REPORT containing the European Parliament’s recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

1.6.2015 - (2014/2228(INI))

Committee on International Trade
Rapporteur: Bernd Lange


Procedure : 2014/2228(INI)
Document stages in plenary
Document selected :  
A8-0175/2015

MOTION FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT RESOLUTION

containing the European Parliament’s recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

The European Parliament,

–       having regard to the EU directives for the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the EU and the US, unanimously adopted by the Council on 14 June 2013[1]and declassified and made public by the Council on 9 October 2014,

–       having regard to articles 168 to 191 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, and in particular to the precautionary principle enshrined in article 191(2),

–       having regard to the Joint Statement of the EU-US Summit of 26 March 2014[2],

–       having regard to the joint statement of the 20th of March by Commissioner Cecilia Malmström and US Trade Representative Michael Froman regarding the exclusion of public services in EU and US trade agreements,

–       having regard to the Council Conclusion on TTIP of 20 March 2015,

–       having regard to the Council conclusions on TTIP of 21 November 2014[3],

–       having regard to the joint statement of 16 November 2014 by US President Barack Obama, Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, UK Prime Minister David Cameron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President François Hollande, Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, following their meeting on the margins of the G20 Summit in Brisbane, Australia[4],

–       having regard to the European Council conclusions of 26-27 June 2014[5],

–       having regard to President Juncker’s political guidelines of 15 July 2014 addressed to the next Commission of and entitled ‘A New Start for Europe: My Agenda for Jobs, Growth, Fairness and Democratic Change’[6],

–       having regard to the Commission’s communication to the College of the Commission of 25 November 2014 on transparency in TTIP negotiations (C(2014)9052)[7], to the Commission decisions of 25 November 2014 on the publication of information on meetings held between Members of the Commission and organisations or self-employed individuals (C(2014)9051) and on the publication of information on meetings held between Directors-General of the Commission and organisations or self-employed individuals (C(2014)9048), to the judgements and opinions of the Court of Justice of the European Union (C-350/12 P, 2/13 (2), 1/09 (3))) on access to documents of the institutions and the 6th of January 2015 decision of the European Ombudsman closing her own-initiative inquiry (OI/10/2014/RA) concerning the European Commission on dealing with requests for information and access to documents (Transparency),

–       having regard to the joint statement of 3 December 2014 by the EU-US Energy Council[8],

–       having regard to the EU integrated approach to food safety (‘farm to fork’) established in 2004[9],

–       having regard to the Commission report of 13 January 2015 on the online public consultation on investment protection and investor-to-state dispute settlement (ISDS) in the TTIP (SWD(2015)0003),

–       having regard to the EU’s textual proposals tabled for discussion with the US in the TTIP negotiating rounds, in particular those which have been declassified and made public by the Commission, inter alia the EU position papers entitled ‘TTIP regulatory issues - engineering industries’[10] , ’Test–case on functional equivalence: proposed methodology for automotive regulatory equivalence’[11] , and ‘Trade and sustainable development chapter/labour and environment: EU paper outlining key issues and elements for provisions in the TTIP’[12] , and the textual proposals on technical barriers to trade (TBT)[13] , sanitary and phytosanitary measures (SPS)[14] , customs and trade facilitation[15] , small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)[16] , possible provisions on competition[17] , possible provisions on state enterprises and enterprises granted special or exclusive rights or privileges[18] , possible provisions on subsidies[19] , and dispute settlement[20] , initial provisions on regulatory cooperation[21],

–       having regard to the opinion on "The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)" of the Committee of the Regions (ECOS-V-063) adopted during the 110th plenary session (11-13 February 2015), and to the 4th June 2014 opinion of the European Economic and Social Committee on "Transatlantic trade relations and the EESC's views on an enhanced cooperation and eventual EU-USA FTA",

–       having regard to the Final Inception Report of 28 April 2014 by ECORYS for the Commission entitled ‘Trade Sustainability Impact Assessment (Trade SIA) in support of negotiations of a comprehensive trade and investment agreement between the European Union and the United States of America’[22],

–       having regards to the Commission's 2015 report on Trade and Investment Barriers,[23]

–       having regard to the ‘Detailed Appraisal of the European Commission’s Impact Assessment on EU-US Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership’ published on April 2014 by CEPS for the Parliament,

–       having regard to its earlier resolutions, in particular those of 23 October 2012 on trade and economic relations with the United States[24], 23 May 2013 on EU trade and investment negotiations with the United States of America[25], and 15 January 2015 on the annual report on the activities of the European Ombudsman 2013[26] ,

–       having regard to Rules 108(4) and 52 of its Rules of Procedure,

–       having regard to the report of the Committee on International Trade and the opinions of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Committee on Development, the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs, the Committee on Employment and Social Affairs, the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety, the Committee on Industry, Research and Energy, the Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection, the Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development, the Committee on Culture and Education, the Committee on Legal Affairs, the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs, the Committee on Constitutional Affairs, and the Committee on Petitions (A8-0175/2015),

A.     whereas exports through trade and growth through investments are key drivers of jobs and economic growth which do not require government investments;

B.     whereas the EU’s GDP is heavily dependent on trade and export and benefits from trade and investment based on rules and whereas an ambitious and balanced agreement with the US should support the reindustrialisation of Europe and help to achieve the 2020 target for an increase in the EU’s GDP generated by industry from 15% to 20% by strengthening trans-atlantic trade in both goods and services; whereas it has the potential to create opportunities especially for SMEs, micro enterprises (in accordance with the definition of Recommendation COM 2003/361/CE, clusters and enterprise networks which suffer disproportionally more from non-tariff barriers (NTBs) than larger companies, as the latter have economies of scale that allow them easier access to markets on both sides of the Atlantic; whereas an agreement between the two biggest economic blocs in the world has the potential to create standards, norms and rules, which will be adopted at a global level, which would serve to the advantage of third countries as well and which would prevent a further fragmentation of world trade; whereas failure to negotiate an agreement will allow other third countries with different standards and values to assume this role instead;

C.     whereas nine Member States of the European Union have already signed a bilateral agreement with the USA, so allowing TTIP to take inspiration from good practice and better enable the obstacles encountered by these Member States to be overcome;

D.     whereas the recent crises on the EU's borders and developments around the world show the need to invest in global governance and a system based on rules and values;

E.     whereas, given the growing interconnectedness of global markets -up to 40% of European industrial products are manufactured from imported upstream products- it is crucial that policy makers shape and promote the interaction of markets; whereas, since industrial production will increasingly take place in global value chains and whereas proper trade rules and removing unnecessary barriers are fundamental to creating added value while maintaining and developing a strong, competitive and diversified industrial base in Europe;

F.     whereas EU's attempts to deal with the challenges of climate change, environmental protection and consumer safety have resulted in high regulatory costs for EU enterprises, coupled with high energy feedstock and electricity prices, which - if left unaddressed in TTIP - may accelerate the process of delocalization, deindustrialization and job losses thereby threatening EU reindustrialization and employment targets, that will also defeat the very policy targets that EU regulations seek to achieve;

G.     whereas a well-designed trade agreement could contribute to harnessing the opportunities of globalisation. Whereas a strong and ambitious trade agreement should not only focus on reducing tariffs and NTBs but should also be a tool to protect workers, consumers and the environment; whereas a strong and ambitious trade agreement is an opportunity to create a framework by strengthening regulation to the highest level, in line with our shared values, thereby preventing social and environmental dumping and ensuring a high level of consumer protection in light of the shared objective of open competition on a level-playing field;

H.     whereas even though, common high standards are in the interest of consumers, it should be recognised that convergence also makes sense for businesses, as the higher costs stemming from higher standards may be better compensated by increased economies of scale in a potential market of 850 million consumers;

I.      whereas previous trade agreements have shown significant benefits for the European economy, it is difficult to assess the real impact of TTIP on both the EU and US economies and to predict while negotiations are ongoing and studies show contradictory results; whereas TTIP alone will not resolve longstanding structural economic problems and their underlying causes in the EU but should be seen as an element in a broader European strategy to create jobs and growth, and expectations for TTIP should be commensurate with the level of ambition that will be reached in the negotiations;

J.      whereas the consequences of the Russian embargo have clearly demonstrated the continuous geopolitical relevance of agriculture, the importance of having access to a range of different agricultural markets and the need for strong and strategic trade partnerships with reliable trade partners;

K      whereas it is important for European agriculture to secure a mutually beneficial trade deal with the US in order to advance Europe’s position as a key player on the global market without jeopardising the current quality standards of European agricultural products and future improvement of those standards, while preserving the European agricultural model and ensuring its economic and social viability;

L.     whereas trade and investment flows are not an end in themselves and the well-being of ordinary citizens, workers and consumers as well as increased opportunities for business as drivers of growth and jobs are the benchmarks for a trade agreement; whereas TTIP should be considered a model for a good trade agreement responding to these requirements in order to serve as an example for our future negotiations with other trade partners;

M.    whereas a certain degree of confidentiality is required in negotiations in order to achieve a high quality outcome, and the limited level of transparency in which the negotiations have been conducted in the past has led to deficiencies in terms of democratic control of the negotiation process;

N.     whereas President Juncker has clearly reiterated in his Political Guidelines that he wants a balanced and reasonable trade agreement with the United States and that - while the EU and the US can go a significant step further in recognising each other’s product standards and working towards transatlantic standards- the EU will not sacrifice its (food)-safety, health, animal health, social, environmental, and data protection standards and cultural diversity; recalling that the safety of the food we eat, the protection of Europeans’ personal data and its services of general interest are non-negotiable unless the aim is to achieve a higher level of protection;

O.     whereas it is important to ensure a satisfactory conclusion of the negotiations on the Safe Harbor and the Data Protection Umbrella Agreement;

