempting to do any of these) within the US, in its territorial sea and the high seas.

Under the act, the US required that US shrimp trawlers use “turtle excluder devices” (TEDs) in their
nets when fishing in areas where there is a significant likelihood of encountering sea turtles.
Shrimp-Turtle Case

The history
    •   1973: An Endangered Species Act was approved. It aimed to protect all endangered species
        from further threats of extinction. Working primarily through and conservation and
        protection, the ESA also affected harvesting techniques.

    •   1987: Voluntary guidelines were issued for including turtle exclusionary devices during
        fishing or shrimping.

    •    1989 and 1991: Legislation is negotiated to protect all sea turtles in American waters,
        including Central America and the Caribbean.

    •   1992: Various NGOs pressurized the prohibition to cover international shrimp harvests.

    •   1996: A full prohibition of all shrimps from any country that does not have sufficient
        precautions and regulatory agencies to ensure that the catch of sea turtles is lesser than or
        equal to that of United States.



The real problem




        Figure 1: Clockwise from top (L): A shrimp trawler, the catch, net used for shrimping and the by-catch

US prohibited the importation of any shrimp harvested using commercial fishing technologies that
might harm sea turtles, unless the exporting country is certified by the US administration as having a
regulatory program to prevent incidental turtle deaths comparable to that of the United States or is
certified as having a fishing environment that does not pose risks to sea turtles from shrimping.
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While US adopted a program to require shrimpers to use TEDs on their boats, a country could take
up to three years to phase in the comprehensive program. Further guidelines, issued in 1993,
extended somewhat the final deadline by which a foreign country must implement its program in
order to be certified. In 1995, environmental NGOs challenged before the US Court of International
Trade (CIT) the decision of the State Department to limit the application of Section 609 to the
greater Caribbean area, as well as certain other interpretations that the State Department had made
of the law.



TED - Turtle Excluder Device




                                 Figure 2: The working of TED explained

A "Turtle Excluder Device" is a grid of bars with an opening either at the top or the bottom of the
trawl net. The grid is fitted into the neck of a shrimp trawl. Small animals such as shrimp pass
through the bars and are caught in the bag end of the trawl. When larger animals, such as marine
turtles and sharks are captured in the trawl, they strike the grid bars and are ejected through the
opening.



Setback for developing countries
The developing countries suffered the following setbacks due to the ban:

•   Loss of Comparative Advantage: The requirement of installing the TED devices on every trawler
    was quite expensive for the poor trawlers of the developing countries. Also as they used the
    more expensive equipment the comparative advantage of producing at lower rates was lost by
    the shrimpers and the trade was jeopardized.
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•   Time difference in implementation and preferential treatment for some countries (ACP
    countries the main beneficiary): In 1991, some countries like Mexico, Belize, Guatemala,
    Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana,
    Suriname, French Guyana, and Brazil were required to make a commitment to require all shrimp
    trawl vessels to use TEDs at all times . These nations were given three years for the complete
    phase-in of a comparable program. The other countries in comparison were given a period of
    only four months to comply.

•   No alternative to TED accepted: Apart from TED, the US did not accept alternative methods of
    ensuring lower mortality for turtles. The embargo applied on the countries was to be removed
    only on the condition if the countries agreed to use the TED in the trawlers. The other potential
    methods of conservation of turtles were completely ignored by US.



Conservation and management of sea turtles in the
developing nations
Following the ban, the complainant nations argued that measures for conservation of sea turtles had
already been in place, much before the diktat of the US.

India
India argued that it had a well-established history of protecting endangered species, including sea
turtles. For many centuries, the essential harmony between the environment and man had been a
central precept in Indian society, based on the fact that the continued replenishment of
environmental resources was crucial for the very livelihood of a vast majority of Indians. The
objectives of environmental protection were therefore deeply ingrained in Indians.

•   Five of the seven species of sea turtles found worldwide are reported to occur in Indian coastal
    waters and the Bay Islands.

•   Environmental resources had traditionally been safeguarded by their close association with the
    teachings of India's major religions. For example, the turtle itself was considered by many
    Indians to be an incarnation of the Divine. The turtle was an incarnation of Lord Vishnu.

•   All the five species of sea turtles that occur in Indian coastal waters are legally protected under
    Schedule I of the Indian Wildlife Protection Act (1972), as well as listed in Appendix I of
    Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES),
    which ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten
    the survival of the species in the wild by signatory countries. However, India could not find any
    provision in CITES which called for an import restriction on shrimp and shrimp products in order
    to protect and conserve sea turtles, nor could it find in CITES any reference to the TEDs as a
    "multilateral environmental standard" to be used for the protection and conservation of sea
    turtles. India did not accept the US assertion that the use of TEDs was the only way to keep sea
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    turtles species found in India's territorial waters from becoming extinct; conservation programs
    such as the ones undertaken by India were also essential for conserving sea turtles.

•   The nesting population of olive ridley had increased over the past ten years in the Gahirmatha
    region, off India's Orissa coast, and every year approximately 600,000 olive ridley sea turtles
    nested in this area. The local government had banned fishing and shrimping within a radius of 20
    kilometers around Gahirmatha to protect these turtles. In addition, 65,000 hectares in the
    Bhitarkanika and Gahirmatha regions had been declared a sea turtle sanctuary. Fifteen other
    state governments had issued public notices reminding fishermen and others that catching or
    endangering sea turtles was illegal. Not only was the Government of India establishing programs
    to ensure the preservation of sea turtles, but the Government had also established programs to
    ensure that the laws were enforced.

•   Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute in India monitored olive ridley turtles nesting in
    some regions during 1978 and 1986, and conducted an exhaustive study on the nesting
    population. The Institute also operated a hatchery for sea turtles in Madras (Now Chennai), from
    which hatchlings were released at sea.

India considered that since it had adequate measures in place to protect and preserve endangered
species of sea turtles, there was no need for the United States to impose its own agenda on third
parties through the use of far-reaching, extraterritorial measures such as the one imposed by
Section 609. This action constituted an unacceptable interference in policies within India's sovereign
jurisdiction.

Malaysia
•   Malaysia submitted that none of the Malaysian fishermen used TEDs. A significant amount of
    wild harvested shrimps were caught using traditional mechanisms (such as hand retrieval nets)
    which would not in any way cause incidental catches of turtles.

•   Organizations actively involved in the conservation of turtles included the Fisheries Department,
    local universities, NGOs (e.g. WWF and the Malaysian Society of Marine Sciences) and
    corporate bodies (as sponsors of conservation projects) carried out the various measures.

        Protection of turtle eggs by incubation programs, involving in situ methods or protected
        beach hatcheries, and banning the commercial harvest and sale of eggs in certain areas (e.g.
        leatherbacks eggs in Terengganu). In other areas where the nesting beaches were extensive,
        turtle egg collection was licensed to the local inhabitants from whom the eggs were
        purchased for incubation in protected beach hatcheries. Efforts were continuously made to
        increase the proportion of eggs bought from licensed egg collectors for incubation.

        Establishment of turtle sanctuaries/state parks in recognized turtle nesting areas to protect
        the nesting sites. This ensured that commercial development did not encroach upon the
        nesting beaches.
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        In marine parks where key nesting sites of green turtles occurred, fishing activities within a
        radius of two nautical miles surrounding the island or island groups was prohibited.

        Research programs were undertaken by local universities and the Fisheries Department to
        provide scientific information for further development and enhancement of conservation
        programs.

•   Sabah and Sarawak had turtle protection laws, and fishing trawlers were not allowed to operate
    within designated areas where turtles mated and nested. Therefore, in the case of the Sarawak
    population of green turtles, even in the absence of TEDs, the population had remained constant
    over a long period and had been sustained. The Turtle Island of Sabah was constituted as a State
    Park in 1984, after the Sabah State Government had compulsorily acquired the islands from
    private ownership.




                             Figure 3: The Sabah and Sarawak islands of Malaysia

•   The active enforcement of fishery laws by the Department of Fisheries had successfully kept the
    trawlers away from the coastal and turtle island waters and the existing trawling operations had
    been successfully kept away from the migration routes of the turtles.

•   Malaysia had a comprehensive legal framework on the conservation and management of marine
    turtles which were under the jurisdiction of 13 individual states. The states' legislation on turtle
    protection had been enacted in 1932 and prohibited, inter alia, the capture, killing, injuring,
    possession or sale of turtles, collection of eggs, disturbing turtles during laying eggs, and
    provided for the establishment of turtle sanctuaries. Subsidiary legislation had also been
    enacted, such as the Customs (Prohibition of Export/Import) Orders of 1988, enforced
    specifically to ban the exports and imports of turtle eggs to and from all countries.

