GATS,Water and the Environment

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GATS,Water and the Environment Implications of the General Agreement on Trade in Services for Water Resources CIEL and WWF International Discussion Paper, October 2003 This paper was researched and written by Aaron Ostrovksy, Robert Speed and Elisabeth Tuerk of the Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL). The authors benefited from numerous discussions on related issues and are grateful to comments on an earlier version of this paper from Nathalie Bernasconi Osterwalder, Tom Crompton, Suzanne Garner, Richard Holland, Eva Royo Gelabert, Aimee Gonzales, Ellen Gould, Ruth Kaplan, Markus Krajewski, Steve Porter and Keith Tyrell. Special thanks to Mireille Cossy, Pete Hardstaff and John Hilary. The views in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of CIEL and WWF. For comments and/or queries on this paper, please contact: Elisabeth Tuerk Staff Attorney CIEL Europe 15 rue des Savoises 1205 Geneva tel: +41 22 321 4774 fax: +41 22 789 0500 Email: etuerk@ciel.org Cover picture Jay Arraich ©2000 www.arraich.com Richard Holland Policy Advisor - Sustainable Water Use WWF Living Waters Programme WWF Netherlands Boulevard 12 3707 BM Zeist The Netherlands tel: +31 30 693 7819 fax: +31 30 691 2064 Email: rholland@wwf.nl For other publications or more information, please contact: Sabine Granger WWF International Ave du Mont Blanc 1196 Gland, Switzerland tel: +41 22 364 9012 fax: +41 22 364 8219 Email: sgranger@wwfint.org Website: www.panda.org/trade Published October 2003 by WWF- World Wide Fund for Nature Any reproduction in full or in part of this publication must mention the title and credit the abovementioned publisher as the copyright owners. Text 2003. All rights reserved. The material and the geographical designations in this report do not imply the expression on an opinion whatsoever on the part of WWF, concerning the legal status of any country, territory, or area, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Acronyms AB CBD CIEL CMA CTE CTS EC EIA EPBC Appellate Body (WTO) United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity Centre for International Environmental Law Catchment Management Authority (South Africa) Committee on Trade and Environment (WTO) Council for Trade in Services (WTO) European Commission environmental impact assessment Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (Australia) EU European Union GATS GATT IGO MEA NAFTA NGO NWA NWP NWRP NWRS SIA UN WB WFD WPDR WRIS WRP WTO WWF General Agreement on Trade in Services General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade inter-governmental organisations multilateral environmental agreement North American Free Trade Agreement non-governmental organisation National Water Act (South Africa) National Water Policy 2002 (India) National Water Resources Policy (Brazil) National Water Resource Strategy (NWRS) sustainability impact assessment United Nations Water Bill 2003 (United Kingdom) Water Framework Directive (EU) Working Party on Domestic Regulation (WTO) Water Resources Information System (Brazil) Water Resource Plan (Brazil) World Trade Organisation World Wide Fund for Nature Contents Executive Summary..............................................................................................................1 Section I Background ....................................................................................................4 Section II Water Legislation Review................................................................................7 A Overview...................................................................................................................7 B South African Water Law ...........................................................................................9 C EU Water Framework Directive (WFD).................................................................... 10 D Proposed Water Legislation in England and Wales ..................................................... 11 E Australian Water Policy............................................................................................ 11 F Indian Water Laws ................................................................................................... 12 G Brazilian Water Laws............................................................................................... 13 Section III The General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) ..................................14 A Introduction: An Overview of the GATS ................................................................... 14 B GATS Negotiations: Timelines, Venues and Criticism................................................ 16 Section IV The GATS and Water: The Link ...................................................................21 A Introduction ............................................................................................................. 21 B Services Covered by the GATS................................................................................. 21 C Trade Covered by the GATS..................................................................................... 23 D Regulatory Measures Covered by the GATS .............................................................. 24 E Entities Covered by the GATS .................................................................................. 