P.     whereas President Juncker has also clearly stated in his political guidelines, that he will not accept that the jurisdiction of courts in the Member States is limited by special regimes for investment disputes; whereas now that the results of the public consultation on investment protection and ISDS in the TTIP are available, a reflection process- taking account of the contributions-is currently being undertaken within and between the three institutions, while exchanging with civil society and the business sector, on the best way to achieve investment protection and equal treatment of investors while ensuring states’ right to regulate;

Q.     whereas Parliament fully supports both the decision of the Council to declassify the negotiation directives and the Commission’s transparency initiative; whereas the lively public debate across Europe on TTIP has shown the need for the TTIP negotiations to be concluded in a more transparent and inclusive manner taking into account the concerns voiced by European citizens and communicating the negotiation results to the general public;

R.     whereas since July 2013 talks between the US and the EU have been going on, but up to now no common text has been agreed;

S.     whereas TTIP is expected to be a mixed agreement requiring ratification by the European Parliament and all 28 EU Member States;

1.      Addresses, in the context of the ongoing negotiations on TTIP, the following recommendations to the Commission:

(a)    regarding the scope and the broader context:

(i)          to ensure that transparent TTIP negotiations lead to an ambitious, comprehensive and balanced trade and investment agreement of a high standard that would promote sustainable growth with shared benefits across Member States, with mutual and reciprocal benefits between the partners, increase international competitiveness and open up new opportunities for EU companies, in particular SMEs, support the creation of high-quality jobs for European citizens, directly benefit European consumers; the content and the implementation of the agreement are more important than the speed of the negotiations; to stress that the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) is the most significant recent EU-US project and should reinvigorate the transatlantic partnership as a whole, beyond its trade aspects; to emphasise that its successful conclusion is of high geopolitical importance;

(ii)          to emphasise that while the TTIP negotiations consist of negotiations on three main areas – ambitiously improving reciprocal market access (for goods, services, investment and public procurement at all levels of government), reducing NTBs and enhancing the compatibility of regulatory regimes, and developing common rules to address shared global trade challenges and opportunities – all these areas are equally important and need to be included in a comprehensive package; TTIP should be ambitious and binding on all levels of government on both sides of the Atlantic, the agreement should lead to lasting genuine market openness on a reciprocal basis and trade facilitation on the ground, and should pay particular attention to structural measures to achieve greater transatlantic cooperation while upholding regulatory standards and consumer protection and preventing social, fiscal and environmental dumping;

(iii)         to keep in mind the strategic importance of the EU-US economic relationship in general and of TTIP in particular, inter alia as an opportunity to promote the principles and values, anchored in a rules-based framework, that the EU and the US share and cherish and to design a common approach and vision to global trade, investment and trade-related issues such as high standards, norms and regulations, in order to develop a broader transatlantic vision and a common set of strategic goals; to bear in mind that given the size of the transatlantic market, TTIP is an opportunity to shape and regulate the international trade order in order to ensure that both blocs thrive in an interconnected world;

(iv)         to ensure, especially given the recent positive developments taking place in the World Trade Organisation (WTO), that an agreement with the US serves as a stepping-stone for broader trade negotiations and is not pre-empting or counteracting the WTO process; bilateral and plurilateral trade agreements should generally speaking be considered as a second-best option and must not prevent efforts made in order to reach significant improvements on the multilateral level; TTIP must ensure synergies with other trade agreements currently being negotiated;

(v)         to bear in mind that the TFEU defines EU trade policy as an integral part of the Union’s overall external action and, therefore, to evaluate the implications of the final agreement, acknowledging opportunities, such as easier market access due to common trans-Atlantic standards, and risks, such as trade diversion from developing countries due to tariff preference erosion;

(vi)         to ensure that the agreement guarantees full respect for EU fundamental rights standards through the inclusion of a legally binding and suspensive human rights clause as a standard part of EU trade agreements with third countries;

(b)    regarding market access:

(i)          to ensure that the market access offers in the different areas are reciprocal, equally ambitious and reflect both parties’ expectations, underlines that the different proposals for those areas must be balanced;

(ii)          to aim at the elimination of all tariff duties while respecting that there are a number of sensitive agricultural and industrial products on both sides for which exhaustive lists will have to be agreed upon during the negotiation process; noting that CETA could be a good point of reference in this regard to foresee for the most sensitive products appropriate transitional periods and quotas and in few cases their exclusion;

(iii)         make every effort to have a safeguard clause incorporated into the agreement, as is clearly set out in the negotiating mandate, which would be invoked where a rise in imports of a particular product threatened to cause serious harm to domestic food production;

(iv)         to keep in mind that as the EU is the largest trading bloc worldwide there are important offensive interests for the EU in the highly specialised services sector, for instance in the area of engineering and other professional services, telecommunication, financial or transport services;

(v)         to increase market access for services according to a "hybrid list approach", using for market access "positive lists", whereby services that are to be opened up to foreign companies are explicitly mentioned and new services are excluded while ensuring that possible stand-still and ratchet clauses only apply to non-discrimination provisions and allow for enough flexibility to bring services of general economic interest back into public control as well as to take into account the emergence of new and innovative services and using "negative list approach" for national treatment";

(vi)         the negotiations should meaningfully address and remove the current US restrictions on maritime and air transport services owned by European businesses as a result of US legislation such as the Jones Act, Foreign Dredging Act, the Federal Aviation Act and the US Air Cabotage law and in relation to capital restrictions on foreign ownership of airlines, which seriously hinders market access for EU companies as well as innovation in the US itself;

(vii)        to build on the joint statement reflecting the negotiators’ clear commitment to exclude current and future Services of General Interest as well as Services of General Economic Interest from the scope of application of TTIP, (including but not limited to water, health, social services, social security systems and education), to ensure that national and if applicable local authorities retain the full right to introduce, adopt, maintain or repeal any measures with regards to the commissioning, organisation, funding and provision of public services as provided in the Treaties as well as in the EU's negotiating mandate; this exclusion should apply irrespective of how the services are provided and funded;

(viii)       to strive hard to ensure mutual recognition of professional qualifications, notably via the creation of a legal framework with federal states that have regulatory powers in this domain, in order to enable EU and US professionals to practise on either side of the Atlantic and to facilitate mobility of investors, professionals, highly -skilled workers and technicians between the EU and the US in sectors covered by TTIP;

(ix)         to bear in mind that visa facilitation for European service and goods providers is a key element for taking advantage of the agreement and to increase, in the context of the negotiations, political pressure on the US to guarantee full visa reciprocity and equal treatment for all citizens of EU Member States without discrimination as regards their access to the US;

(x)         to combine market access negotiations on financial services with convergence in financial regulation at the highest level, in order to support the introduction and compatibility of necessary regulation in order to reinforce financial stability, to ensure adequate protection for consumers of financial goods and services and support ongoing cooperation efforts in other international forums, such as the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and the Financial Stability Board; to ensure that these cooperation efforts do not limit the EU and member states regulatory and supervisory sovereignty, including their ability to ban certain financial products and activities;

(xi)         to establish enhanced cooperation between the EU, the Member States and the US, including mechanisms for more efficient international cooperation with the aim to set global higher standards against financial and tax criminality and corruption;

(xii)        to ensure that the EU’s acquis on data privacy is not compromised through the liberalisation of data flows, in particular in the area of e-commerce and financial services, while recognizing the relevance of data flows as a backbone of transatlantic trade and the digital economy; to incorporate, as a key point, a comprehensive and unambiguous horizontal self-standing provision, based on Article XIV of the General Agreement on Trade in services (GATS), that fully exempts the existing and future EU legal framework for the protection of personal data from the agreement without any condition that it must be consistent with other parts of the TTIP; to negotiate provisions which touch upon the flow of personal data only if the full application of data protection rules on both sides of the Atlantic is guaranteed and respected to cooperate with the United States in order to encourage third countries to adopt similar high data protection standards around the world;

(xiii)       to keep in mind that the consent of the European Parliament to the final TTIP agreement could be endangered as long as the US blanket mass surveillance activities are not completely abandoned and an adequate solution is found for the data privacy rights of EU citizens, including administrative and judicial redress, as stated in the paragraph 74 of the Parliament resolution of 12 March 2014;

(xiv)       to ensure that the trust between the EU and US, which was damaged by mass surveillance scandals, be rapidly and fully restored;   

(xv)        to include am ambitious chapter on competition ensuring that European competition law is properly respected particularly in the digital world; to ensure that private companies can compete fairly with state-owned or state-controlled companies; to ensure that state subsidies to private companies should be regulated and subject to a transparent control system;

(xvi)        to call for open competition in and development of the digital economy, which is by nature global but has its main bases in the EU and the USA; to emphasise in the negotiations that the digital economy must be central to the transatlantic market, with leverage in the global economy and in opening up global markets further;

(xvii)      to keep in mind regarding information society services and telecommunications services, that it is of particular importance that the TTIP ensure a level playing field with equal and transparent access based on reciprocity for EU service companies to the US market and with an obligation on US service providers to respect and comply with all relevant industry and product safety standards and consumer rights when providing services in Europe or to European customers;

(xviii)     to ensure in the agreement, in full compliance with the UNESCO Convention on the protection and promotion of the diversity of cultural expressions, that the parties, reserve their right to adopt or maintain any measure (in particularly those of a regulatory and/or financial nature) with respect to the protection or promotion of cultural and linguistic diversity, in line with the relevant Articles as established in the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, as well as media freedom and media pluralism, irrespective of the technology or distribution platform used and keeping in mind that the mandate given to the European Commission by the Member States explicitly excludes the audiovisual services;

(xix)       specify that nothing in the agreement shall affect the ability of the EU or EU Member States to subsidise and provide financial support to cultural industries and cultural, educational, audiovisual and press services;

(xx)        confirm that fixed book price systems and price fixing for newspapers and magazines will not be challenged by the obligations under the TTIP agreement;