•   Malaysia had cooperated with the Philippines in the launching of the Turtle Island Heritage
    Protected Area in 1996, to develop uniform conservation measures for the turtles on the
    islands.
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•   While recognizing that the use of TEDs was a step in contributing to the conservation of turtles,
    Malaysia considered that it was just one of the many accepted methods for the conservation of
    turtles. The use of TED alone could not absolutely ensure the survival of turtles.

Malaysia considered that its commitment was evident by the actions taken both domestically and
internationally in order to protect these endangered species from extinction. Conservation efforts
were better achieved through bilateral or multilateral agreements rather than resorting to trade
sanctions under the WTO.

Pakistan
Pakistan submitted that it shared the United States' concerns over the plight of sea turtles. However,
the US requirement that TEDs be installed on Pakistan's commercial fishing vessels not only violated
US obligations under the GATT, but was completely unnecessary given Pakistan's long history of
protecting endangered species, including sea turtles.

•   Pakistan stated that its culture embraced a traditional belief that it was sinful to kill sea turtles.

•   In 1950, Pakistan had passed legislation to protect sea turtles by enacting the Imports and
    Exports (Control) Act (amended on 13 August 1996), which made it illegal to export protected
    species, including sea turtles and sea turtle by-products from Pakistan.

•   In addition to laws protecting sea turtles, various public and private organizations in Pakistan
    were engaged in sea turtle protection programs. Since 1979, Pakistan's Sindh Wildlife
    Department was engaged in sea turtle conservation programs in conjunction with WWF and
    IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature). The main objective of this program was
    to protect sea turtles from extinction. In this regard, this program had established enclosures on
    beaches to protect sea turtles and their eggs from predators and poachers.

•   The Sindh Wildlife Department had also engaged in turtle conservation training programs
    designed to teach the public about the importance of protecting sea turtles. This program had
    proven to be extremely effective in preserving and protecting sea turtles. It was estimated that
    between October 1979 and December 1995 more than 1.5 million sea turtle eggs had been
    protected and thousands of hatchlings had been released safely to the sea.

Pakistan did not accept the US assertion that the use of TEDs was the only way to prevent the
extinction of sea turtles and considered the US action to be an unacceptable interference in policies
within Pakistan's sovereign jurisdiction. Pakistan argued that, since it had adequate measures in
place to protect and preserve endangered species of sea turtles, there was no need for the United
States to meddle with the internal affairs of the country.
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Thailand
•   Thailand submitted that it had a long history of taking action to protect the four species of sea
    turtles (leatherback, green, hawksbill and olive ridley) within its jurisdiction. The Thai culture
    embraced a traditional belief that it was sinful to kill sea turtles.

•   As early as 1947, the Fisheries Act had been passed, prohibiting the catching, harvesting or
    harming of any sea turtle. This Act also specified that any accidentally caught turtles had to be
    released into the sea immediately.

•   Three branches of the Government of Thailand were responsible for sea turtle restoration
    programs: the Department of Fisheries, the Department of Forestry, and the Royal Thai Navy.
    Sea turtle egg collection programs were run by 5 Marine Fisheries Development Centers and 13
    Coastal Aquaculture Development Centers within the Department of Fisheries. The goal of the
    restoration programs administered by these institutions was to cultivate and release 5,000 baby
    sea turtles a year.

•   From 1967 to 1996, there had been no observed incidental sea turtle kills in connection with
    shrimping. The reason for this was that sea turtles inhabited coral reefs and sea grass beds
    within three kilometers of the shoreline where shrimp trawling was prohibited.

•   During the fifth meeting of the ASEAN Sectoral Working Group on Fisheries, held on 13-14
    March 1997, Thailand had suggested that an agreement be negotiated within ASEAN with
    respect to sea turtles. The meeting had agreed to authorize Thailand to draft a Memorandum of
    Understanding setting forth the steps that could be taken jointly for the protection and
    conservation of sea turtles. The MOU also established a Technical Expert Working Group to
    prepare an ASEAN program for Sea Turtle Conservation and Protection, coordinated by
    Malaysia. It also established mutual recognition of each nation's laws and regulations on this
    subject and called for harmonization of such laws and for the sympathetic consideration of such
    new laws that might be proposed by the working group.



Is TED the only option?
•   The complainants argued that the use of TED was not the only and most effective device to
    protect the sea turtles and that TED is not a “multilateral environmental standard” and that
    “extending the same program outside the United States was disguised restriction on
    international trade, because scientific evidence did not demonstrate that shrimp trawling was
    the principal threat or even an immediate threat to sea turtles elsewhere in the world.

•   In 1996, the Indian government proposed legislation for the requirement of modified
    "indigenous" TEDs, which they called TSDs (Turtle Saving Devices) to be used by local fishermen.
    This was a response to the declining olive ridley population that was nesting in beaches such as
    in Orissa. The modified TSDs were similar to standard TEDs except for having fewer bars. This
Shrimp-Turtle Case
    resulted in the increase of the distance between each pair of bars to ensure that bigger
    specimens of shrimp and fish were able to pass through the TSD and into the net.

•   It has been acknowledged that the larger sea turtles, primarily large loggerheads and
    leatherbacks are too large to fit through the escape hatches installed in most TEDs. These turtles
    remain trapped within the net and perish.

•   TED use becomes impractical due to debris in the water. When a TED is clogged with debris, it
    can no longer catch fish effectively or exclude turtles. For example, in September 2008 following
    Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) allowed temporary use
    of "Tow Times" in lieu of TEDs. Vessels were required to limit their tows to 55 minutes from the
    time the trawl doors entered the water until they were retrieved from the water. In June 2010
    the limit was further reduced to 30 minutes. Unfortunately vessels were not equipped with tow
    time data loggers, so there was no practical method to enforce these time limits.

•   Use of TED results in about 9-10% loss in catch of fishes and shrimps, thereby increasing the
    transaction costs.



The environmental “standards” of US
•   Each year US factories spew 3 million tons of toxic chemicals into the air, land, and water. That
    compounds the over one-half billion tons of solid hazardous wastes.

•   US is the 2nd highest producer of Carbon emission.




                           Figure 4: Environment Performance Index scores of US
Shrimp-Turtle Case
•   Among 132 countries, USA has a ranking of 100 in ecosystem vitality in Environment
    Performance Index.
•   A survey conducted by Gallup depicts that there has been a decrease in concern for
    environment in the US is shown below.




                         Figure 5: The environmental awareness survey of US citizens

•   Apart from fishing/shrimping, there are the various other reasons for turtle mortality but rather
    than creating an international stir, is enough being done to curb these turtle mortality due to the
    following causes:

        Artificial lighting: When a sea turtle hatches, its evolutionary instincts push it to move
        towards the brightest light in view, which naturally would be the sun or the moon, leading
        them toward the ocean horizon and into their new ecosystem. However, due to the
        continual expansion of cities, construction of condos and hotels on coasts everywhere has
        grown exponentially. With the invention of the light bulb and therefore artificial light, the
        sea turtle’s natural source of guiding light has been replaced and is no longer the only or the
        brightest source of light. With virtually every coast now constantly lit with buildings, the
        hatchlings become easily confused and turned around, few of them making successful treks
        to the ocean. Studies support artificial light as the leading cause for hatchling disorientation,
        showing that in 1999, 51% of the nests studied showed signs of confusion with one-fourth of
        all the hatchlings headed in the wrong direction.

        Magnetic interference: Ferrous metal wire mesh screens are commonly used to protect sea
        turtle nests from predators' excavating and devouring the eggs and hatchlings. A new
        concern is that nestlings' delicate magnetic sense may not develop normally in the presence
        of the magnetic field interference from these steel mesh cages.

        Oil spills and marine pollution: Marine pollution is both directly harmful to sea turtles as
        well as indirectly, through the deterioration of their natural habitats. Some of the most
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        dangerous ocean pollutants include toxic metals, PCBs, fertilizers, untreated waste,
        chemicals and a variety of petroleum products. Oil spills are particularly dangerous to sea
        turtles. A 1994 study off of Florida’s Atlantic coast, 63% of hatchlings surveyed had been
        found to have ingested tar. Loggerheads in particular have been shown to have the most
        problems with tar-ball ingestion, leading to oesophageal swelling that can dislocate the
        intestines and liver leading to serious buoyancy issues as well as excessive swelling. Many
        regions heavily associated with oil, either exploration, transportation, or processing, are also
        significant sea turtle environments, including the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean, and
        particularly the coasts of Texas and Florida.

