Trade in Services Agreement (TISA) is currently being
negotiated by the U.S., EU and 22 other countries that account for two-thirds
of global GDP, would be the largest trade treaty of its kind in history and
takes aim at the world's massive service industries. According to World Bank
figures, "services"—an umbrella term that covers everything from
package delivery to telecommunications to finance to energy production—comprise
75 percent of the EU economy, 80 percent of the U.S. economy, and the majority
of the global economy. The media is focused on the COP21 Paris
"talks" while completely ignoring those Geneva TISA meetings that are
scheming to over-ride any climate change legislation that may come out of Paris.
Friends of the Earth trade analyst Bill Waren warns that
"In the alleged interest of making trade easier, environmental regulations
are at risk of being 'harmonized down' to the lowest common denominator, and
public services of an environmentally-sensitive nature are in danger of being
privatized."
Friends of the Earth president Erich Pica also cautioned “It
is hypocritical for President Obama and other leaders of developed economies to
meet in Paris to address climate change when their trade ministers are secretly
crafting a Trade in Services Agreement which would undermine initiatives to cut
carbon emissions....Big oil services companies, water services multinationals,
tar sands pipeline companies, exporters of fossil fuels and other corporate
polluters are beneficiaries of TISA. President Obama and other heads of state
are their willing handmaidens.”
TISA would "recklessly undermine urgent work worldwide
to reduce dangerous carbon emissions, create clean energy jobs, and increase
energy security for economies everywhere," according to Victor Menotti of
the International Forum on Globalization. Denouncing TISA as the "Free
Fracking Agreement," Menotti says that under the deal, "popular
policies like requiring public input for big projects, approving building in
sensitive areas, or hiring local labor, are all stealthily made vulnerable to
being attacked."
Nick Dearden, director of Global Justice Now, said. "Regardless
of the outcomes of the Paris climate talks, if TISA was passed it would
massively reduce the ability of national governments to make the sort of
rational choices about energy production that would move us further towards a
low carbon economy," Dearden continued. "TISA seeks to place
corporate handcuffs on our governments at a time when they need as much
flexibility as possible to steer us away from fossil fuel dependency," he
said. "If we want to fight climate change, we must also stop TISA and the
other toxic trade deals that are being cooked up behind closed doors."
The mainstream environmentalist lobby group, the Sierra
Club, has also indicated trade agreements presently being made will hinder
moves to mitigate climate change. The Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) is a
"polluter-friendly" deal that "poses a panoply of threats to our
climate and environment," a new report from the Sierra Club finds. "After
years of extraordinary secrecy," the report states, "it’s finally
clear what TPP negotiators were trying to hide: The TPP is a raw deal for
communities and our climate."
The TPP would: empower fossil fuel corporations to attack
climate policies in private tribunals; lock in dirty fossil fuel production by
expediting natural gas exports; increase climate-disrupting emissions by
shifting U.S. manufacturing overseas; and impose new limits on government
efforts to combat climate disruption.
Explaining how the deal would increase carbon emissions with
a shift towards more overseas manufacturing, Ben Beachy and Ilana Solomon of
the Sierra Club's Responsible Trade Program write in a blog post that
“The TPP would force U.S. manufacturers to compete directly
with companies in low-wage countries like Vietnam and Malaysia, encouraging
U.S. manufacturing to set up operations abroad. This “offshoring” of U.S.
manufacturing would not only cost us jobs in the U.S., but also increase
climate-disrupting emissions. This is because production in Vietnam is more
than four times as carbon-intensive, and production in Malaysia is twice as
carbon-intensive, as U.S. production. This shift in manufacturing from the
United States to countries on the other side of the Pacific Ocean would also
increase shipping-related greenhouse gas emissions.
The TPP would further expand climate-disrupting emissions by
eliminating tariffs on cash crops like oil palm, encouraging wider production
in countries such as Malaysia, where oil palm expansion has played a leading
role in destroying tropical forests that capture carbon. Increased oil palm
production also would fuel an industry that is already rife with human rights
and labor abuses.”
“As the world’s leaders gather in Paris to tackle climate
disruption, the U.S. is pushing its largest trade deal in history, the
Trans-Pacific Partnership, which not only fails to mention the climate crisis,
but is actually counterproductive," Solomon said in a media statement.”
Another environmentalist organization that concentrates upon
food issues, Grain, has also echoed the threats of those trade deals which contain
measures that allow food companies to challenge popular initiatives that are
good for the climate but impinge on their profits. “Buy local” programmes, with
their obvious benefits to fighting climate change, are generally considered
discriminatory and trade distorting under free trade doctrine. The TTIP, for
instance, may forbid initiatives to support the use of local foods in public
services like schools and hospitals. The same is true of initiatives to support
“green” purchasing or programmes to require purchasing from small- and
medium-sized enterprises in the name of mitigating climate change. Both of
these types of effort can be contested by companies as discriminatory, under
the investor-state dispute mechanisms contained in many trade agreements.
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