(xxi)       given the huge interest on the part of European companies, notably SMEs, in obtaining non-discriminatory access to public contracts in the US both at federal and sub-federal level, for example for construction services, civil engineering, transport and energy infrastructure and goods and services, to have an ambitious approach to the chapter on public procurement, while respecting the compliance of the chapter with the new EU public procurement and concession directives, with a view to remedying, in line with the principle of reciprocity, the large disparity that currently exists in the degree of openness of the two public procurement markets on both sides of the Atlantic by significantly opening up the US market (still governed by the Buy American Act of 1933) at federal and sub-federal level alike building on commitments made in the Agreement on Government Procurement (GPA) and by removing the restrictions that currently apply at federal, state and local level alike in the United States; and to set up mechanisms to guarantee that commitments entered into by the US federal authorities will be honoured at all political and administrative levels;

(xxii)      to ensure, with the aim of creating open, non-discriminatory and predictable procedural requirements ensuring equal access for EU and US companies, especially SMEs, when tendering for public contracts, that the US increases the transparency of the adjudication process in force on its territory;

(xxiii)     to promote EU-US cooperation at the international level in order to promote common sustainability standards for public procurement at all federal and sub‑federal levels of government, inter alia in the implementation of the recently revised Government Procurement Agreement; and the adoption and observation of social responsibility standards by businesses based on the Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises of the Organisation for Economic Co‑operation and Development (OECD);

(xxiv)     to ensure that the US states are included in the negotiation process in order to achieve meaningful results in opening up US public procurement contracts to EU companies;

(xxv)      to be aware regarding public procurement of the sensitive nature of the fields of defence and security and to take into account the objectives set by the Heads of States and Governments during the 2013 Defence Council to promote the establishment of a European security and defence market and of a European defence technological and industrial base (EDTIB);

(xxvi)     to ensure that the negotiations on rules of origin aim at reconciling the EU and US approaches and at establishing effective rules of origin, thereby avoiding that rules of origin are undermined by other agreements, to consider the negotiations as an opportunity to move towards common standards for compulsory origin marking of products; given the conclusion of the negotiations for the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) between the EU and Canada and the potential upgrade of the EU-Mexico free trade agreement, the possibility and scope of cumulation will need to be considered; however to keep in mind that the purpose of TTIP is to facilitate trade in genuinely US and EU made products and not to allow imports from third countries, therefore exclusions for certain products will need to be considered on a case by case basis and exclusions from all type of cumulation should be granted for sensitive sectors;

(xxvii)    to ensure that TTIP is an open agreement, and to look for ways in which valued partners, which have an interest in the TTIP negotiations because of Customs Union agreements with either the EU or the US, can be more actively informed of the developments;

(c) regarding regulatory cooperation and coherence pillar and NTBs:

(i)          to ensure that the regulatory cooperation chapter promotes a transparent, effective, pro-competitive economic environment through the identification and prevention of potential future non-tariff barriers to trade, which disproportionately affect SME's, and the facilitation of trade and investment while developing and securing the highest levels of protection of health and safety in line with the precautionary principle laid down in Article 191 TFEU, consumer, labour environmental and animal welfare legislation and of cultural diversity that exists in the EU; to support, whilst fully respecting regulatory autonomy, the establishment of a structured dialogue and cooperation between regulators in the most transparent way possible and involving stakeholders; to include cross-cutting disciplines on regulatory coherence and transparency for the development and implementation of efficient, cost-effective, and more compatible regulations for goods and services; negotiators on both sides need to identify and to be very clear about which technical procedures and standards are fundamental and cannot be compromised, which ones can be the subject of a common approach, which are the areas where mutual recognition based on a common high standard and a strong system of market surveillance is desirable and which are those where simply an improved exchange of information is possible, based on the experience of several years of talks in a variety of fora including the Transatlantic Economic Council and the High Level Regulatory Cooperation Forum to ensure similarly that it will not affect standards that have yet to be set in areas where the legislation or the standards are very different in the US as compared with the EU, such as, for example, the implementation of existing (framework) legislation (e.g. REACH), or the adoption of new laws (e.g. cloning), or future definitions affecting the level of protection (e.g. endocrine disrupting chemicals); to ensure that any provisions on regulatory cooperation in the TTIP do not set a procedural requirement for the adoption of Union acts concerned by it nor give rise to enforceable rights in that regard;

(ii)          to base negotiations on SPS and TBT measures on the key principles of the multilateral SPS and TBT agreements and to protect European SPS standards and procedures; to aim in the first place at the elimination or significant reduction of excessively burdensome SPS measures including related import procedures; in particular to ensure that pre-approvals, obligatory protocols or pre-clearance inspections are not applied as a permanent import measure; to achieve increased transparency and openness, mutual recognition of equivalent standards, exchanges of best practices, strengthening of dialogue between regulators and stakeholders and strengthening of cooperation in international standards-setting bodies; to ensure in negotiations on SPS and TBT measures, that the high standards that have been put in place in order to ensure food safety, human, animal or plant life or health in the EU are not compromised in any way;

(iii)         to encourage the US side to lift the ban on beef imports from the EU;

(iv)         with regard to the horizontal regulatory cooperation chapter, to foster bilateral regulatory cooperation in order to avoid unnecessary divergence, particularly as regards new technologies and services, for the benefit of European and US competitiveness and consumer choice; to achieve this through enhanced information exchange and to improve the adoption and implementation of international instruments, whilst respecting the subsidiarity principle, on the basis of successful precedents such as ISO standards or under the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe's (UNECE) World Forum for Harmonisation of Vehicle Regulations (WP.29); to remember that the recognition of equivalence of the greatest possible number of vehicle safety regulations based on a verified equivalent level of protection would be one of the most important achievements of the agreement; to ensure that the prior impact assessment for each regulatory act should measure its impact on consumers and the environment next to its impact on trade and investment; to promote regulatory compatibility without compromising the legitimate regulatory and policy objectives and the competences of the EU and US legislators;

(v)         to aim to continue to guarantee a high level of product safety within the Union while eliminate unnecessary duplication of testing that causes a waste of resources, in particular on low-risk products;

(vi)         to address customs issues that go beyond the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement TFA) rules and stress that, in order to achieve real administrative burden removal, there is a need to work towards a maximum degree of regulatory alignment on customs and border related policies and practices;

(vii)        to define clearly, in the context of future regulatory cooperation, which measures concern TBT and duplicated or redundant administrative burdens and formalities and which are linked to fundamental standards and regulations, or procedures serving a public policy objective;

(viii)       to fully respect the established regulatory systems on both sides of the Atlantic, as well as the European Parliament’s role within the EU’s decision-making process and its democratic scrutiny over EU regulatory processes when creating the framework for future cooperation while at the same time ensuring the utmost transparency and being vigilant about having a balanced involvement of stakeholders within the consultations included in the development of a regulatory proposal and not do delay the European legislative process; to specify the role, the composition and the legal status of the Regulatory Cooperation Body, taking into consideration that any direct and compulsory application of its recommendations would imply a breach of the law-making procedures laid down in the Treaties; to also monitor that it fully preserves the capacity of national, regional and local authorities to legislate their own policies, in particular social and environmental policies;

(d)    regarding the rules:

(i)          to combine negotiations on market access and regulatory cooperation with the establishment of ambitious rules and principles bearing in mind that each pillar has specific sensitivities, on issues such as, but not limited to, sustainable development, energy, SMEs, investment and state-owned enterprises;

(ii)          to ensure that the sustainable development chapter is binding and enforceable and aims at the full and effective ratification, implementation and enforcement of the eight fundamental International Labour Organisation (ILO) conventions and their content, the ILO's Decent Work Agenda and the core international environmental agreements; provisions must be aimed at further improving levels of protection of labour and environmental standards; an ambitious trade and sustainable development chapter must also include rules on corporate social responsibility based on OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and clearly structured dialogue with civil society;

(iii)         to ensure that labour and environmental standards are not limited to the trade and sustainable development chapter but are equally included in other areas of the agreement, such as investment, trade in services, regulatory cooperation and public procurement;

(iv)         to ensure that labour and environmental standards are made enforceable, by building on the good experience of existing FTAs by the EU and US and national legislation; to ensure that the implementation of and compliance with labour provisions is subjected to an effective monitoring process, involving social partners and civil society representatives and to the general dispute settlement which applies to the whole agreement

(v)         to ensure, in full respect of national legislation, that employees of transatlantic companies, registered under EU member state law, have access to information and consultation in line with the European works council directive;

(vi)         to ensure that the economic, employment, social, and environmental impact of TTIP, is also examined by means of a thorough and objective ex-ante trade sustainability impact assessment (SIA) in full respect of the EU Directive on SIA, with clear and structured involvement of all relevant stakeholders, including civil society; asks the Commission to conduct comparative in-depth impact studies for each Member State and an evaluation of the competitiveness of EU sectors and their counterparts in the US with the aim to make projections on job losses and gains in the sectors affected in each Member State, whereby the adjustment costs could be partly taken up by EU and Member State funding;

(vii)        to retain the objective of dedicating a specific chapter to energy, including industrial raw materials; to ensure that in course of the negotiations the two sides examine ways to facilitate energy exports, so that TTIP would abolish any existing restrictions or impediments of export for fuels, including LNG and crude oil, between the two trading partners, with the aim of creating a competitive, transparent and non-discriminatory energy market thereby supporting a diversification of energy sources, contributing to security of supply and leading to lower energy prices emphasises that this energy chapter must integrate clear guarantees that the EU's environmental standards and climate action goals must not be undermined;  to encourage EU-US cooperation to end fuel tax exemptions for commercial aviation in line with the G-20 commitments to phase out fossil fuel subsidies;