        Other minor reasons include poaching, global warming and diseases.

But for all these reasons US is not taking any crucial step. US is apparently concerned and interested
in restricting imports of shrimps from developing nations because of its ulterior motives.



Ulterior motives of US
•   The tropical shrimps had much more demand than the temperate shrimps in the US market as
    they were much more delectable. These shrimps, due to their tropical origins, were much more
    liked and preferred over the temperate shrimps by the customers. This created a huge demand
    for these shrimps and affected the local shrimp industry inversely. Thus US wanted to stop
    these imports in order to increase their domestic demand again.

•   The Asian countries had the comparative advantage of providing shrimps at lower costs than
    were available domestically. Due to various cheap inputs like labor, the shrimps imported from
    developing countries were very cheap in comparison to those of developed nation.

•   The US was adhering to richer lobbyists representing environmental and angling interests. The
    major companies involved in fishing and shrimping had invested a lot into TEDs and this was
    affecting their profitability and increasing their costs. Thus these companies used the
    government to force the use of TEDs in other nations also from where shrimps were imported.

•   While importation of shrimps from the mentioned countries was banned, US did not undertake
    any steps to stop import of shrimps from China. Such act of double standards was nothing but
    realpolitik on the part of the US because it was aware that such acts of intimidation would not
    work for China. The US could not flex its muscles when it came to matters concerning China.
Shrimp-Turtle Case

The WTO Case Timeline
                       4 nations (India, Malaysia, Pakistan & Thailand) jointly have consultations
      Oct 8th, 1996
                       with the U.S.

        Nov 19th,
                       Consultations held without resolution
         1996

      Jan 9th – Feb    India, Malaysia, Pakistan & Thailand request DSB to establish a panel to look
       25th , 1997     into the US embargo on import of shrimp & shrimp products

        April 15th,
                       DSB establishes 3 member panel
          1997

        April 6th,
                       Panel issues final report and ruling (in favor of the plaintiff nations)
         1998

        July 13th,
                       US appeals against the panel’s ruling
          1998

        Oct 1998       Appellate Body gives its final report (in favor of US)



                                  Figure 6: The Shrimp-Turtle case timeline



Argument by Plaintiff Nations
Following were the arguments put forth by the plaintiff nations:

•   India, Pakistan, Malaysia and Thailand argued that the embargo on shrimp and shrimp products
    was inconsistent with the Most-Favoured-Nation (MFN) principle embodied in Article I:I of
    GATT. This argument was raised because:

        Pursuant to the embargo, wild shrimp harvested by use of TEDs were forbidden entry into
        the United States if harvested by a national of a non-certified country, while shrimp
        harvested by the same method by a national of a certified country would be permitted entry
        into the United States.

        The embargo, as applied, was also inconsistent with Article I:I of the GATT 1994 because
        initially affected nations had been granted a phase-in period of three years, while newly
        affected nations had not been given a similar phase-in period. Thus, initially affected nations
        had been given the opportunity to implement the required use of TEDs without substantially
        interrupting shrimp trade to the United States. Products from these countries had therefore
        been given an "advantage, favour, privilege or immunity" over like products originating in
        the territories of other Members.
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•   Article XI of GATT 1994 provided for the general elimination of quantitative restrictions on
    imports and exports. The scope of Article XI was comprehensive, applying to all measures
    instituted or maintained by a Member prohibiting or restricting the import, export or sale for
    export of products other than measures that took the form of duties, taxes or other charges.

•   The ban imposed by the US was in contravention of Article XIII.I as it restricted importation of
    like products. Physically identical shrimp and shrimp products from different nations were
    treated differently by the United States upon imports based solely on the method of harvest and
    the policies of the foreign government under whose jurisdiction the shrimps were harvested.
    Import of shrimp and shrimp products from some shrimp harvesting nations were denied entry
    into the United States while imports of similar shrimp and shrimp products from other nations
    were permitted entry into the United States.



Argument by US
•   The US argued that it had taken measures to protect and conserve sea turtles, and endangered
    “natural resource” that all parties to this dispute had agreed needed to be protected and
    conserved. United States required its shrimp fishermen to harvest shrimp in manner that was
    safe for sea turtles. In this case, the United States only asked that shrimp imported into the
    United States to be harvested in a comparable manner.

•   Article XX lays down specific instances in which a WTO member may be exempted from GATT
    rules. A member can exercise Article XX to “protect human, animal, plant life or health”. Article
    XX could also be exercised for “conservation of exhaustible natural resources” if such measures
    are made effective in conjunction with restrictions on domestic production or consumption.

•   US complained that in spite of repeated reminders on the usage of TEDs, the complainants did
    not pay heed to their claims and there were no effective shrimp/turtle policies undertaken by
    these countries.

•   US also claimed to be in compliance with the “WTO Agreement”. This agreement was the first
    multilateral trade agreement concluded after the UN Conference on Environment and
    Development which provided that the rules of trade must not only promote expansion of trade
    and production, but must do so in a manner that respects the principle of sustainable
    development and protects and preserves the environment.



Panel Ruling: 6th April 1988
•   Ban inconsistent with GATT Article XI: The import ban applied by the US on the basis of Section
    609 of Public Law 101-162 is not consistent with Article XI - Section I of GATT 1994 imposed by
    the US.
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•   US could not justify its measure under GATT Article XX (dealing with general exceptions to Art
    XX): The US measure constituted unjustifiable and arbitrary discrimination between countries
    where the same conditions prevail.

•   The Panel made the following recommendation: United States bring this measure into
    conformity with its obligations under the WTO Agreement.



Aftermath of the ruling
•   US and parties to the dispute reached agreement on a 13 month compliance period which
    ended in December 1999.

•   The US Department of State guidelines for implementing Section 609 was revised and issued
    after providing notice and an opportunity for public comment.

•   US to provide financial and technical assistance (training in the design, construction, installation
    and operation of TEDs to any government requesting it).

However, in October 2000, Malaysia requested the re-establishment of the original panel to
examine whether the United States had in fact complied with the Appellate Body findings. The
implementation panel ruled in favor of the United States citing the following:

        Appellate Body ruling was an obligation to negotiate.
        United States had indeed made serious “good faith” efforts to negotiate.



Other Disputes at WTO
US-Mexico - Tuna Dolphin Case
In this dispute, Mexico was the exporting
country concerned. Its exports of tuna to the
US were banned. Mexico complained in 1991
under the GATT dispute settlement
procedure. The embargo also applies to
“intermediary” countries handling the tuna
en route from Mexico to the United States.
Often the tuna is processed and canned in
one of these countries. In this dispute, the
“intermediary” countries facing the embargo
were Costa Rica, Italy, Japan, and Spain etc.               Figure 7: A Dolphin-Safe can of Tuna


The panel reported to GATT members in September 1991 and concluded that:

•   US could not embargo imports of tuna products from Mexico simply because Mexican
    regulations on the way tuna was produced did not satisfy US regulations. (But the US could apply




                                                                       Figure 8: A Dolphin Safe can of Tuna
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    its regulations on the quality or content of the tuna imported.) This has become known as a
    product versus process issue.

•   GATT rules did not allow one country to take trade action for the purpose of attempting to
    enforce its own domestic laws in another country - even to protect animal health or exhaustible
    natural resources. The term used here is "extra-territoriality".

US-EU - Meat without hormones case
The Beef Hormone Dispute is one of the
two    most     intractable  transatlantic
controversies since the establishment of
the WTO.

In the 1990s, in the midst of the mad cow
disease crisis, the EU banned the import of
meat that contained artificial beef
hormones. WTO rules permit such bans,
but only where a signatory presents valid
scientific evidence that the ban is a health
and safety measure. Canada and the US
opposed this ban, taking the EU to the WTO
DSB in 1997 where the WTO ruled against                        Figure 9: Hormone-free Pork
the EU.



Disputes involving the US




                                 Figure 10: Disputes involving US in WTO
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Since inception of the World Trade Organization, US have been involved in numerous disputes with
large number of other WTO members as well as non-members, either as a complainant or as a
respondent. The red color represents the US as a complainant while the blue color represents US as
a respondent.



Developed Nations: Devils in disguise?
With the coming up of the so called “Globalization” , the rich countries have got a kind of licensing
rights to exploit poorer nations in the name of development and investment. The developed
economies are getting involved in a proxy reign of power and influence.