25 Section V Implications of the GATS for Water Management Policies ...........................27 A Introduction – Framework for Analysis...................................................................... 27 B Water Rights: Ownership of Water and the Allocation of Water Rights to Private Entities. ................................................................................................................... 28 C Avoiding Over-Exploitation: Licenses, Concessions and Permits That Establish Clear Quantitative Limitations on Services Provision........................................................... 30 D Avoiding Over-Exploitation: Licenses, Concessions and Permits That Establish Other Quantitative Caps on Services Provision. .......................................................... 32 E Pollution Control: Licenses, Concessions, Permits and Technical Standards to Regulate Discharge of Pollutants or to Operate Facilities ............................................ 35 F High Quality Provision of Water-Sensitive Services: Qualification Requirements for Services Providers.................................................................................................... 37 G Water Pricing: Recognizing the True Economic Value of Water in-Licensing Fees and Financial Aspects of Concession Contracts. ......................................................... 38 H Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs) and Sustainability Impact Assessments (SIAs): Documentation and Information Required for the Granting of Licenses............ 39 I Land Ownership: Preserving Water by Regulating the Use and Ownership of Land. ..... 41 J Cutting Across all Environmental, Water Preservation and Other Domestic Regulation: The GATS Negotiating Mandate on Domestic Regulation. ..............41 K Cutting Across All Environmental, Water Preservation and other Domestic Regulation: The GATS National Treatment Obligation. .............................................. 43 The GATS Environmental Exception: Can Art. XIV Help? ......................................... 44 L Section VI Conclusions and Policy Recommendations .....................................................46 A Conclusions ............................................................................................................. 46 B Policy Recommendations.......................................................................................... 50 References ..........................................................................................................................52 Executive Summary Water is one of the most important elements for the health of an ecosystem. It is essential to all life on earth and is a limiting factor in economic and social development. Globally, freshwater resources are being over-exploited, polluted and degraded. Demands for water, for drinking as well as for development, are increasingly being made on systems which are already near the point of collapse. Water management policies that focus on both sustainable development and sustainable water use are more important than ever before in order to ensure that ecosystems are not permanently damaged. During the last decade, significant changes in policy have been made in respect to how water is managed and how it is supplied to consumers. These changes have resulted in institutional and legislative reforms, and a range of policy initiatives and instruments. However, developing international trade law that is compatible with the ability of countries to adopt strong domestic water policies is problematic. Specifically, there are concerns about how international trade rules covering services may constrain domestic regulations protecting and conserving water, wetlands and eco-systems. While there has been considerable analysis of the consequences that the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) may have for water service provision, particularly with reference to the privatization of water services, far less attention has been paid to the interaction between the GATS and domestic water laws insofar as they relate to resource management and environmental protection. Most important amongst these are challenges that arise from the inherently different approach water and international trade rules take to policy making. In order to protect water resources, regulators need flexibility to implement adaptive management plans which can respond to changes in environment and use patterns. International trade rules, however, favour legal security and predictability, seeking to “lock in” policy choices once they are established. This is particularly problematic in light of the fact that domestic water laws are in a state of flux. New trends in domestic water management have emerged in the last few decades. New management tools, such as granting water rights or mitigating water pollution through licensing and technical regulations, are essential to creating ecologically sound and sustainable water management systems. In addition, water can also be managed through quantitative caps on water use or requirements for sustainability impact assessments (SIA). However, many of these management tools apply to service providers, and in so doing may also affect foreign service providers that aim to supply and consequently trade their services. As a result, these domestic water management policies may be subject to the GATS. There are concerns that the current GATS regime, as well as proposed future rules and commitments, could restrict a WTO Member country’s scope to impose such crucial water regulations. For example, GATS commitments could limit a WTO Member’s ability to set and implement specific standards for pollution discharge or to require SIAs if these measures are found to be a burden on international trade in services. This paper highlights the following 12 areas where potential for conflict between GATS disciplines and domestic policies to protect and conserve water, wetlands and ecosystems is emerging. 