(viii)       to ensure that the right of either partner to govern and to regulate the exploration, exploitation and production of energy sources remains untouched by any agreement, but that the principle of non-discrimination is applied once exploitation is decided; to keep in mind that nothing in the agreement should undermine legitimate non-discriminatory democratic decisions with regard to energy production, in accordance with the precautionary principle; to ensure that access to raw materials as well as to energy should also be granted on a non-discriminatory basis for companies from either the EU or the US and quality standards for energy products must be respected, including those for energy products related to their impact on CO2 emissions such as the one enshrined in the Fuel Quality Directive;

(ix)         to ensure that TTIP supports the use and promotion of green goods and services, including through facilitating their development, and simplifies their exports and imports thereby tapping into the considerable potential for both environmental and economic gains offered by the transatlantic economy and complementing the on-going plurilateral negotiations on the Green Goods agreement with the aim of contributing to fight combat global warming and to create new jobs in the “green economy;

(x)         to ensure that TTIP serves as a forum for the development of ambitious and binding common sustainability standards for energy production and energy efficiency, always taking into account and adhering to existing standards on both sides such as the EU energy labelling and eco-design directives and to explore ways to enhance cooperation on energy research, development and innovation and promotion of low-carbon and environmentally friendly technologies;

(xi)         to ensure that TTIP contributes to the sustainable management of fishery resources, particularly through cooperation between the parties in combatting illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing (IUU);

(xii)        to ensure that TTIP includes a specific chapter on SME’s in TTIP based on the joint commitment of both negotiating parties and aims at creating new opportunities in the US for European SMEs (including micro enterprises), on the basis of SME exporters’ actual reported experience, for instance by eliminating double certification requirements, by establishing a web-based information system about the different regulations and best practices, by facilitating access to support schemes for SME, by introducing ‘fast-track’ procedures at the border or by eliminating specific tariff peaks that continue to exist; it should establish mechanisms for both sides to work together to facilitate SMEs’ participation in transatlantic trade and investment, for instance through a common SME ‘one-stop shop’ with SMEs stakeholders playing a key role in its establishment, which would provide specific information they need to export to, import from or invest in the US, including on customs duties, on taxes, on regulations, on custom procedures and on market opportunities;

(xiii)       to ensure that TTIP contains a comprehensive chapter on investment including provisions on both market access and investment protection, recognising that access to capital can stimulate jobs and growth ; the investment chapter should aim at ensuring non-discriminatory treatment for the establishment of European and US companies in each other’s territory, while taking account of the sensitive nature of some specific sectors; these should look to enhance Europe as a destination for investment, increase confidence for EU investment in the US and also address investors' obligations and responsibilities by referring, inter alia, to the OECD principles for multinational enterprises and to the UN principles on Business and human rights as benchmarks;

(xiv)       to ensure that investment protection provisions are limited to post-establishment provisions and focus on national treatment, most-favoured nation, fair and equitable treatment and protection against direct and indirect expropriation, including the right to prompt, adequate and effective compensation; standards of protection and definitions of investor and investment should be drawn up in a precise legal manner protecting the right to regulate in the public interest, clarifying the meaning of indirect expropriation and preventing unfounded or frivolous claims; free transfer of capital should be in line with the EU treaty provisions and should include a prudential carve-out not limited in time in the case of financial crises;

(xv)        to ensure the applicability of international agreements, to bring an end to the unequal treatment of European investors in the US on account of existing agreements of Member States; to ensure that foreign investors are treated in a non-discriminatory fashion and have a fair opportunity to seek and achieve redress of grievances while benefiting from no greater rights than domestic investors:

–         to build on the concept paper recently presented by Commissioner Malmström to INTA Committee on May 7 and the ongoing discussions in the Trade Ministers' Council and to use them as a basis for negotiations on a new and effective system of investment protection, as they provide very welcome proposals for reform and improvement,

–         taking into account the EU's and the US' developed legal systems, to trust  the courts of the EU and of the Member States and of the United States to provide effective legal protection based on the principle of democratic legitimacy, efficiently and in a cost-effective  manner,

–         to propose a permanent solution for resolving disputes between investors and states which is subject to democratic principles and scrutiny, where potential cases are treated in a transparent manner by publicly appointed, independent professional judges in public hearings and which includes an appellate mechanism, where consistency of judicial decisions is ensured and the jurisdiction of courts of the EU and of the Member States is respected,

–         in the medium term, a public International Investment Court could be the most appropriate means to address investment disputes;

(xvi)       to ensure that TTIP includes an ambitious, balanced and modern chapter on and precisely defined areas of intellectual property rights, including recognition and enhanced protection of geographical indications and reflects a fair and efficient level of protection, without impeding the EU’s need to reform its copyright system and while ensuring a fair balance of IPRs and the public interest, in particular the need to preserve access to affordable medicines by continuing to support the TRIPS flexibilities;

(xvii)      to consider it to be of great importance that the EU and the US remain committed and engaged in global multilateral patent harmonisation discussions through existing international bodies and thus cautions against attempting to introduce provisions on substantive patent law, in particular with regard to issues relating to patentability and grace periods, into the TTIP;

(xviii)     to ensure that the IPR chapter does not include provisions on the liability of internet intermediaries or on criminal sanctions as a tool for enforcement, as having been previously rejected by Parliament including the proposed ACTA treaty;

(xix)       to secure full recognition and strong legal protection of EU geographical indications and measures to deal with improper use and misleading information and practices; to guarantee the labelling, traceability and genuine origin of these products for consumers and the protection of the know-how of producers as an essential part of a balanced agreement;

(e) regarding transparency, civil society involvement, public and political outreach:

(i)     to continue ongoing efforts to increase transparency in the negotiations by making more negotiation proposals available to the general public, to implement the recommendations of the European Ombudsman, in particular relating to the rules on public access to documents;

(ii)          to translate these transparency efforts into meaningful practical results, inter alia by reaching arrangements with the US side to improve transparency, including access to all negotiating documents for the Members of the European Parliament, including consolidated texts, while at the same time maintaining due confidentiality, in order to allow Members of Parliament and the Member States to develop constructive discussions with stakeholders and the public,; to ensure that both negotiating parties should justify any refusal to disclose a negotiating proposal;

(iii)         to promote an even closer engagement with the Member States, who were responsible for the negotiating mandate which directed the European Commission to open negotiations with the US, with the aim of forging their active involvement in better communicating the scope and the possible benefits of the agreement for European citizens, as committed to in the Council Conclusions adopted on 20 March 2015, in order to ensure a broad, fact-based public debate on TTIP in Europe with the aim of exploring the genuine concerns surrounding the agreement;

(iv)         to reinforce its continuous and transparent engagement with a wide range of stakeholders, throughout the negotiation process; encourages all stakeholders to participate actively and to put forward initiatives and information relevant to the negotiations;

(v)         to encourage Member States to involve national parliaments in line with their respective constitutional obligations, to provide all the necessary support for Member States to fulfil this task and to strengthen outreach to national parliaments, in order to keep national parliaments adequately informed on the ongoing negotiations;

(vi)         to build on the close engagement with Parliament and to seek an even closer, structured dialogue, which will continue to closely monitor the negotiating process and to engage on its part with the Commission, the Member States, and the US Congress and Administration, as well as with stakeholders on both sides of the Atlantic, in order to ensure an outcome which will benefit citizens in the EU, the US and beyond;

(vii)        to ensure that TTIP and its future implementation is accompanied by a deepening of transatlantic parliamentary cooperation, on the basis and using the experience of the Transatlantic Legislators Dialogue, leading in future to a broader and enhanced political framework to develop common approaches, reinforce the strategic partnership and to improve global cooperation between the EU and US;

2.      Instructs its President to forward this resolution containing the European Parliament’s recommendations to the Commission and, for information, to the Council, the governments and parliaments of the Member States, and the US Administration and Congress.

EXPLANATORY STATEMENT

When the EU negotiates an international agreement, such as TTIP, the European Parliament is entitled to express its position on the agreement at any stage of the negotiations, based on Rule 108; 4 of the Rules of Procedure. Your rapporteur would like to use this opportunity to assess the main results of the negotiations after over one and a half years of discussions and to express the Parliament’s views on the main areas of a potential TTIP agreement. The Parliament’s report should contribute to a fresh start of the negotiations, now that the new Commission is in place and after the midterm elections in the US.

This report is a follow-up of resolutions adopted in the previous parliamentary term on trade and investment negotiations with the United States in October 2012 and May 2013. The aim of the rapporteur was to be as comprehensive as possible and to allow Members of different committees within the Parliament to make a reflected contribution to the process. The Parliament has the last word in the ratification of trade agreements between the EU and third countries: An agreement may enter into force only with the consent of the Parliament. The rejection of ACTA (protection of intellectual property inter alia in the digital domain) has proven that the Parliament takes its role in trade policy very seriously.

Given the many critical voices from the European public and given the weak public acceptance of the agreement under negotiation, the Parliament will continue to push for the highest possible level of transparency and will guarantee that only a good agreement will be adopted, an agreement which respects European values, stimulates sustainable growth and contributes to the well-being of all citizens.