The governments of developed nations promote and support their multinational companies to
exploit poorer nations in the name of global trade. The fact of the matter is this that the rich are
getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. This massive exploitation, with the help of trade and
other political influences, have led to mass starvation, political instability in the host country and
power hungry clans fighting amongst each other. This has further deteriorated the overall conditions
of these countries leading to genocide and abject poverty, case in point being countries like Nigeria,
Libya, Sudan, etc.

Poor countries hold 40 per cent of the world's population, but receive only 3 per cent of the world's
income from trade. Rich countries make up 14 per cent of world population and yet get 75 per cent
of the profit from trade. These rich countries enforce stricter bans and regulations from the imports
of developing nations, whenever their domestic industries get slightest of the interference from the
exports of the developing nations.

Developing nations are poorer countries; their inputs of the production are cheap. They can produce
same goods as rich developed nations at cheaper price. The developed nations want to level the
fields by enforcing higher taxes on the imports from developing countries. This is a major loss of
comparative advantage and against the principles of free trade.

Developed countries give financial aid to the poorer countries for development purposes; but,
through the complex web of taxes, tariffs and quotas that govern trade, they take far more from the
poor than what they give them. Unfair trade costs the world's poor $100bn a year. There are terrible
inequities that need to be addressed if the 2.7 billion people in the world who live on less than $2 a
day are to be enabled to stand on their own feet.

Few examples of unfair trade practices across the world include:

•   Discrimination in case of Cocoa by US and EU. Higher the addition of value by a poor, higher the
    tariffs imposition (Germany, Britain against Ivory Coast, Ghana). For importing raw cocoa beans
    from Ghana and Ivory Coast, US and EU impose no tariffs. However, if these countries export
    processed cocoa beans in the form of cocoa butter; the tariffs will be raised to 10 per cent in EU.
    It will go further to 15% and 20 per cent if they will process it in the form of cocoa powder and
    chocolate respectively.
Shrimp-Turtle Case
•    Clothing, India's second largest export to the US, is taxed by Washington at 19 per cent whereas
     the imports from countries such as France, Japan, and Germany are charged at between 0-1 per
     cent.



Developing Nations in WTO

    Attractive opportunities due to free trade among nations
    prometed developing countries to join WTO

         Growth of industries in developing nations due to availability
         of new markets for sale of their products

               Domestic industry of developed nations faced competition
               from those of the developing countries

                    Restrictions imposed on the produce of developing nations in
                    the form of Trade Sanctions and Anti-dumping investigations

                          WTO's role is that of an enforcer imposing restrictions on the
                          developing countries


                                 Figure 11: Developing nations and the WTO



Future of WTO - Challenges before developing nations
•    Directly participating in the dispute settlement process (explained in Annexure) either as a
     complainant or as a defendant has become very complex, because of the intricacies of the legal
     interpretation which has routinely become a part of the panel or appeal process in the disputes
     these days.

•    The developed countries have started taking up these negotiations with a new determination to
     expand the access of their economic entities in developing countries. Their attitude and
     approach appear to have changed in recent years. The old concept of enlightened self-interest in
     seeing the harmony of their own long-term prospects with the development of developing
     countries has been replaced by expectations of immediate gains from expansion of current
     opportunities in the developing countries, irrespective of its effect on the economies of these
     countries.

•    The developed countries, particularly the major ones, are more coordinated in their objectives
     and methods in the WTO, whereas the developing countries have been losing whatever
     solidarity they had in the past. The developed countries are also now moving with a great deal of
     confidence in themselves. They feel that they can solve their economic problems by proper
Shrimp-Turtle Case
    coordination of policies among themselves; and they do not see the need for support from
    developing countries in this regard. This has naturally reduced their sensitivity to the problems
    of developing countries.

•   A developed country, on the other hand, can start the process with much greater ease. Similarly
    the developing countries also face a serious handicap in defending themselves in a case in the
    WTO because of the cost involved. Thus, the developing countries are very poorly placed in the
    WTO in respect of enforcing their rights and ensuring observance of the obligations of the other
    countries.
Shrimp-Turtle Case

Conclusion
The hitch still remains and some of the major questions regarding world trade are yet to be
answered:



                                                       Should free trade be restricted in the
    Is globalization a debt-trap for the
                                                       name of environmental protection and
    developing and poor nations?
                                                       to what extent?



                                       GLOBALIZATION


    WTO Members unilaterally adopting
                                                       Why can’t the consumer make the
    their own conditional market access
                                                       purchasing decision instead of the
    measures - Does it not undermine the
                                                       governments?
    multilateral trading system?


                                Figure 12: A question mark on Globalization

Environmentalists also insist that WTO rules need to be changed to accommodate Multilateral
Environmental Agreements (MEAs). They want trade sanctions imposed to enforce MEAs, such as
the Kyoto Protocol on reducing carbon-dioxide emissions, which are beyond challenge at the WTO.
This is tricky. Clearly, some accommodation is needed, but exemptions from trade rules all too easily
become protectionist loopholes. Rich-country parties to an MEA could, for instance, gang up on poor
countries on environmental grounds.

In such cases the right response is to tackle the root cause of the environmental damage - and not to
stop trade. The right way to deal with people’s desire for consumption (eating turtle-friendly
shrimps, hormone-free beef or whatever) is not to impose one country’s values on another. The
onus should lie on consumers, rather than governments, to choose what they want – let the
MARKET prevail over the STATE!
Shrimp-Turtle Case

Annexure
Dispute Settlement Process
Dispute settlement is the central pillar of the multilateral trading system, and the WTO’s unique
contribution to the stability of the global economy. Settling disputes is the responsibility of the
Dispute Settlement Body (the General Council in another guise), which consists of all WTO
members. The Dispute Settlement Body has the sole authority to establish “panels” of experts to
consider the case, and to accept or reject the panels’ findings or the results of an appeal. It monitors
the implementation of the rulings and recommendations, and has the power to authorize retaliation
when a country does not comply with a ruling.



                                   STAGE 1 – Consultations (up to 60 days)




                                                 STAGE 2 – Panels
        Panel Appointment ( up to 45        Final Panel Report to Parties (6       Final Panel Report to WTO (3
                   Days)                                months)                               weeks)




               STAGE 3 – Provision of Appeal - Appellate Body Setup (60 days – 90 days)

                                          DSB adopts Appeal Report (30days)



                                       Figure 13: The Dispute Settlement Process

    •     First stage: Consultation (up to 60 days). Before taking any other actions, the countries in
          dispute have to talk to each other to see if they can settle their differences by themselves. If
          that fails, they can also ask the WTO director-general to mediate or try to help in any other
          way.

    •     Second stage: The panel (up to 45 days for a panel to be appointed, plus 6 months for the
          panel to conclude). If consultations fail, the complaining country can ask for a panel to be
          appointed. The country “in the dock” can block the creation of a panel once, but when the
          Dispute Settlement Body meets for a second time, the appointment can no longer be
          blocked (unless there is a consensus against appointing the panel).

          Officially, the panel is helping the Dispute Settlement Body make rulings or
          recommendations, but since the panel’s report can only be rejected by consensus in the
          Dispute Settlement Body, its conclusions are difficult to overturn. The panel’s findings have
          to be based on the agreements cited. The panel’s final report should normally be given to
          the parties to the dispute within six months. In cases of urgency, including those concerning
          perishable goods, the deadline is shortened to three months.
Shrimp-Turtle Case
•   Third stage: Provision of Appeal - Appellate Body Setup (60 - 90 days). Either side can
    appeal a panel’s ruling. Sometimes both sides do so. Appeals have to be based on points of
    law such as legal interpretation - they cannot re-examine existing evidence or examine new
    issues.