1. The GATS covers a broad range of regulatory entities responsible for water management and conservation issues. WWF-CIEL: GATS, Water and the Environment 1 2. The GATS affects policies that regulate the granting of water rights. 3. The GATS market access provision (Art. XVI) prohibits certain policies that aim to avoid over-exploitation of water resources by establishing certain quantitative limitations on service provision. 4. The GATS market access provision (Art. XVI) creates legal insecurity for policies that aim to protect water by establishing quantitative caps either on the water available for economic activity or on the impact that operations of service suppliers have on water. 5. Future disciplines on domestic regulation may limit how regulators establish and verify the necessary professional qualifications for service providers whose activities affect water. 6. Future disciplines on domestic regulation may constrain WTO Members’ abilities to use licenses, permits or technical regulations and standards to protect and preserve water, including to regulate discharge of pollutants or to operate facilities. 7. Future disciplines on domestic regulation may constrain WTO Members’ abilities to include environmental considerations when setting licensing fees and determining financial aspects of concession contracts in the water sector. 8. Future disciplines on domestic regulation may constrain WTO Members’ abilities to require potential license holders to conduct thorough sustainability impact assessments and to furnish the respective documentation. 9. The GATS might be (mis)used to eliminate policies that aim to preserve water by regulating the use and ownership of land with springs. 10. The GATS domestic regulation negotiating mandate (Art. VI.4) may result in future disciplines that unduly constrain regulatory prerogatives across the board. 11. The GATS national treatment obligation (Art. XVII) may unduly constrain regulatory prerogatives across the board. 12. The GATS environmental exception (Art. XIV) constitutes an inadequate remedy for the challenges that the GATS poses for domestic water management. This paper presents a series of policy recommendations that can address these challenges and help ensure that the GATS does not negatively affect water services by limiting regulatory flexibility and “locking-in” WTO Members to regulatory commitments that might ultimately be detrimental. Because GATS commitments are difficult to amend, policy makers and trade negotiators should begin work immediately, prior to, or in parallel with, agreeing to new rules or accepting new commitments in the current negotiations. To this end, water policy makers should begin by raising awareness about the effect of the GATS on domestic water policies as well as conducting analyses (such as a comprehensive, participatory SIA) designed to provide substantive input into trade negotiating positions. Specifically, they should determine what relevant national, sub-national and nongovernmental entities are involved in water management processes, analyze which sectors of services trade (for example, water, tourism or energy) may be most affected by domestic water management, and study which national policies to preserve and protect water may be most affected by services trade liberalisation. This analysis should be conducted early enough WWF-CIEL: GATS, Water and the Environment 2 to provide substantive input and policy recommendations for their country’s negotiating position, as well as to ensure that WTO discussions on assessments are thorough and comprehensive. Trade policy makers should work to ensure a transparent negotiating process. Transparency and participation are essential elements to allow the development of international trade rules that grant sufficient space to domestic regulators to put in place policies to protect and conserve water, wetlands and ecosystems. Substantive attention to the existing GATS legal framework should include clarifying or interpreting ambiguities or amending existing GATS rules. Such changes should ensure that, • the existing general exceptions also include a specific exception for measures relating to the protection of the environment and the conservation of natural resources, specifically water; • the GATS national treatment obligation does not prohibit de facto discriminatory measures; • the GATS market access obligation effectively allows all policies that aim to preserve and protect water by limiting water input into the production and delivery processes of services. Further, market access obligations should only prohibit measures that have both the effect and forms explicitly defined in Art. XVI of the GATS. WTO Members should