1.4.2015

OPINION of the Committee on Foreign Affairs

for the Committee on International Trade

on recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Francisco José Millán Mon

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on Foreign Affairs calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

1.  Believes that the EU and the US are key strategic partners; stresses that the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) is the most significant recent EU-US project and should reinvigorate the transatlantic partnership as a whole, beyond its trade aspects; emphasises that its successful conclusion is of high geopolitical importance at a moment when the US is pivoting to Asia and concluding the Trans-Pacific Partnership; underlines that the TTIP is predicted to have a positive impact on jobs, growth and competitiveness for the two economies, which have both been hit by the crisis; underlines that these negotiations should be carried out in the most transparent and open way possible;

2.  Stresses that trade policy is an essential part of the EU’s external action and as such must be formulated in a way that is in line with other foreign policies and policy instruments; encourages therefore a close interaction between relevant commissioners, Directorates-General, the European External Action Service and the Member States;

3.  Notes the TTIP’s strategic importance in strengthening and shaping rules-based global trade and economic governance founded on the values shared by the EU and the US, particularly in an increasingly multipolar world; notes that its impact would go beyond the bilateral implications by facilitating the establishment of common regulations, rules and standards that could later be adopted at global level; stresses in this regard that bilateral negotiations that the EU conducts must not be a substitute but rather a springboard for further trade liberalisation within the WTO;

4.  Emphasises that the TTIP must not lower standards, especially on important issues like consumer protection, health, labour rights or the environment, but rather take into account the differences between the EU’s and the US’ regulatory systems and seek to achieve higher common standards as a model for the world, as this would strengthen the EU’s global economic position, while furthering our values; stresses that no provision in the chapter on investment protection should be understood to undermine the right of the EU and the Member States to regulate, in accordance with their respective competences, in the pursuit of legitimate public policy objectives;

5.  Stresses that both parties to the TTIP must make an engagement to encourage companies to respect the OECD Guidelines on Multinational Enterprises (MNEs); notes that parties should work with unions to monitor MNEs’ adherence to these guidelines;

6.  Asks the Commission, regarding public procurement, to be aware of the sensitive nature of the fields of defence and security and to take into account the objectives set by the Heads of States and Governments during the 2013 Defence Council to promote the establishment of a European security and defence market and of a European defence technological and industrial base (EDTIB);

7.  Highlights that the conclusion of the TTIP creates the prospect of a broad economic space, which would include third countries with which the EU and the US have close trade and economic relations; asks the Commission to ensure that any final agreement could be expanded to allow for close cooperation with countries with which the EU and the US have free trade agreements, and to consult in the process in particular with those that would be impacted by the TTIP, such as Mexico and Canada, because of the North American Free Trade Agreement, Turkey, because of its Customs Union with the EU, and the EEA countries; notes that studies indicate that the TTIP would have a positive impact on third country economies, including new opportunities for developing countries;

8.  Stresses that the EU’s energy supply largely depends on foreign sources and hence asks the Commission to ensure that a strong energy chapter be included in the TTIP; emphasises the TTIP’s potential for diversifying the EU’s hydrocarbons supply and contributing to its energy security; urges the Commission to explore ways in which this potential could be exploited in line with high environmental standards, the transition to low-emission economies and ambitious EU goals on tackling climate change; underlines that the agreement should not have an impact on the rights of each party to control the exploration and exploitation of its energy resources;

9.  Believes that this agreement should be accompanied by a deepening of transatlantic parliamentary cooperation, and that the strengthening of trade and investment links through the TTIP should lead in the future to a broader and enhanced political framework to develop common approaches, to reinforce the strategic partnership, and to improve global cooperation between the EU and the US; stresses that any instruments created to strengthen regulatory cooperation should not affect the European or US legislative procedures and that legislators must always be involved in an appropriate manner, respecting their corresponding parliamentary rights, in any body that may be created for the purpose of regulatory cooperation; underlines the need to also involve all relevant stakeholders;

10. Reminds the Commission that abolition by the US of the visa regime for five EU Member States is still pending;

11. Takes note of the fact that the Commission is taking steps to improve the transparency of the negotiations; acknowledges that progress has already been made; asks the Commission to continue making efforts, also vis-à-vis the US authorities, in favour of greater parliamentary transparency of the negotiations, including timely access to more negotiating documents; stresses that proper communication with civil society is essential to ensure the success of the agreement and calls on the Commission and Member States to increase their outreach activities; hopes that the more transparent approach of the Commission will also apply to other trade negotiations.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

31.3.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

35

20

5

Members present for the final vote

Lars Adaktusson, Michèle Alliot-Marie, Nikos Androulakis, Francisco Assis, Amjad Bashir, Mario Borghezio, Elmar Brok, Klaus Buchner, James Carver, Fabio Massimo Castaldo, Lorenzo Cesa, Aymeric Chauprade, Andi Cristea, Arnaud Danjean, Mark Demesmaeker, Knut Fleckenstein, Anna Elżbieta Fotyga, Eugen Freund, Sandra Kalniete, Manolis Kefalogiannis, Tunne Kelam, Afzal Khan, Andrey Kovatchev, Eduard Kukan, Ilhan Kyuchyuk, Arne Lietz, Barbara Lochbihler, Sabine Lösing, Andrejs Mamikins, Ramona Nicole Mănescu, David McAllister, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, Francisco José Millán Mon, Javier Nart, Pier Antonio Panzeri, Demetris Papadakis, Vincent Peillon, Alojz Peterle, Kati Piri, Andrej Plenković, Cristian Dan Preda, Jozo Radoš, Sofia Sakorafa, Jacek Saryusz-Wolski, Alyn Smith, Jaromír Štětina, Charles Tannock, Ivo Vajgl, Johannes Cornelis van Baalen, Geoffrey Van Orden, Hilde Vautmans

Substitutes present for the final vote

Reinhard Bütikofer, Angel Dzhambazki, Neena Gill, Marek Jurek, Antonio López-Istúriz White, György Schöpflin, Igor Šoltes, Janusz Zemke

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Dieter-Lebrecht Koch

24.2.2015

OPINION of the Committee on Development

for the Committee on International Trade

on recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Arne Lietz

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on Development calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

1.  Asks the Commission to respect in trade relations Article 208 of the Lisbon Treaty and to include in the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) an explicit reference to development policy as one of the legitimate public policy objectives, as well as to the principle of policy coherence for development, requiring that the objectives of development cooperation be taken into account in policies that are likely to affect developing countries;

2.  Asks the Commission to bear in mind that, given the size and scope of the transatlantic economy, the implications of TTIP will go far beyond the bilateral relationships and will undoubtedly impact on developing countries, as this mega-trade deal is likely to shape global trade rules and set new standards; requests the Commission to commission an independent study of TTIP’s impact on developing countries and on the future sustainable development goals, once the provisions of TTIP are clearer, as the wording of the negotiating mandate is so general that the possible spillover effect on developing countries is still difficult to predict;

3.  Asks the Commission to take into account that the effect of TTIP on developing countries will vary depending on their economic structure and current trade relations; also calls on the Commission to take into account the fact that the majority of developing countries benefit from some degree of tariff preferences from the EU and the US; invites the Commission to intensify the dialogue with developing countries in order to assess the impact of TTIP and to consider the likely risk of preference erosion and accompanying trade and investment diversion for some developing countries;

4.  Asks the Commission to highlight in its dialogue with developing countries the potential of TTIP to create new opportunities for developing countries in global trade, resulting from increased growth and demand for export goods in both the EU and the US and lower trade costs arising from the need to adapt to a single set of rules and standards in order to have access to both markets; recommends to the Commission that it act to alleviate the cost of compliance (especially for SMEs) and support initiatives to foster developing countries’ inclusion in global value chains through suitable development instruments;

5.  Asks the Commission to provide developing countries with political support and technical assistance in pursuing stronger regional integration and trading areas, and to move towards a fairer approach in its negotiations of Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) which are aimed at setting up a secure framework for the flow of trade and investment between the EU and the ACP countries;

6.  Urges the Commission to ensure that TTIP will not reduce the significance of the WTO and will contribute to an equitable and sustainable world trading system while not sidelining important issues for developing countries such as food security, agricultural subsidies and climate change mitigation, by stepping up efforts to advance in democratic multilateral forums, notably the WTO, as the EU’s preferential option, and to successfully conclude the negotiations of the Doha Round, as this is the best way to achieve a trading system that is inclusive and operates for the benefit of all; also asks the Commission to ensure that the TTIP’s third pillar respects multilateral rules whereby the WTO foresees exceptions for developing countries, especially with regard to the possibility of export restrictions in the area of energy and access to raw materials;

7.  Requests the Commission to promote within the negotiations the highest global standards on human rights, ILO standards, decent work, environmental protection, universal access to quality public services, social protection, public and universal health coverage, universal access to medicines, and food and product safety; encourages the EU to position itself as the defender of the interests of developing countries;

8.  Calls on the Commission and the Member States to increase the transparency and democratic nature of the negotiations by enhancing dialogue with civil society and other stakeholders.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

24.2.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

16

7

1

Members present for the final vote

Beatriz Becerra Basterrechea, Ignazio Corrao, Nathan Gill, Enrique Guerrero Salom, Maria Heubuch, Hans Jansen, Teresa Jiménez-Becerril Barrio, Arne Lietz, Linda McAvan, Norbert Neuser, Maurice Ponga, Cristian Dan Preda, Lola Sánchez Caldentey, Elly Schlein, György Schöpflin, Pedro Silva Pereira, Davor Ivo Stier, Bogdan Brunon Wenta, Rainer Wieland, Anna Záborská