Each appeal is heard by three members of a permanent seven-member Appellate Body set up by
the Dispute Settlement Body and broadly representing the range of WTO membership.
Members of the Appellate Body have four-year terms. They have to be individuals with
recognized standing in the field of law and international trade, not affiliated with any
government. The appeal can uphold, modify or reverse the panel’s legal findings and
conclusions. Normally appeals should not last more than 60 days, with an absolute maximum of
90 days. The Dispute Settlement Body has to accept or reject the appeals report within 30 days -
and rejection is only possible by consensus.
Shrimp-Turtle Case

References
•   www.wto.org
•   www.economist.com
•   www.theinsider.org
•   news.independent.co.uk
•   www.iucnredlist.org
•   www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/species/turtles/
•   www.conserveturtles.org
•   www.downtoearth.org.in
•   ictsd.org

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Developing Nations Challenge US Shrimp-Turtle Import Ban

  • 1. Shrimp-Turtle Case A case for the developing countries Section B, Group 6: Alisha Sukhija (11PGDM066) Arnab Moitra (11PGDM076) Kamaldeep Singh (11PGDM086) Paritosh Saini (11PGDM097) Sanchit Gupta (11PGDM107) Sumit Kumar Jain (11PGDM117)
  • 2. Shrimp-Turtle Case Table of Contents Introduction............................................................................................................................................. 2 The history ...............................................................................................................................................3 The real problem .....................................................................................................................................3 TED - Turtle Excluder Device ...................................................................................................................4 Setback for developing countries ............................................................................................................4 Conservation and management of sea turtles in the developing nations ..............................................5 Is TED the only option? ...........................................................................................................................9 The environmental “standards” of US ..................................................................................................10 Ulterior motives of US ...........................................................................................................................12 The WTO Case Timeline ........................................................................................................................13 Argument by Plaintiff Nations ...............................................................................................................13 Argument by US ....................................................................................................................................14 Panel Ruling: 6th April 1988 ..................................................................................................................14 Aftermath of the ruling .........................................................................................................................15 Other Disputes at WTO .........................................................................................................................15 Disputes involving the US ......................................................................................................................16 Developed Nations: Devils in disguise? .................................................................................................17 Developing Nations in WTO ..................................................................................................................18 Future of WTO - Challenges before developing nations .......................................................................18 Conclusion ............................................................................................................................................. 20 Annexure ............................................................................................................................................... 21 References ............................................................................................................................................. 23
  • 3. Shrimp-Turtle Case Introduction Seven species of sea turtles have been identified till date. They are distributed around the world in subtropical and tropical areas. They spend their lives at sea, where they migrate between their foraging and nesting grounds. Sea turtles have been adversely affected by human activity, either directly (their meat, shells and eggs have been exploited), or indirectly (incidental capture in fisheries, destruction of their habitats, pollution of the oceans). In early 1997, India, Malaysia, Pakistan and Thailand brought a joint complaint against a ban imposed by the US on the importation of certain shrimp and shrimp products. The protection of sea turtles was at the heart of the ban. The US Endangered Species Act of 1973 listed as endangered or threatened the five species of sea turtles that occur in US waters, and prohibited their “take” (meaning harassment, hunting, capture, killing or attempting to do any of these) within the US, in its territorial sea and the high seas. Under the act, the US required that US shrimp trawlers use “turtle excluder devices” (TEDs) in their nets when fishing in areas where there is a significant likelihood of encountering sea turtles.
  • 4. Shrimp-Turtle Case The history • 1973: An Endangered Species Act was approved. It aimed to protect all endangered species from further threats of extinction. Working primarily through and conservation and protection, the ESA also affected harvesting techniques. • 1987: Voluntary guidelines were issued for including turtle exclusionary devices during fishing or shrimping. • 1989 and 1991: Legislation is negotiated to protect all sea turtles in American waters, including Central America and the Caribbean. • 1992: Various NGOs pressurized the prohibition to cover international shrimp harvests. • 1996: A full prohibition of all shrimps from any country that does not have sufficient precautions and regulatory agencies to ensure that the catch of sea turtles is lesser than or equal to that of United States. The real problem Figure 1: Clockwise from top (L): A shrimp trawler, the catch, net used for shrimping and the by-catch US prohibited the importation of any shrimp harvested using commercial fishing technologies that might harm sea turtles, unless the exporting country is certified by the US administration as having a regulatory program to prevent incidental turtle deaths comparable to that of the United States or is certified as having a fishing environment that does not pose risks to sea turtles from shrimping.
  • 5. Shrimp-Turtle Case While US adopted a program to require shrimpers to use TEDs on their boats, a country could take up to three years to phase in the comprehensive program. Further guidelines, issued in 1993, extended somewhat the final deadline by which a foreign country must implement its program in order to be certified. In 1995, environmental NGOs challenged before the US Court of International Trade (CIT) the decision of the State Department to limit the application of Section 609 to the greater Caribbean area, as well as certain other interpretations that the State Department had made of the law. TED - Turtle Excluder Device Figure 2: The working of TED explained A "Turtle Excluder Device" is a grid of bars with an opening either at the top or the bottom of the trawl net. The grid is fitted into the neck of a shrimp trawl. Small animals such as shrimp pass through the bars and are caught in the bag end of the trawl. When larger animals, such as marine turtles and sharks are captured in the trawl, they strike the grid bars and are ejected through the opening. Setback for developing countries The developing countries suffered the following setbacks due to the ban: • Loss of Comparative Advantage: The requirement of installing the TED devices on every trawler was quite expensive for the poor trawlers of the developing countries. Also as they used the more expensive equipment the comparative advantage of producing at lower rates was lost by the shrimpers and the trade was jeopardized.
  • 6. Shrimp-Turtle Case • Time difference in implementation and preferential treatment for some countries (ACP countries the main beneficiary): In 1991, some countries like Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, Suriname, French Guyana, and Brazil were required to make a commitment to require all shrimp trawl vessels to use TEDs at all times . These nations were given three years for the complete phase-in of a comparable program. The other countries in comparison were given a period of only four months to comply. • No alternative to TED accepted: Apart from TED, the US did not accept alternative methods of ensuring lower mortality for turtles. The embargo applied on the countries was to be removed only on the condition if the countries agreed to use the TED in the trawlers. The other potential methods of conservation of turtles were completely ignored by US. Conservation and management of sea turtles in the developing nations Following the ban, the complainant nations argued that measures for conservation of sea turtles had already been in place, much before the diktat of the US. India India argued that it had a well-established history of protecting endangered species, including sea turtles. For many centuries, the essential harmony between the environment and man had been a central precept in Indian society, based on the fact that the continued replenishment of environmental resources was crucial for the very livelihood of a vast majority of Indians. The objectives of environmental protection were therefore deeply ingrained in Indians. • Five of the seven species of sea turtles found worldwide are reported to occur in Indian coastal waters and the Bay Islands. • Environmental resources had traditionally been safeguarded by their close association with the teachings of India's major religions. For example, the turtle itself was considered by many Indians to be an incarnation of the Divine. The turtle was an incarnation of Lord Vishnu. • All the five species of sea turtles that occur in Indian coastal waters are legally protected under Schedule I of the Indian Wildlife Protection Act (1972), as well as listed in Appendix I of Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), which ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten the survival of the species in the wild by signatory countries. However, India could not find any provision in CITES which called for an import restriction on shrimp and shrimp products in order to protect and conserve sea turtles, nor could it find in CITES any reference to the TEDs as a "multilateral environmental standard" to be used for the protection and conservation of sea turtles. India did not accept the US assertion that the use of TEDs was the only way to keep sea
