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DEC/JAN 2002 Thoughts
in the Presence of Fear The
Prospect of Peace Reducing
Dependence On Oil Will Ensure America's National Security US
Civil Rights in Serious Jeopardy Engineering
Consent on the Domestic Front The
Emperor is Naked Green
View of Fundamentalism vs. Modernism The
One Eternal Truth World
Trade Organization Continues to Fail McKenzie
River Gathering: Funding Change for 25 Years Dreams
and Visions: The Fountain of Wisdom From
Survival to Serenity Environmental
Film Festival Coming to Ashland Herbal
Help for Winter Weather How
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Aim at Blame Understanding
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World Trade
organization By Danila Oder and Debi Weiss The explicit way the US, the EU, Canada and Japan bludgeoned their way into gains on virtually every issue on the agenda at the WTO Ministerial, shows the world is certainly up for sale. The greatest tragedy is that the worlds richest economies, which invariably swear in the name of democracy, used all undemocratic norms and arms to force a consensus down the throat of developing countries. The autocratic process of takeover of the global economy puts at risk millions of people, especially women and children, without basic rights and opportunities. -Devinder Sharma, New Delhi-based trade policy analyst The World Trade Organizations fourth ministerial meeting held in Qatar last November concluded in overtime with one win, but mostly losses for the people and the environment. Although they had pledged to dialogue with civil society following the Seattle debacle, the WTO avoided doing so by meeting in Qatara tiny Persian Gulf Emirate which does not allow demonstrations, has no labor unions, no political parties, and no domestic antiglobalization groups. With limited hotel space and visa restrictions, fewer than 200 NGO representatives were allowed to attend, although 50-100 members of NGOs did stage a protest in the conference center the first night of the meeting. The nonbinding but politically important agreement to let poor countries manufacture and use generic drugs was the single positive outcome. Drug patents can now be overridden in times of health crises such as AIDS. Several countries where major pharmaceutical companies are based, including the U.S., had opposed this humanitarian measure. The final agreement also fails to address the developing countries outrage at unfair policies and their exclusion from decision-making, which had scuttled the Seattle meeting. According to a report from the Coalition of Civil Society groups, the lessons of the Seattle debacle in 1999 were ignored: The negotiations process in Geneva was untransparent and deeply unfair to the majority of WTO members and the inequities continued in Doha. The much criticized Green Rooms used in Seattle were used again, as were powerful unelected facilitators of these informal groups. These civil society representatives exposed unethical negotiating practices by some governments of the rich world, such as linking aid budgets and trade preferences to the trade positions of developing countries, and targeting individual developing country negotiators. The major trading nations in the rich world arrogantly attempted to impose their agenda on the rest of the world. The BBC reported that African nations had been threatened by the US with the loss of trade concessions if they did not back a new round of talks. Filipino activist Walden Bello wrote that the developing countries were pressured to agree to a new round of talks by manipulation of the WTOs undemocratic system of decision-making and blunter forms of trade blackmail. Bello went on to say that the demand for a development box to promote food security and development which was being pushed by a number of developing countries was completely ignored; and there is no commitment to change the TRIPs agreement to outlaw biopiracy and patents on life, which was a key developing country concern coming into Doha. The EU had wanted to allow its member states to require labeling of genetically modified food products (GMOs) and to use the precautionary principle in food imports, but gave up because the US and ministers of many developing countries persisted in seeing it as solely an excuse for protection of EU farmers. The food exporters including the US successfully pressured the EU and Japan to approve the gradual elimination of popular subsidies for their farmers. No commitments on improving labor standards were made. The EU tried to represent its citizens Green consensus that the environment belongs in the WTO talks, but obtained only a weak promise of future talks on harmonizing WTO rules with international agreements like the Kyoto protocol. US family farm activist Ben Lilliston wrote from Doha, Although countries seem to enthusiastically buy the WTOs line that free trade is good for everyone, it quickly becomes clear that most dont believe the propaganda. By refusing to accept the Kyoto Protocol on industrial emissions, the Bush administration provides US industry with the equivalent of an enormous hidden subsidy that cant be negotiated under WTO rules. China and Taiwan were accepted as new WTO members. Chinas leaders seem to be emulating repressive, paved-over Singaporewithout labor or envi-ronmental standards, Chinese businesses have free reign in raping its environment and converting its natural resources into plastic toys for export. The main bene-ficiaries of Chinas membership in the WTO will be state-owned enterprises and large foreign companies. Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizens Global Trade Watch, warned, For people in China, this will cause lost jobs and ruined livelihoods. And in the United States and in other countries around the world, big multinational companies will be using China; this is especially bad for the middle-income countries like Mexico, because all the companies that have relocated to those places are more likely to move to China now. Protection for human rights in China will become far more difficult. The US has agreed to stop the annual review procedure wherein Congress considers whether to end normal trade relations with China because of its record on human rights. The ministers of developing countries oppose western labor standards as protectionist and the US did not push for labor standards. The weak International Labor Organization, rather than the WTO, will be responsible for getting labor issues into the globalization debate. The status quo remainsno sanctions allowed for child, prison or sweatshop labor. The House of Representatives passed a resolution urging the US negotiators not to adopt policies that would hurt national defense, but US trade representative Robert Zoellick and his boss answer to a higher authorityWall Streetand Wall Street wanted a new round (which will keep the stock market up). To get the new round, the US now must reopen talks on its anti-dumping policies, which means more foreign steel and a weakened US steel industry. The EU and Japan agreed to phase out subsidies for their farmers. Their rural economies, their agricultural country sides and their sense of their own pasts will weaken and disappear. People are not starving in those countries now, so why is it essential to provide lower priced food by importing it? Answer: it was the price of a new round of talks. The beneficiaries of lower subsidies will be developing countries, and large exporters in countries like the US, Canada and New Zealand, such as Cargill and Tyson Foods. According to the Coalition of Civil Society Groups: Most of the positive proposals from civil society have not been considered. These include protection of the rights to development, promotion of local economies, food security, social, cultural and labor rights, and protection of the environment. These proposals recognize that the competence of the WTO must be limited to trade, and that conflicts between trade and other international agreements must be resolved outside the WTO system. Reform of the global system must also include regulation of the main actors in the global economy, the multinational corporations. From a political point of view, the WTO is run by a gang of lobbyists and free-trade fundamentalists who work for the global elites. From an economic point of view, its an organization set up to facilitate trade within the framework of race-to-the-bottom, linear-future, chew-up-the-planet economics. When free-trade globalization has to be justified by economic theory instead of actual outcome, the inapplicable principles of comparative advantage and Adam Smiths invisible hand are invoked to justify its rationality. Activists have
four choices: We can ignore the WTO and focus on local activities. We can
demand the abolition of all international governance. We can try to reform
the WTO. Or we can try to change the economic theory in the halls of power.
Greenpeace and Public Citizen, for example, favor reform, or shrinking and
partial replacement with other international bodies. That political approach
is essential, but inadequate. The EUs inability to get any other country
interested in the precautionary principle shows that national agendas at the
WTO are nearly always driven by maximizing self-interest within the economic
rules that exist. Danila Oder is a writer and activist in Los Angeles; Debi Weiss is a writer in southern Oregon.
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Shell Oil
Prepares for Phil Watts, the chairman of Royal Dutch Shell, announced recently that Shell, one of the largest oil companies in the world, was preparing for the end of the hydrocarbon age. Watts says Shell envisions either an evolutionary carbon shift from coal to natural gas to renewables or a far more dramatic shift from carbon-intensive fuels to hydrogen. Watts stated this second possibility explores something rather more revolutionary, the potential for a truly hydrogen economy, growing out of new and exciting developments in fuel cells, advanced hydrocarbon technologies and carbon dioxide sequestration. Watts sees fuel cells beginning to reach serious use by 2025, before oil becomes scarce. Watts has pledged to commit between $500 million and $1 billion over the next five years to develop new energy businesses, concentrating primarily on solar and wind energy, and believes oil companies can no longer assume they will dominate the next 100 years as they have the previous century. Urge Congress
to The new war America now faces is a distinctly different one, requiring different tactics and overarching strategies. Our nation needs to undertake a concerted effort to decentralize our energy system and reduce our dependence on imported oil by relying more on alternative and renewable forms of energy which not only will protect the nation from foreign political blackmail but will also create jobs, revive a flagging rural economy and dramatically improve the quality of the environment and health of the American people. Like the War Bonds of 60 years ago, government-issued and guaranteed bonds could be used to fund our war effort; not to build fleets of tanks or planes, but to build tens of thousands of wind turbines and the installation of millions of square feet of solar panels and similar alternative energy technologies, making a meaningful contribution to our nations energy needs. Similar investments would be made in major energy conservation initiatives. The goal of this ambitious program would be the creation of a secure, nationwide energy system that would lay the foundation for the worlds first major hydrogen economy. Fax or mail letters to your Congressional representatives and Senators, as well as to your local media. Urge Congress to enact a Wind Bond program in the spirit of the War Bond efforts of the Second World War. Now is the time to put America on the road to a freer, more secure tomorrow. Visit EV World www.evworld.com/index.cfm or email editor@evworld.com for more information. |
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