Substitutes present for the final vote

Marina Albiol Guzmán, Juan Fernando López Aguilar, Judith Sargentini

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Kosma Złotowski

27.3.2015

OPINION of the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs

for the Committee on International Trade

on recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Jeppe Kofod

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

1.  Addresses the following recommendations to the Commission:

a.  to ensure that a comprehensive and ambitious agreement is reached on the TTIP that enhances fair competition on both sides of the Atlantic, while taking into account the values of the European social market economy, ensuring benefits to consumers, industry and investors, enhancing quality job creation and growth, and ensuring that regulatory cooperation does not undermine democratic control on both sides of the Atlantic in any way, and also seeks a transition to a more sustainable society;

b.  to take immediate action to ensure that trade and investment by financial actors on both sides of the Atlantic, as well as equal market access for all service providers in the US and in Europe, are regulated on the basis of the highest standards whilst working for high levels of protection, especially in areas such as health and safety, consumer protection, labour, social rights, regulation of financial services, environmental legislation, food safety and data protection; to ensure that no provisions in any way preclude the future strengthening of such standards, either substantively or by inducing a regulatory chilling effect; and to ensure that the TTIP agreement includes a specific chapter for SMEs;

c.  to take the view that a good agreement on regulatory standards can act as a global precedent for future trade and investment agreements reducing costs for companies, in particular SMEs, around the world;

d.  to acknowledge that the main beneficiaries from the TTIP can be SMEs, as big corporations have economies of scale that allow them easily to access markets on both sides of the Atlantic, and that SMEs do not have the financial, legal or other resources to cope with regulatory differences and other barriers to trade;

e.  to ensure greater transparency and information exchange in the framework of state aid rules and the allocation of state aid, while ensuring the provision of services of general economic interest, as well as closer cooperation between competition authorities in the areas of mergers, antitrust, state-owned enterprises and subsidies; to take immediate action to ensure the inclusion of a competition chapter in the agreement;

f.   to take immediate action to ensure that market access negotiations on financial services are combined with mutual recognition and upward convergence in financial regulation, implying the promotion of higher standards and the general interest as a principal objective; to support ever higher international standards in ongoing cooperation efforts in other international forums, including the Basel III rules, without prejudice to the ability of the EU and of Member State authorities to regulate and supervise financial products and practices in the performance of their regulatory and supervisory duties;

g.  to spare no efforts to fully use the opportunity provided by the TTIP negotiations to move forward together on financial services in a positive and constructive way, while taking account of what has been achieved by both sides on the matter already; topics of discussion could include bilateral consultations before new pieces of legislation, transparency towards stakeholders when it comes to bilateral discussions on financial issues, and more accountability to elected bodies;

h.  to refrain from additional market access commitments for financial services, since interconnectedness, complexity and excessively big entities generate and spread systemic risks and represent a threat to financial stability;

i.   to come forward with a directive with measures against BEPS (base erosion and profit shifting), in order to end harmful competition on the part of businesses, in particular multinationals, which organise their global tax position, often across the Atlantic, in a way that allows the shifting of profits to lower-tax jurisdictions, taking into account the work of the OECD; to ensure that offshore funds whose managers operate on both sides of the Atlantic are required to establish their headquarters onshore; to take immediate action to ensure the automatic exchange of information and country-by-country reporting regarding tax matters, excluding SMEs; to establish a definition and list of tax havens at EU level, taking into account the work of the OECD;

j.   to take immediate action to include legal measures within the TTIP to counter aggressive tax planning via the systematic movement of capital across the Atlantic, and to ensure that the latter is instead based on economic activity and does not seek to avoid tax payments in the country of production; to ensure enhanced transparency and granularity regarding balance of payments statistics across the Atlantic;

k.  to take immediate action to ensure fair competition and equal market access for European companies, including SMEs, to public contracts and public procurement in the US and guarantee that the latter include mandatory respect for social, ethical and environmental criteria; to acknowledge that the current imbalance of market access to public contracts and public procurement in the US compared to the EU constitutes unfair competition; to acknowledge that 85 % of public tenders in the EU are already open to US suppliers, while only 32 % of US tenders are open to EU suppliers; to ensure that recently adopted EU rules on public procurement continue to be respected;

l.   to ensure that the recently adopted EU rules on public procurement are shielded and supported in the framework of the negotiations, in particular regarding SMEs’ access to public contracts, eligibility criteria based on the best quality-price ratio instead of the cheapest price, reserved markets allocated to social economy undertakings, the possibility for contractual authorities to foster inter-community cooperation, and the preservation of thresholds for tendering exclusion from EU and international rules; to guarantee that EU undertakings are not discriminated against when applying for public procurement contracts in the US and that they benefit from a transparent access equivalent to that applying to US undertakings in Europe under public procurement rules in the EU;

m. to take immediate proactive measures against protectionism, and address legislation that hinders European market access to the US;

n.  to ensure that any and all dispute mechanisms set in place within the TTIP framework uphold full transparency, are subject to democratic principles and scrutiny, and do not interfere with governments’ right to regulate;

o.  to take immediate action to ensure that a ‘positive list approach’ is chosen, so that all public services covered by the TTIP are explicitly listed positively in the agreement and no standstill or ratchet clauses are included in it;

p.  to acknowledge and emphasise the continued importance of state-owned enterprises and other forms of public ownership for important public services and services of general interest and to call for their exclusion from the agreement; to ensure that the management of public services is not affected by the TTIP, in line with the mandate given to the Commission by the Member States;

q.  to acknowledge that the TTIP will benefit SMEs more than big business; to take note that the elimination of tariffs, the simplification of customs procedures and the convergence of products standards will notably facilitate SMEs’ participation in transatlantic trade and that the TTIP will be the first free trade agreement to have a dedicated SME chapter; to work towards consolidating the existing cooperation between the US and the EU on SMEs; to work towards the creation of websites where SMEs in both Europe and the US can find out about tariffs, customs procedures and all applicable product regulations at federal and state level in the US, and Union and Member State level in the EU;

r.   to ensure that European competition law is properly respected in all fields, with particular regard to digital markets;

s.   to ensure that workers’ rights and worker protection are fully respected in the agreement and are not undermined by increased market access and competition;

t.   to be aware of the fact that this agreement is of political as well as economic significance, since it is being signed between the two sides of the Atlantic, an area characterised by sharing both security and the values of freedom, equality, democracy, human rights and the social market economy;

u.  to be aware of the uncertainties which exist in relation to the TTIP negotiations, and, in order to dispel them, to make the negotiations as transparent as possible and to launch a European information campaign;

v.  to take further action to make the negotiations more transparent, in particular as regards direct access to information at regional and local levels;

w. to ensure transparency in the negotiations throughout the entire process in line with the Commission’s obligation , under Article 218(10) TFEU, whose statutory character has been confirmed by the ECJ in a recent ruling, to keep Parliament fully informed on an immediate basis at all stages of the negotiations; to work towards an agreement with the US Administration regarding access for all parliamentarians to the consolidated negotiation texts; to ensure access for the public to relevant negotiation documents from all parties, with the exception of those which are to be classified with clear justification on a case-by-case basis, in line with Regulation (EC) No 1049/2001 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 30 May 2001 regarding public access to European Parliament, Council and Commission documents;

x.  to propose initiatives for SMEs on how to obtain market access and initiate investments across the Atlantic;

y.  to ensure that the European Parliament plays a proper role in the regulatory convergence decisions to be made after the agreement is ratified.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

24.3.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

34

13

9

Members present for the final vote

Gerolf Annemans, Hugues Bayet, Pervenche Berès, Udo Bullmann, Esther de Lange, Fabio De Masi, Anneliese Dodds, Markus Ferber, Jonás Fernández, Elisa Ferreira, Sven Giegold, Neena Gill, Roberto Gualtieri, Brian Hayes, Gunnar Hökmark, Danuta Maria Hübner, Cătălin Sorin Ivan, Petr Ježek, Othmar Karas, Georgios Kyrtsos, Alain Lamassoure, Werner Langen, Sander Loones, Bernd Lucke, Olle Ludvigsson, Ivana Maletić, Fulvio Martusciello, Marisa Matias, Bernard Monot, Luděk Niedermayer, Stanisław Ożóg, Dariusz Rosati, Alfred Sant, Molly Scott Cato, Peter Simon, Renato Soru, Theodor Dumitru Stolojan, Kay Swinburne, Paul Tang, Michael Theurer, Ramon Tremosa i Balcells, Ernest Urtasun, Marco Valli, Tom Vandenkendelaere, Cora van Nieuwenhuizen, Jakob von Weizsäcker, Pablo Zalba Bidegain, Marco Zanni

Substitutes present for the final vote

Matt Carthy, Philippe De Backer, Jeppe Kofod, Thomas Mann, Morten Messerschmidt, Siegfried Mureșan, Michel Reimon, Miguel Urbán Crespo

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Jussi Halla-aho

1.4.2015

OPINION of the Committee on Employment and Social Affairs

for the Committee on International Trade

on recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Marian Harkin

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on Employment and Social Affairs calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

–   having regard to the Commission’s impact assessment report on the future of EU-US trade relations, published on 12 March 2013,

1.  Addresses, in the context of the ongoing negotiations on TTIP, the following recommendations to the Commission:

     (i)         to ensure that TTIP will both safeguard existing jobs and make a tangible and positive contribution to safeguarding and generating strong, sustainable growth in order to maximise the potential for creating higher-skilled jobs to meet the new needs of the labour market along with better and sustainable jobs in the EU in order to help achieve the 2020 target of 75 % employment, bearing in mind that trade is not an end in itself but a means of improving well-being; to fully respect and protect global labour standards; to guarantee that standards, in particular social, environmental and workplace health and safety standards, are protected and that such standards can be improved;

     (ii)        to provide Parliament with updated estimates of the impact of TTIP on employment and growth in the EU, with particular reference to the consequences for Member States from Central and South-Eastern Europe;

     (iii)       to ensure that steps are taken to modernise training systems in order to facilitate the development of new skills and better-qualified workers, thereby improving access to the labour market;

     (iv)       to ensure that the social and environmental impacts of a potential agreement are thoroughly assessed by means of an open debate;

     (v)        to gauge the risk that defining common social and environmental protection standards with the United States will weaken collective European preferences and exacerbate the economic and social divergences between Member States;

     (vi)       to ensure, across all chapters of the TTIP agreement, that it under no circumstances leads to the weakening, circumvention or invalidation of Member State and EU standards in the following areas: workers’ rights, working conditions, social security, social inclusion and social protection, health and safety in the workplace, professional training, professional qualifications, free movement of workers and pensioners, social dialogue, anti-discrimination in the workplace and on the employment market; furthermore, to guarantee that TTIP includes comprehensive and binding provisions on labour laws and policies at all levels of government that are in keeping with the International Labour Organisation (ILO) Core Conventions and the Decent Work Agenda; to ensure that trade or investment is not encouraged through the weakening of labour laws; where disputes arise, labour provisions must be subject to a dispute settlement mechanism, including the possibility of sanctions; in this respect ILO supervisory bodies can play a role;