also change the current course of negotiations to increase, rather than constrain, domestic regulatory space for polices that protect and conserve water and wetlands ecosystems. To this end, WTO members should halt negotiations on controversial disciplines, such as domestic regulation. In particular, WTO members should, • refrain from making new national treatment or market access commitments in service sectors which may be affected by water management policies; • complement existing and future commitments with horizontal conditions or limitations which effectively safeguard the full range of existing and future water management and preservation policies; • refrain from adopting any additional disciplines on domestic regulation. New commitments on domestic services should be entered into with caution. Where new disciplines on domestic services cannot be avoided, WTO Members should § limit the scope and breadth of future disciplines; § refrain from using language on necessity; § include statements that the conservation of water, water courses and wetlands – and the protection of the environment and conservation of natural resources in general – are legitimate national policy objectives, the effective pursuit of which will not be constrained by international trade rules; and § ensure that future annexes or disciplines contain effective safeguards and exceptions for environmental policies, as well as specific language for water preservation policies. Much of the GATS is still in development. This makes a clear assessment of its implications and effects difficult but vitally important. Many domestic water laws are also in a state of flux and development. This renders any assessment of possible inconsistencies between the GATS and water policies an even more complex process. However, the fact that many decisions – particularly in the GATS context – have not yet been taken provides a unique opportunity to influence not only the outcome, but to provide policy makers responsible for water, wetland and preservation policy with the flexibility to adopt approaches that they consider most suitable and effective to achieve their goals. WWF-CIEL: GATS, Water and the Environment 3 Section I Background Water is indisputably one of the most precious of all natural resources. It is essential to all life on earth. It is also a limiting factor in economic and social development. Freshwater resources globally are being over-exploited, polluted and degraded and many systems are on the point of collapse. At the same time, pressure has never been greater to provide water for drinking as well as for economic development. Water resource management thus poses one of the great challenges for achieving ecologically sustainable development. During the last decade, significant changes in policy have been made in respect to how water is managed and how it is supplied to consumers. These have resulted in institutional and legislative reforms, and a range of policy initiatives and instruments. At same time, defining water for the purposes of international trade law has proven problematic. For example, in the case of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), concerns that water would be covered by the rules of an international trade agreement have led to the adoption of a joint public statement by the Parties to NAFTA, to clarify that certain forms of water would not fall within the ambit of NAFTA.1 Specifically, the statement suggests that, “[w]ater in its natural state in lakes, rivers, reservoirs, aquifers, water basins and the like is not a good or product, is not traded, and therefore is not and never has been subject to the terms of any trade agreement.”2 The debate has not matured to this point in the World Trade Organization (WTO). To date, the question of whether or not water would be covered by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) has not figured prominently in the trade and environment discourse. However, concerns about how international trade rules may constrain domestic regulations which have been designed to protect the environment have been prevalent, including the public debate about current negotiations to liberalize trade in services. Concern over the implications of the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) for domestic policy making has given rise to significant analysis of the GATS and its operation. 3 Concerns have focused particularly on the significance of the agreement for the provision of essential services – such as health, education and water, raising important aspects of basic human rights. While there has been considerable debate and analysis of the consequences of the GATS for water service provision, particularly with reference to the privatization of water services,4 far less attention has been paid to the interaction of the GATS with domestic water 1 For a comprehensive analysis of this approach see Shrybman, Steven, The Impact of International Services and Investment Agreements on Public Policy and Law Concerning Water, (2002). 2 “1993 Statement by the Government of Canada, Mexico and the United States”, available at http://www.scics.gu.ca/info99/83067000_e.html#statement. Last accessed on June 12, 2001. 