  • 7. Shrimp-Turtle Case turtles species found in India's territorial waters from becoming extinct; conservation programs such as the ones undertaken by India were also essential for conserving sea turtles. • The nesting population of olive ridley had increased over the past ten years in the Gahirmatha region, off India's Orissa coast, and every year approximately 600,000 olive ridley sea turtles nested in this area. The local government had banned fishing and shrimping within a radius of 20 kilometers around Gahirmatha to protect these turtles. In addition, 65,000 hectares in the Bhitarkanika and Gahirmatha regions had been declared a sea turtle sanctuary. Fifteen other state governments had issued public notices reminding fishermen and others that catching or endangering sea turtles was illegal. Not only was the Government of India establishing programs to ensure the preservation of sea turtles, but the Government had also established programs to ensure that the laws were enforced. • Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute in India monitored olive ridley turtles nesting in some regions during 1978 and 1986, and conducted an exhaustive study on the nesting population. The Institute also operated a hatchery for sea turtles in Madras (Now Chennai), from which hatchlings were released at sea. India considered that since it had adequate measures in place to protect and preserve endangered species of sea turtles, there was no need for the United States to impose its own agenda on third parties through the use of far-reaching, extraterritorial measures such as the one imposed by Section 609. This action constituted an unacceptable interference in policies within India's sovereign jurisdiction. Malaysia • Malaysia submitted that none of the Malaysian fishermen used TEDs. A significant amount of wild harvested shrimps were caught using traditional mechanisms (such as hand retrieval nets) which would not in any way cause incidental catches of turtles. • Organizations actively involved in the conservation of turtles included the Fisheries Department, local universities, NGOs (e.g. WWF and the Malaysian Society of Marine Sciences) and corporate bodies (as sponsors of conservation projects) carried out the various measures. Protection of turtle eggs by incubation programs, involving in situ methods or protected beach hatcheries, and banning the commercial harvest and sale of eggs in certain areas (e.g. leatherbacks eggs in Terengganu). In other areas where the nesting beaches were extensive, turtle egg collection was licensed to the local inhabitants from whom the eggs were purchased for incubation in protected beach hatcheries. Efforts were continuously made to increase the proportion of eggs bought from licensed egg collectors for incubation. Establishment of turtle sanctuaries/state parks in recognized turtle nesting areas to protect the nesting sites. This ensured that commercial development did not encroach upon the nesting beaches.
  • 8. Shrimp-Turtle Case In marine parks where key nesting sites of green turtles occurred, fishing activities within a radius of two nautical miles surrounding the island or island groups was prohibited. Research programs were undertaken by local universities and the Fisheries Department to provide scientific information for further development and enhancement of conservation programs. • Sabah and Sarawak had turtle protection laws, and fishing trawlers were not allowed to operate within designated areas where turtles mated and nested. Therefore, in the case of the Sarawak population of green turtles, even in the absence of TEDs, the population had remained constant over a long period and had been sustained. The Turtle Island of Sabah was constituted as a State Park in 1984, after the Sabah State Government had compulsorily acquired the islands from private ownership. Figure 3: The Sabah and Sarawak islands of Malaysia • The active enforcement of fishery laws by the Department of Fisheries had successfully kept the trawlers away from the coastal and turtle island waters and the existing trawling operations had been successfully kept away from the migration routes of the turtles. • Malaysia had a comprehensive legal framework on the conservation and management of marine turtles which were under the jurisdiction of 13 individual states. The states' legislation on turtle protection had been enacted in 1932 and prohibited, inter alia, the capture, killing, injuring, possession or sale of turtles, collection of eggs, disturbing turtles during laying eggs, and provided for the establishment of turtle sanctuaries. Subsidiary legislation had also been enacted, such as the Customs (Prohibition of Export/Import) Orders of 1988, enforced specifically to ban the exports and imports of turtle eggs to and from all countries. • Malaysia had cooperated with the Philippines in the launching of the Turtle Island Heritage Protected Area in 1996, to develop uniform conservation measures for the turtles on the islands.
  • 9. Shrimp-Turtle Case • While recognizing that the use of TEDs was a step in contributing to the conservation of turtles, Malaysia considered that it was just one of the many accepted methods for the conservation of turtles. The use of TED alone could not absolutely ensure the survival of turtles. Malaysia considered that its commitment was evident by the actions taken both domestically and internationally in order to protect these endangered species from extinction. Conservation efforts were better achieved through bilateral or multilateral agreements rather than resorting to trade sanctions under the WTO. Pakistan Pakistan submitted that it shared the United States' concerns over the plight of sea turtles. However, the US requirement that TEDs be installed on Pakistan's commercial fishing vessels not only violated US obligations under the GATT, but was completely unnecessary given Pakistan's long history of protecting endangered species, including sea turtles. • Pakistan stated that its culture embraced a traditional belief that it was sinful to kill sea turtles. • In 1950, Pakistan had passed legislation to protect sea turtles by enacting the Imports and Exports (Control) Act (amended on 13 August 1996), which made it illegal to export protected species, including sea turtles and sea turtle by-products from Pakistan. • In addition to laws protecting sea turtles, various public and private organizations in Pakistan were engaged in sea turtle protection programs. Since 1979, Pakistan's Sindh Wildlife Department was engaged in sea turtle conservation programs in conjunction with WWF and IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature). The main objective of this program was to protect sea turtles from extinction. In this regard, this program had established enclosures on beaches to protect sea turtles and their eggs from predators and poachers. • The Sindh Wildlife Department had also engaged in turtle conservation training programs designed to teach the public about the importance of protecting sea turtles. This program had proven to be extremely effective in preserving and protecting sea turtles. It was estimated that between October 1979 and December 1995 more than 1.5 million sea turtle eggs had been protected and thousands of hatchlings had been released safely to the sea. Pakistan did not accept the US assertion that the use of TEDs was the only way to prevent the extinction of sea turtles and considered the US action to be an unacceptable interference in policies within Pakistan's sovereign jurisdiction. Pakistan argued that, since it had adequate measures in place to protect and preserve endangered species of sea turtles, there was no need for the United States to meddle with the internal affairs of the country.
  • 10. Shrimp-Turtle Case Thailand • Thailand submitted that it had a long history of taking action to protect the four species of sea turtles (leatherback, green, hawksbill and olive ridley) within its jurisdiction. The Thai culture embraced a traditional belief that it was sinful to kill sea turtles. • As early as 1947, the Fisheries Act had been passed, prohibiting the catching, harvesting or harming of any sea turtle. This Act also specified that any accidentally caught turtles had to be released into the sea immediately. • Three branches of the Government of Thailand were responsible for sea turtle restoration programs: the Department of Fisheries, the Department of Forestry, and the Royal Thai Navy. Sea turtle egg collection programs were run by 5 Marine Fisheries Development Centers and 13 Coastal Aquaculture Development Centers within the Department of Fisheries. The goal of the restoration programs administered by these institutions was to cultivate and release 5,000 baby sea turtles a year. • From 1967 to 1996, there had been no observed incidental sea turtle kills in connection with shrimping. The reason for this was that sea turtles inhabited coral reefs and sea grass beds within three kilometers of the shoreline where shrimp trawling was prohibited. • During the fifth meeting of the ASEAN Sectoral Working Group on Fisheries, held on 13-14 March 1997, Thailand had suggested that an agreement be negotiated within ASEAN with respect to sea turtles. The meeting had agreed to authorize Thailand to draft a Memorandum of Understanding setting forth the steps that could be taken jointly for the protection and conservation of sea turtles. The MOU also established a Technical Expert Working Group to prepare an ASEAN program for Sea Turtle Conservation and Protection, coordinated by Malaysia. It also established mutual recognition of each nation's laws and regulations on this subject and called for harmonization of such laws and for the sympathetic consideration of such new laws that might be proposed by the working group. Is TED the only option? • The complainants argued that the use of TED was not the only and most effective device to protect the sea turtles and that TED is not a “multilateral environmental standard” and that “extending the same program outside the United States was disguised restriction on international trade, because scientific evidence did not demonstrate that shrimp trawling was the principal threat or even an immediate threat to sea turtles elsewhere in the world. • In 1996, the Indian government proposed legislation for the requirement of modified "indigenous" TEDs, which they called TSDs (Turtle Saving Devices) to be used by local fishermen. This was a response to the declining olive ridley population that was nesting in beaches such as in Orissa. The modified TSDs were similar to standard TEDs except for having fewer bars. This
  • 11. Shrimp-Turtle Case resulted in the increase of the distance between each pair of bars to ensure that bigger specimens of shrimp and fish were able to pass through the TSD and into the net. • It has been acknowledged that the larger sea turtles, primarily large loggerheads and leatherbacks are too large to fit through the escape hatches installed in most TEDs. These turtles remain trapped within the net and perish. • TED use becomes impractical due to debris in the water. When a TED is clogged with debris, it can no longer catch fish effectively or exclude turtles. For example, in September 2008 following Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) allowed temporary use of "Tow Times" in lieu of TEDs. Vessels were required to limit their tows to 55 minutes from the time the trawl doors entered the water until they were retrieved from the water. In June 2010 the limit was further reduced to 30 minutes. Unfortunately vessels were not equipped with tow time data loggers, so there was no practical method to enforce these time limits. • Use of TED results in about 9-10% loss in catch of fishes and shrimps, thereby increasing the transaction costs. The environmental “standards” of US • Each year US factories spew 3 million tons of toxic chemicals into the air, land, and water. That compounds the over one-half billion tons of solid hazardous wastes. • US is the 2nd highest producer of Carbon emission. Figure 4: Environment Performance Index scores of US