     (vii)      if final elements of the TTIP agreement should endanger or stand in the way of standards in these areas, to inform Parliament’s responsible Committee on Employment and Social Affairs of this immediately so that consultation can take place and decisions be taken;

     (viii)      to reject any agreement that might pose a threat to labour standards in Europe and lead to social dumping;

     (ix)       to ensure that the dimensions of labour and social provisions are recognised, defended and fully integrated into all operational areas of the agreement so as to ensure a coherent and comprehensive approach to sustainable development in the trade agreement;

     (x)        to ensure that on the margin of the TTIP negotiations the mutually beneficial mobility package arrangement is achieved, bearing in mind that visa facilitation for European service and goods providers and enabling professionals to work in the USA by recognising their qualifications is one of the key elements in taking full advantage of the TTIP agreement;

     (xi)       to ensure that civil society can make a meaningful contribution to implementing relevant TTIP provisions; in this context implementation of and compliance with labour provisions should be subject to a monitoring process which involves the social partners and civil society in a process of social dialogue involving advisory committees, while also bearing in mind the broader dimension of Article 17(1) TEU; to ensure that civil society and the public concerned are informed and have access to all relevant negotiating texts and that Parliament and the Council have access to a consolidated negotiating text immediately after such texts have been discussed in negotiating rounds;

     (xii)      to take immediate steps to guarantee Member States’ right to legislate, fund, organise, set quality and safety standards for, manage and regulate all public services, including education, social services, health services, water supply, sewage disposal, waste disposal, social security, railways and public transport, energy, cultural and audiovisual services, etc. and to ensure the exclusion of public services (including water, health, social security systems and education) from the scope of the treaty;

     (xiii)      to ensure an explicit exclusion of public services, as referred to in Article 14 TFEU, from the scope of application of TTIP, in order to ensure that national and local authorities have the freedom to introduce, adopt, maintain or repeal any measure with regard to the commissioning, organisation, funding and provision of public services, as provided for in Article 168 TFEU (public health) and Protocol 26 (Service of General Interest) thereto; this exclusion should apply whether the services in question are organised as a monopoly, operating under exclusive rights or otherwise, and whether publicly or privately funded and/or provided; such services include health and social care services, social security systems, publicly funded education, railway and public transport, and water, gas and electricity services;

     (xiv)     to ensure that ratchet and standstill clauses do not apply to any public and social services; the full scope for the re-nationalisation and re-municipalisation of services must be safeguarded;

     (xv)      to ensure that the specific challenges faced by SMEs and micro-companies, such as non-tariff trade barriers, red tape and trade diversion effects arising from TTIP, are fully taken into account; to ensure that SMEs benefit fully from an open market by creating an economic framework that encourages exports and a favourable, competitive and sustainable business environment; to ensure that the specific challenges faced by the 87 % of all SMEs in the EU that are not involved in export but rely on domestic demand are fully taken into account;

     (xvi)     to simplify procedures and consider new mechanisms to help SMEs benefit from TTIP;

     (xvii)     to create incentives and promote the uptake of corporate social responsibility (CSR), which must complement and under no circumstances replace labour and environmental laws;

     (xviii)    to ensure that agreement on any dispute settlement mechanism regarding investment protection must take into account the results of the public consultation on investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS), be fully transparent and democratically accountable, explicitly state the Member States’ right to regulate and under no circumstances restrict or hinder legislators from passing and enforcing laws both in the area of employment and in the area of social policy for their countries; a state-to-state dispute settlement system between the EU and the US – both of which have fully functional legal systems and a sufficient level of investment protection to guarantee legal security – is another appropriate tool for addressing investment disputes; the inclusion of any form of private arbitration courts in TTIP must be ruled out;

     (xix)     to take steps to uphold a ‘positive listing’ approach in the agreement in relation to the chapter on trade in services and establishment whereby services that are to be opened up for foreign companies are explicitly specified;

     (xx)      given the Commission’s acknowledgement in its Impact Assessment report that there could be prolonged and substantial adjustment costs in the EU labour market, to ensure that there are realistic statistical projections on job losses/gains in the sectors affected and in each Member State and that these are constantly updated and published so that timely intervention can be made by the Commission to support the affected sectors, regions or Member States; to take into account external impacts and anticipate crisis scenarios in its projections; this support could be achieved through EU funding, including an adapted European Globalisation Adjustment Fund with an adequate budget;

     (xi)       to ensure that the exchange conditions are subject to strict reciprocity in order to strengthen the EU’s industrial fabric, protect SMEs, create jobs and prevent all unfair competition, in particular as regards social standards;

     (xxii)     to take steps to ensure that regulatory cooperation does not restrict the right of governments and of the European Parliament to legislate in the public interest; steps must be taken to ensure that regulatory cooperation does not lead to the weakening of labour standards, including health and safety standards; it must be ensured that labour and social standards are not treated as non-tariff barriers or technical barriers to trade; stakeholders, including social partners, should be included in the process of regulatory cooperation in a balanced representation;

     (xxiii)    to ensure that new EU rules adopted through the revision of directives on public procurement remain preserved and promoted in the framework of ongoing negotiations, particularly in terms of public market access for SMEs, the award criteria based on best value rather than lowest price, the markets for actors in the social economy, the possibility for contracting authorities to cooperate and form intercommunalities, and the thresholds below which the procurement is not subject to EU or international rules;

     (xxiv)    to ensure, in order to safeguard the European social model against competition from Anglo-Saxon American capitalism, and that collectively funded public services and social security systems are not sacrificed; TTIP must not increase the pressure on Member States to reduce public expenditure as an easy way to become economically competitive and supply investors with an attractive business climate;

     (xxv)    to ensure that governments have the opportunity to adopt socially and environmentally responsible procurement policies; procurement provisions should not prevent governments from addressing societal and environmental needs and the agreement must not restrict the ability to make social demands, as stated in the new EU directives on public procurement; in addition, public procurement policies should be in line with ILO Convention 94 regarding labour clauses in public contracts;

     (xxvi)    to take rapid steps to ensure that the issue of aggressive tax planning is regulated, such as moving companies’ head offices from the other side of the Atlantic to benefit from conditions that affect competition and have a negative impact on employment.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

1.4.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

30

18

3

Members present for the final vote

Laura Agea, Guillaume Balas, Brando Benifei, Enrique Calvet Chambon, Martina Dlabajová, Arne Gericke, Marian Harkin, Danuta Jazłowiecka, Agnes Jongerius, Rina Ronja Kari, Jan Keller, Ádám Kósa, Agnieszka Kozłowska-Rajewicz, Zdzisław Krasnodębski, Jean Lambert, Jérôme Lavrilleux, Patrick Le Hyaric, Jeroen Lenaers, Verónica Lope Fontagné, Javi López, Thomas Mann, Dominique Martin, Anthea McIntyre, Joëlle Mélin, Elisabeth Morin-Chartier, Emilian Pavel, Georgi Pirinski, Sofia Ribeiro, Maria João Rodrigues, Claude Rolin, Anne Sander, Sven Schulze, Siôn Simon, Jutta Steinruck, Romana Tomc, Yana Toom, Ulrike Trebesius, Marita Ulvskog, Renate Weber, Tatjana Ždanoka, Jana Žitňanská, Inês Cristina Zuber

Substitutes present for the final vote

Daniela Aiuto, Georges Bach, Elmar Brok, Karima Delli, Sergio Gutiérrez Prieto, Miapetra Kumpula-Natri, Joachim Schuster, Neoklis Sylikiotis, Ivo Vajgl

16.4.2015

OPINION of the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety

for the Committee on International Trade

on recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Bart Staes

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

–   having regard to the Joint Statement of 13 February 2013 by US President Barack Obama, European Commission President José Manuel Barroso and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy[27],

–   having regard to its resolution on EU trade and investment agreement negotiations with the US of 23 May 2013[28],

–   having regard to the directives for the negotiation on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership between the European Union and the United States of America of 14 June 2013[29],

–   having regard to the 2013 and 2014 Reports on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures by the US Trade Representative[30],

–   having regard to the 2013 and 2014 Reports on Technical Barriers to Trade by the US Trade Representative[31],

–   having regard to the studies by its Directorate-General for internal policies entitled ‘Legal implications of the EU-US trade and investment partnership (TTIP) for the Acquis Communautaire and the ENVI relevant sectors that could be addressed during negotiations’ of October 2013[32] and ‘ENVI relevant legislative Areas of the EU-US Trade and Investment Partnership Negotiations (TTIP)’ of November 2014[33],

–   having regard to the information note on investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) in the United States and the European Union of June 2014 by the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)[34],

–   having regard to Articles 168 and 191 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, and in particular to the precautionary principle in Article 191(2),

–   having regard to the EU integrated approach to food safety (‘farm to fork’) established in 2004[35],

–   having regard to the results of the Eurobarometer survey from November 2014 on the transatlantic trade and investment agreement,

–   having regard to the National Emission Ceilings Directive 2001/81/EC, as part of the implementation of the Thematic Strategy on Air Pollution, and taking into account the legislation for specific source categories, such as Euro 5/6 and EURO VI, which aim at reducing air pollution, which causes 400 000 premature deaths in Europe,

A. whereas trade has been a generator of growth, employment and prosperity for generations in Europe; whereas, however, trade and investment are not goals in themselves but should constitute a means to raise standards of living, improve well-being, protect and promote public health, and contribute to ensuring full employment and the sustainable use of the world’s resources in accordance with the objective of sustainable development, seeking to both protect and preserve the environment;

B.  whereas, according to the Eurobarometer survey of November 2014, in 25 of the 28 Member States a majority of European citizens are in favour of a transatlantic trade and investment agreement;