3 For GATS related research see UNHCHR (2000), Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: Liberalisation of Trade in Services and Human Rights, Report of the High Commissioner E/CN.4/Sub.2/2002, (June 2002); For policy inter-linkages between the World Bank, the GATS and investment agreements affecting the provision of water see Going With the Flow: How International Trade, Finance and Investment Regimes Affect the Provision of Water to the Poor, CIEL Issue Brief, (2003), http://www.ciel.org. 4 Tuerk, Elisabeth and Robert Speed. GATS and Water, A Draft Discussion Paper for the Workshop on Trade and Water. 3 March (2003), Geneva (forthcoming); Mireille Cossy. Water Services and the GATS – Selected Legal Aspects, A Draft Discussion Paper for the Workshop on Trade and Water. 3 March (2003), Geneva (forthcoming); Ellen Gould. Water in the Current Round of WTO Negotiations on Services, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives Briefing Paper Series: Investment and Trade, Vol. 4, No. 1; John Hilary. GATS and Water: The Threat of Services Negotiations at the WTO, A Save the Children Briefing Paper, (2003); UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, General Comment No. 15 (2002) The Right to Water (arts.11 and 12 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights) E/C.12/2002/11, (November 2002). WWF-CIEL: GATS, Water and the Environment 4 laws insofar as they relate to resource management and environmental protection. 5 This paper seeks to examine these issues. Section II provides a review of a range of domestic water laws and policies. It commences with an overview of trends in water management, which outlines the key policy shifts that have occurred over the past decade or more. The paper then considers frameworks in place in a range of different countries, drawing out selected elements to focus on those that are most relevant for this paper. Section III examines the GATS and offers a brief overview of the agreement. It explains what the agreement is, what its key provisions are and how they work, and how the agreement is evolving in current negotiations. In Section IV, the paper looks at the links between water and the GATS. It describes the type of services relevant to water resources, the notion of trade, the type of regulatory measures and the entities which are, or may be, covered by the GATS. Section V considers in more detail the potential implications of the GATS for water resource management, and in doing so draws on examples of water policies and laws described in Section II. This section first examines issues surrounding the ownership of water and how the GATS interacts with the allocation of water rights to private entities. It then explores possible implications for policies aiming to achieve certain water management objectives, in particular policies that aim: • • • • to avoid over-exploitation by using licenses, concessions and permits that establish clear quantitative limitations for service providers extracting or otherwise using water; to preserve water, by effectively amounting to quantitative limitations on service provision (for example, placing caps on the amount of water available for service delivery); to mitigate water pollution by using licenses, concessions, permits and technical standards to regulate discharge of pollutants or to operate facilities; and, to ensure high quality provision of water-sensitive services by using qualification requirements for service providers. Section V also considers whether GATS constrains regulators in accounting for environmental factors (such as the true, economic value of water) when setting licensing fees and whether it may curtail policies that require SIAs and other documentation before commencing large-scale water projects. After analyzing how the GATS may affect policies that directly concern the regulation of water, it turns to analyze how the GATS may affect policies that aim to preserve water by regulating the use and ownership of land. It then looks at a cross-cutting issue, namely how the GATS national treatment obligation may constrain water preservation policies. Section V concludes by evaluating whether the GATS environmental exception is an adequate tool to remedy the various challenges that the GATS poses for domestic water management. 5 Fuchs, Peter and Elisabeth Tuerk. The General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) and future GATS-Negotiations -- Implications for Environmental Policy Makers, Paper prepared for the German Federal Environment Agency (2001). Available at http://www.umweltbundesamt.de; Shrybman, Steven. The Impact of International Services and Investment Agreements on Public Policy and Law Concerning Water, (2002); David Waskow and Vicente Paolo B. Yu III, A Disservice to the Earth: The Environmental Impact of the WTO General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), http://www.attac.de/gats/gatsfoee.pdf. WWF-CIEL: GATS, Water and the Environment 5 Section VI contains the conclusions arising from the paper. It starts by discussing systemic differences between the legal frameworks created by the GATS and by domestic water laws; it then outlines the key areas of overlap between water resource management and the GATS and the threats that the GATS could pose for the ability of governments and citizens to manage water resources. Section VI concludes with suggestions for action that could be taken to address these threats. WWF-CIEL: GATS, Water and the Environment 6
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