  • 12. Shrimp-Turtle Case • Among 132 countries, USA has a ranking of 100 in ecosystem vitality in Environment Performance Index. • A survey conducted by Gallup depicts that there has been a decrease in concern for environment in the US is shown below. Figure 5: The environmental awareness survey of US citizens • Apart from fishing/shrimping, there are the various other reasons for turtle mortality but rather than creating an international stir, is enough being done to curb these turtle mortality due to the following causes: Artificial lighting: When a sea turtle hatches, its evolutionary instincts push it to move towards the brightest light in view, which naturally would be the sun or the moon, leading them toward the ocean horizon and into their new ecosystem. However, due to the continual expansion of cities, construction of condos and hotels on coasts everywhere has grown exponentially. With the invention of the light bulb and therefore artificial light, the sea turtle’s natural source of guiding light has been replaced and is no longer the only or the brightest source of light. With virtually every coast now constantly lit with buildings, the hatchlings become easily confused and turned around, few of them making successful treks to the ocean. Studies support artificial light as the leading cause for hatchling disorientation, showing that in 1999, 51% of the nests studied showed signs of confusion with one-fourth of all the hatchlings headed in the wrong direction. Magnetic interference: Ferrous metal wire mesh screens are commonly used to protect sea turtle nests from predators' excavating and devouring the eggs and hatchlings. A new concern is that nestlings' delicate magnetic sense may not develop normally in the presence of the magnetic field interference from these steel mesh cages. Oil spills and marine pollution: Marine pollution is both directly harmful to sea turtles as well as indirectly, through the deterioration of their natural habitats. Some of the most
  • 13. Shrimp-Turtle Case dangerous ocean pollutants include toxic metals, PCBs, fertilizers, untreated waste, chemicals and a variety of petroleum products. Oil spills are particularly dangerous to sea turtles. A 1994 study off of Florida’s Atlantic coast, 63% of hatchlings surveyed had been found to have ingested tar. Loggerheads in particular have been shown to have the most problems with tar-ball ingestion, leading to oesophageal swelling that can dislocate the intestines and liver leading to serious buoyancy issues as well as excessive swelling. Many regions heavily associated with oil, either exploration, transportation, or processing, are also significant sea turtle environments, including the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean, and particularly the coasts of Texas and Florida. Other minor reasons include poaching, global warming and diseases. But for all these reasons US is not taking any crucial step. US is apparently concerned and interested in restricting imports of shrimps from developing nations because of its ulterior motives. Ulterior motives of US • The tropical shrimps had much more demand than the temperate shrimps in the US market as they were much more delectable. These shrimps, due to their tropical origins, were much more liked and preferred over the temperate shrimps by the customers. This created a huge demand for these shrimps and affected the local shrimp industry inversely. Thus US wanted to stop these imports in order to increase their domestic demand again. • The Asian countries had the comparative advantage of providing shrimps at lower costs than were available domestically. Due to various cheap inputs like labor, the shrimps imported from developing countries were very cheap in comparison to those of developed nation. • The US was adhering to richer lobbyists representing environmental and angling interests. The major companies involved in fishing and shrimping had invested a lot into TEDs and this was affecting their profitability and increasing their costs. Thus these companies used the government to force the use of TEDs in other nations also from where shrimps were imported. • While importation of shrimps from the mentioned countries was banned, US did not undertake any steps to stop import of shrimps from China. Such act of double standards was nothing but realpolitik on the part of the US because it was aware that such acts of intimidation would not work for China. The US could not flex its muscles when it came to matters concerning China.
  • 14. Shrimp-Turtle Case The WTO Case Timeline 4 nations (India, Malaysia, Pakistan & Thailand) jointly have consultations Oct 8th, 1996 with the U.S. Nov 19th, Consultations held without resolution 1996 Jan 9th – Feb India, Malaysia, Pakistan & Thailand request DSB to establish a panel to look 25th , 1997 into the US embargo on import of shrimp & shrimp products April 15th, DSB establishes 3 member panel 1997 April 6th, Panel issues final report and ruling (in favor of the plaintiff nations) 1998 July 13th, US appeals against the panel’s ruling 1998 Oct 1998 Appellate Body gives its final report (in favor of US) Figure 6: The Shrimp-Turtle case timeline Argument by Plaintiff Nations Following were the arguments put forth by the plaintiff nations: • India, Pakistan, Malaysia and Thailand argued that the embargo on shrimp and shrimp products was inconsistent with the Most-Favoured-Nation (MFN) principle embodied in Article I:I of GATT. This argument was raised because: Pursuant to the embargo, wild shrimp harvested by use of TEDs were forbidden entry into the United States if harvested by a national of a non-certified country, while shrimp harvested by the same method by a national of a certified country would be permitted entry into the United States. The embargo, as applied, was also inconsistent with Article I:I of the GATT 1994 because initially affected nations had been granted a phase-in period of three years, while newly affected nations had not been given a similar phase-in period. Thus, initially affected nations had been given the opportunity to implement the required use of TEDs without substantially interrupting shrimp trade to the United States. Products from these countries had therefore been given an "advantage, favour, privilege or immunity" over like products originating in the territories of other Members.
  • 15. Shrimp-Turtle Case • Article XI of GATT 1994 provided for the general elimination of quantitative restrictions on imports and exports. The scope of Article XI was comprehensive, applying to all measures instituted or maintained by a Member prohibiting or restricting the import, export or sale for export of products other than measures that took the form of duties, taxes or other charges. • The ban imposed by the US was in contravention of Article XIII.I as it restricted importation of like products. Physically identical shrimp and shrimp products from different nations were treated differently by the United States upon imports based solely on the method of harvest and the policies of the foreign government under whose jurisdiction the shrimps were harvested. Import of shrimp and shrimp products from some shrimp harvesting nations were denied entry into the United States while imports of similar shrimp and shrimp products from other nations were permitted entry into the United States. Argument by US • The US argued that it had taken measures to protect and conserve sea turtles, and endangered “natural resource” that all parties to this dispute had agreed needed to be protected and conserved. United States required its shrimp fishermen to harvest shrimp in manner that was safe for sea turtles. In this case, the United States only asked that shrimp imported into the United States to be harvested in a comparable manner. • Article XX lays down specific instances in which a WTO member may be exempted from GATT rules. A member can exercise Article XX to “protect human, animal, plant life or health”. Article XX could also be exercised for “conservation of exhaustible natural resources” if such measures are made effective in conjunction with restrictions on domestic production or consumption. • US complained that in spite of repeated reminders on the usage of TEDs, the complainants did not pay heed to their claims and there were no effective shrimp/turtle policies undertaken by these countries. • US also claimed to be in compliance with the “WTO Agreement”. This agreement was the first multilateral trade agreement concluded after the UN Conference on Environment and Development which provided that the rules of trade must not only promote expansion of trade and production, but must do so in a manner that respects the principle of sustainable development and protects and preserves the environment. Panel Ruling: 6th April 1988 • Ban inconsistent with GATT Article XI: The import ban applied by the US on the basis of Section 609 of Public Law 101-162 is not consistent with Article XI - Section I of GATT 1994 imposed by the US.
  • 16. Shrimp-Turtle Case • US could not justify its measure under GATT Article XX (dealing with general exceptions to Art XX): The US measure constituted unjustifiable and arbitrary discrimination between countries where the same conditions prevail. • The Panel made the following recommendation: United States bring this measure into conformity with its obligations under the WTO Agreement. Aftermath of the ruling • US and parties to the dispute reached agreement on a 13 month compliance period which ended in December 1999. • The US Department of State guidelines for implementing Section 609 was revised and issued after providing notice and an opportunity for public comment. • US to provide financial and technical assistance (training in the design, construction, installation and operation of TEDs to any government requesting it). However, in October 2000, Malaysia requested the re-establishment of the original panel to examine whether the United States had in fact complied with the Appellate Body findings. The implementation panel ruled in favor of the United States citing the following: Appellate Body ruling was an obligation to negotiate. United States had indeed made serious “good faith” efforts to negotiate. Other Disputes at WTO US-Mexico - Tuna Dolphin Case In this dispute, Mexico was the exporting country concerned. Its exports of tuna to the US were banned. Mexico complained in 1991 under the GATT dispute settlement procedure. The embargo also applies to “intermediary” countries handling the tuna en route from Mexico to the United States. Often the tuna is processed and canned in one of these countries. In this dispute, the “intermediary” countries facing the embargo were Costa Rica, Italy, Japan, and Spain etc. Figure 7: A Dolphin-Safe can of Tuna The panel reported to GATT members in September 1991 and concluded that: • US could not embargo imports of tuna products from Mexico simply because Mexican regulations on the way tuna was produced did not satisfy US regulations. (But the US could apply Figure 8: A Dolphin Safe can of Tuna
