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WTO case over hormones in beef drags on

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Published: January 8, 2009

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The trade dispute that Reuters describes as having “stretched World Trade Organization jurisprudence to the limits” stretched even further last month over a block on Canadian and U. S. beef by the European Union.

The EU on Dec. 22 announced yet another request for “consultations” at the WTO with Canada and the U. S., which for years have put up retaliatory trade sanctions against EU products in the dispute. The EU estimates Canada’s retaliatory tariffs as worth C$11.3 million per year.

The EU has banned the use of growth-promoting hormones and the import of meat treated with hormones since the 1980s. Canada and the U. S., claiming there’s no valid scientific basis for the EU ban, first took it to the WTO in 1996.

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January 20, 2019, Tokyo, Japan - Sliced Canadian beef are displayed on the dishes for tasting at the Nissin World Delicatessen supermarket in Tokyo as Japan's tariff of imported beef will be reduced from 38.5 percent to 9 percent in 16 years on Sunday, January 20, 2019. Canadian International Trade Minister James Carr is now here to attend the first ministerial meeting of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).

UPDATED: CCA calls for end to temporary U.K. trade deal

The Canadian Cattle Association is asking the federal government to rescind a bridge trade agreement between Canada and the U.K. based on the latter’s refusal to accept Canadian beef and pork.

The EU’s filing Dec. 22 follows an October ruling by a WTO appeal body, which overturned a successful EU challenge of Canadian and U. S. tariffs. That appeal body urged the two sides to launch “Article 21.5” proceedings to resolve whether the EU has removed the WTOinconsistent part of its ban, as the EU claims it did in 2003.

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