  • 17. Shrimp-Turtle Case its regulations on the quality or content of the tuna imported.) This has become known as a product versus process issue. • GATT rules did not allow one country to take trade action for the purpose of attempting to enforce its own domestic laws in another country - even to protect animal health or exhaustible natural resources. The term used here is "extra-territoriality". US-EU - Meat without hormones case The Beef Hormone Dispute is one of the two most intractable transatlantic controversies since the establishment of the WTO. In the 1990s, in the midst of the mad cow disease crisis, the EU banned the import of meat that contained artificial beef hormones. WTO rules permit such bans, but only where a signatory presents valid scientific evidence that the ban is a health and safety measure. Canada and the US opposed this ban, taking the EU to the WTO DSB in 1997 where the WTO ruled against Figure 9: Hormone-free Pork the EU. Disputes involving the US Figure 10: Disputes involving US in WTO
  • 18. Shrimp-Turtle Case Since inception of the World Trade Organization, US have been involved in numerous disputes with large number of other WTO members as well as non-members, either as a complainant or as a respondent. The red color represents the US as a complainant while the blue color represents US as a respondent. Developed Nations: Devils in disguise? With the coming up of the so called “Globalization” , the rich countries have got a kind of licensing rights to exploit poorer nations in the name of development and investment. The developed economies are getting involved in a proxy reign of power and influence. The governments of developed nations promote and support their multinational companies to exploit poorer nations in the name of global trade. The fact of the matter is this that the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. This massive exploitation, with the help of trade and other political influences, have led to mass starvation, political instability in the host country and power hungry clans fighting amongst each other. This has further deteriorated the overall conditions of these countries leading to genocide and abject poverty, case in point being countries like Nigeria, Libya, Sudan, etc. Poor countries hold 40 per cent of the world's population, but receive only 3 per cent of the world's income from trade. Rich countries make up 14 per cent of world population and yet get 75 per cent of the profit from trade. These rich countries enforce stricter bans and regulations from the imports of developing nations, whenever their domestic industries get slightest of the interference from the exports of the developing nations. Developing nations are poorer countries; their inputs of the production are cheap. They can produce same goods as rich developed nations at cheaper price. The developed nations want to level the fields by enforcing higher taxes on the imports from developing countries. This is a major loss of comparative advantage and against the principles of free trade. Developed countries give financial aid to the poorer countries for development purposes; but, through the complex web of taxes, tariffs and quotas that govern trade, they take far more from the poor than what they give them. Unfair trade costs the world's poor $100bn a year. There are terrible inequities that need to be addressed if the 2.7 billion people in the world who live on less than $2 a day are to be enabled to stand on their own feet. Few examples of unfair trade practices across the world include: • Discrimination in case of Cocoa by US and EU. Higher the addition of value by a poor, higher the tariffs imposition (Germany, Britain against Ivory Coast, Ghana). For importing raw cocoa beans from Ghana and Ivory Coast, US and EU impose no tariffs. However, if these countries export processed cocoa beans in the form of cocoa butter; the tariffs will be raised to 10 per cent in EU. It will go further to 15% and 20 per cent if they will process it in the form of cocoa powder and chocolate respectively.
  • 19. Shrimp-Turtle Case • Clothing, India's second largest export to the US, is taxed by Washington at 19 per cent whereas the imports from countries such as France, Japan, and Germany are charged at between 0-1 per cent. Developing Nations in WTO Attractive opportunities due to free trade among nations prometed developing countries to join WTO Growth of industries in developing nations due to availability of new markets for sale of their products Domestic industry of developed nations faced competition from those of the developing countries Restrictions imposed on the produce of developing nations in the form of Trade Sanctions and Anti-dumping investigations WTO's role is that of an enforcer imposing restrictions on the developing countries Figure 11: Developing nations and the WTO Future of WTO - Challenges before developing nations • Directly participating in the dispute settlement process (explained in Annexure) either as a complainant or as a defendant has become very complex, because of the intricacies of the legal interpretation which has routinely become a part of the panel or appeal process in the disputes these days. • The developed countries have started taking up these negotiations with a new determination to expand the access of their economic entities in developing countries. Their attitude and approach appear to have changed in recent years. The old concept of enlightened self-interest in seeing the harmony of their own long-term prospects with the development of developing countries has been replaced by expectations of immediate gains from expansion of current opportunities in the developing countries, irrespective of its effect on the economies of these countries. • The developed countries, particularly the major ones, are more coordinated in their objectives and methods in the WTO, whereas the developing countries have been losing whatever solidarity they had in the past. The developed countries are also now moving with a great deal of confidence in themselves. They feel that they can solve their economic problems by proper
  • 20. Shrimp-Turtle Case coordination of policies among themselves; and they do not see the need for support from developing countries in this regard. This has naturally reduced their sensitivity to the problems of developing countries. • A developed country, on the other hand, can start the process with much greater ease. Similarly the developing countries also face a serious handicap in defending themselves in a case in the WTO because of the cost involved. Thus, the developing countries are very poorly placed in the WTO in respect of enforcing their rights and ensuring observance of the obligations of the other countries.
  • 21. Shrimp-Turtle Case Conclusion The hitch still remains and some of the major questions regarding world trade are yet to be answered: Should free trade be restricted in the Is globalization a debt-trap for the name of environmental protection and developing and poor nations? to what extent? GLOBALIZATION WTO Members unilaterally adopting Why can’t the consumer make the their own conditional market access purchasing decision instead of the measures - Does it not undermine the governments? multilateral trading system? Figure 12: A question mark on Globalization Environmentalists also insist that WTO rules need to be changed to accommodate Multilateral Environmental Agreements (MEAs). They want trade sanctions imposed to enforce MEAs, such as the Kyoto Protocol on reducing carbon-dioxide emissions, which are beyond challenge at the WTO. This is tricky. Clearly, some accommodation is needed, but exemptions from trade rules all too easily become protectionist loopholes. Rich-country parties to an MEA could, for instance, gang up on poor countries on environmental grounds. In such cases the right response is to tackle the root cause of the environmental damage - and not to stop trade. The right way to deal with people’s desire for consumption (eating turtle-friendly shrimps, hormone-free beef or whatever) is not to impose one country’s values on another. The onus should lie on consumers, rather than governments, to choose what they want – let the MARKET prevail over the STATE!
  • 22. Shrimp-Turtle Case Annexure Dispute Settlement Process Dispute settlement is the central pillar of the multilateral trading system, and the WTO’s unique contribution to the stability of the global economy. Settling disputes is the responsibility of the Dispute Settlement Body (the General Council in another guise), which consists of all WTO members. The Dispute Settlement Body has the sole authority to establish “panels” of experts to consider the case, and to accept or reject the panels’ findings or the results of an appeal. It monitors the implementation of the rulings and recommendations, and has the power to authorize retaliation when a country does not comply with a ruling. STAGE 1 – Consultations (up to 60 days) STAGE 2 – Panels Panel Appointment ( up to 45 Final Panel Report to Parties (6 Final Panel Report to WTO (3 Days) months) weeks) STAGE 3 – Provision of Appeal - Appellate Body Setup (60 days – 90 days) DSB adopts Appeal Report (30days) Figure 13: The Dispute Settlement Process • First stage: Consultation (up to 60 days). Before taking any other actions, the countries in dispute have to talk to each other to see if they can settle their differences by themselves. If that fails, they can also ask the WTO director-general to mediate or try to help in any other way. • Second stage: The panel (up to 45 days for a panel to be appointed, plus 6 months for the panel to conclude). If consultations fail, the complaining country can ask for a panel to be appointed. The country “in the dock” can block the creation of a panel once, but when the Dispute Settlement Body meets for a second time, the appointment can no longer be blocked (unless there is a consensus against appointing the panel). Officially, the panel is helping the Dispute Settlement Body make rulings or recommendations, but since the panel’s report can only be rejected by consensus in the Dispute Settlement Body, its conclusions are difficult to overturn. The panel’s findings have to be based on the agreements cited. The panel’s final report should normally be given to the parties to the dispute within six months. In cases of urgency, including those concerning perishable goods, the deadline is shortened to three months.
  • 23. Shrimp-Turtle Case • Third stage: Provision of Appeal - Appellate Body Setup (60 - 90 days). Either side can appeal a panel’s ruling. Sometimes both sides do so. Appeals have to be based on points of law such as legal interpretation - they cannot re-examine existing evidence or examine new issues. Each appeal is heard by three members of a permanent seven-member Appellate Body set up by the Dispute Settlement Body and broadly representing the range of WTO membership. Members of the Appellate Body have four-year terms. They have to be individuals with recognized standing in the field of law and international trade, not affiliated with any government. The appeal can uphold, modify or reverse the panel’s legal findings and conclusions. Normally appeals should not last more than 60 days, with an absolute maximum of 90 days. The Dispute Settlement Body has to accept or reject the appeals report within 30 days - and rejection is only possible by consensus.
  • 24. Shrimp-Turtle Case References • www.wto.org • www.economist.com • www.theinsider.org • news.independent.co.uk • www.iucnredlist.org • www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/species/turtles/ • www.conserveturtles.org • www.downtoearth.org.in • ictsd.org