C. whereas Europe, as a continent with an ageing population, scarce raw materials, low birth rates, and a social model based on large social expenditures as a proportion of GDP, will increasingly come to rely on growth outside the EU in order to help generate prosperity domestically to support its social systems, which will come under severe pressure, principally as a result of increased life expectancy coupled with a declining working-age population;

D. whereas according to the Council Directives for the negotiation on the TTIP[36], the objective of the Agreement is to increase trade and investment between the EU and the US in order to generate new economic opportunities for the creation of jobs and growth through increased market access and greater regulatory compatibility, by eliminating unnecessary regulatory obstacles to trade and setting the path for global standards, while recognising that sustainable development is an overarching objective of the Parties, and that the Parties will not encourage trade or foreign direct investment by lowering domestic environmental, health and safety legislation and standards; whereas the European Commission[37] and President Obama[38] have stated, in public, on numerous occasions that standards will not be lowered on either side of the Atlantic;

E.  whereas the US has already concluded several other trade and investment partnership agreements with other global actors;

F.  whereas the TTIP negotiations contain three main pillars, covering a) market access, b) regulatory issues and non-tariff barriers (NTBs), and c) rules;

G. whereas the TTIP provides an opportunity to set a path for high standards in certain areas for the protection of public health, animal health and the environment on a global level;

H. whereas there are nevertheless concerns that the aim of the TTIP to reduce and eliminate existing non-tariff barriers[39] could lead to an agreement that could endanger the EU level of protection concerning public health, including food safety, animal health and the environment;

I.   whereas there are differences between the regulatory systems of the EU and the US, also in terms of the protection of public health and the environment, including food safety, consumer information and animal health, owing to different legal and political cultures reflecting differing concerns and approaches, such as different principles (e.g. the precautionary principle), value judgments, policy objectives and methods of risk analysis;

J.   whereas the EU and the US consider certain standards in these areas to be trade barriers[40];

K. whereas there is concern that the intention to adopt the TTIP and similar trade agreements has already affected Commission proposals and actions relating, for example, to food safety and climate protection (e.g. pathogen reduction treatments, labelling of meat from cloned animals and their offspring, and the implementation of the fuel quality directive);

L.  whereas there is concern that the draft provisions on regulatory cooperation on acts that have or are likely to have a significant impact on trade and investment between the EU and the US: 

     - grant the US formal rights with regard to implementing acts to be adopted pursuant to Article 291 TFEU, while the European Parliament has no right to scrutiny whatsoever with regard to implementing acts,

     - grant the US the right to enter into regulatory exchanges concerning the adoption of national legislation by Member States, including joint examination of possible means to promote regulatory compatibility,

     - could de facto make it more difficult for the EU to go beyond the lowest common denominator of international instruments owing to the commitments it has made regarding international regulatory cooperation and implementation of international instruments;

M. whereas a prerequisite for achieving greater regulatory compatibility without endangering existing and future EU health and environmental standards is to clearly distinguish between those areas where the objectives and levels of protection are similar and those where they are diverging; whereas in areas where the objectives and levels of protection are similar, common approaches or mutual recognition could be pursued; whereas in areas where the levels of protection are clearly diverging, cooperation should focus on exchange of information or upward harmonisation;

N. whereas the EU and US legislators have taken very different approaches as regards food and feed safety regulation, specifically with respect to authorisation, labelling and controls in the food and feed chain for GMOs, traceability of meat, pathogen treatments, pesticides and cloned animals; whereas the EU environmental and food safety regulations are based on the precautionary principle and the ‘farm-to-fork’ approach that establish stricter EU rules and should thus be maintained;

O. whereas the impact of a future TTIP on the EU environmental, health and food safety acquis will strongly depend on the precise provisions of the agreement; whereas under no circumstances can a trade agreement modify existing legislation in contracting countries; whereas the implementation of existing legislation as well as the adoption of future legislation must remain in the hands of democratically elected bodies respecting established procedures;

P.  whereas the EU currently has limited access to the US market in the maritime sector, and, if properly implemented, the TTIP could lead to better cooperation, greater convergence and economic benefit for European businesses;

Q. whereas, unlike more than 150 countries worldwide, the US has not ratified major international conventions on chemical substances (e.g. the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants and the Rotterdam Convention on the trade of certain hazardous chemicals), which shows that the US is isolated as regards international chemicals policy; whereas, moreover, the US refuses to implement the environmental part of the UN globally harmonised system for the classification and labelling of chemicals, which illustrates that when it comes to chemicals, there is disagreement between the US and the EU at the most basic level;

R.  whereas according to the 2014 US report on Technical Barriers to Trade, the US has raised concerns regarding REACH at every World Trade Organisation (WTO) TBT Committee meeting since 2003, intervening ‘with concerns that aspects of REACH are discriminatory, lack a legitimate rationale, and pose unnecessary obstacles to trade’, which indicates a rather fundamental opposition to REACH by the US;

S.  whereas the fundamentally different nature of the US Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), adopted in 1976, as compared with REACH, adopted in 2006, is commonly accepted; whereas for that reason, the negotiations on the TTIP do not intend to harmonise the two systems; whereas, however, the negotiations concern future cooperation concerning the implementation of REACH; whereas, given the strongly diverging views on risk governance of chemicals and the fundamental and sustained opposition of the US to REACH, there are no benefits in cooperating on the implementation of these diverging laws, all the more since implementation is far from being a merely technical or uncontroversial exercise;

T.  whereas there are major differences in the regulatory systems of the US and the EU with regard to plant protection products:

     - 82 active substances are banned in the EU, but allowed in the US,

     - the EU deliberately adopted hazard-based cut-off criteria to phase out the use of active substances that are carcinogenic, mutagenic, toxic to reproduction, persistent and toxic and bioaccumulative, or endocrine disrupters, in Regulation (EC) No 1107/2009; the US insists on a risk-based approach, based on numerous assumptions and extrapolations, thus tolerating the use of such substances of very high concern,

     - there is a general pattern of lower amounts of pesticide residues allowed in food in the EU as compared with the US;

U. whereas the draft EU negotiation text on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures tabled for the round of 29 September-3 October 2014 suggests obliging Parties to apply tolerances and maximum residue levels set by the Codex Alimentarius Commission within 12 months after their adoption, unless the importing Party had signalled a reservation at the Codex Alimentarius Commission meeting; whereas there is a general pattern of lower amounts of pesticide residues allowed in food in the EU as compared with the Codex Alimentarius Commission; whereas over the last four years, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has filed a reservation in 31-57 % of all cases, which highlights the large degree of disagreement by EFSA with the Codex standards; whereas EFSA currently feels free to express its reservations, within the limits possible; whereas once the TTIP has been adopted, however, it is highly questionable whether EFSA will be allowed politically to continue to do so, given that the draft text intends to commit the EU and the US to collaborate in the international standard setting bodies ‘with a view to reaching mutually satisfactory outcomes’, which could discourage EFSA from filing reservations to the Codex Alimentarius Commission in the future and thus lead to weaker standards in the EU;

V. whereas the import into the EU of poultry meat treated with antimicrobial solutions containing sodium hypochlorite should be prevented;

W. whereas the almost ratified Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) has already shown the opportunities for trade in sensitive agricultural areas such as beef, whilst adhering strictly to European sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) standards and methods[41];

X. whereas the 2014 US TBT report refers to the concerns of the US chemical and crop protection industry with regard to the hazard-based cut-off criteria to be developed for endocrine disrupters, and stated that the US raised concerns about DG Environment’s proposal bilaterally as well as during the meetings of the WTO TBT and SPS Committees; whereas the Commission decided to launch an impact assessment on the development of criteria for endocrine disrupters in July 2013; whereas this decision is the main reason for the Commission’s failure to adopt criteria by the 4-year deadline of December 2013; whereas, while the US welcomed the Commission’s decision, both the Council and Parliament decided to support Sweden in its court action to challenge the Commission’s failure, illustrating fundamentally different views as to the nature of regulatory provisions in EU law;

Y. whereas there are links between unhealthy foods and diet-related non-communicable diseases (NCDs); whereas according to the UN Special Rapporteur on the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, global trade, increased foreign direct investment (FDI) in the food sector and the pervasive marketing of unhealthy foods have increased the consumption of unhealthy foods[42]; whereas the Special Rapporteur concluded his report with a set of recommendations, aimed at States and the food industry, to take concrete steps to reduce the production and consumption of unhealthy foods and increase the availability and affordability of healthier food alternatives;

Z.  whereas according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) global action plan for the prevention and control of non-communicable diseases 2013-2020[43], the cumulative output loss resulting from the four major non-communicable diseases together with mental disorders is estimated to be USD 47 trillion; whereas according to the WHO, this loss represents 75 % of global GDP in 2010 (USD 63 trillion); whereas according to the WHO, continuing ‘business as usual’ with regard to non-communicable diseases will result in loss of productivity and an escalation of health care costs in all countries;

AA.     whereas the Director-General of the WHO stated at the 8th Global Conference on Health Promotion in June 2013 that ‘efforts to prevent non-communicable diseases go against the business interests of powerful economic operators’[44];

AB.     whereas the TTIP, similarly to the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, could constrain the ability of the EU and the Member States to protect nutrition policy from the influence of vested interests, reduce the range of interventions available to actively discourage consumption of less healthy food (and to promote healthy food), including via public procurement policies, and limit the EU and the Member States’ capacity to implement these interventions[45];

AC.     whereas the US federal law on animal welfare is well below the level of EU regulation, including the lack of legislation on welfare standards for farmed animals before the point of slaughter; whereas, unfortunately, animal welfare is not considered by the Commission to be a trade concern in the same way as food safety or animal health for the purposes of import requirements;

AD.     whereas the EU and the US have a very different regulatory approach, average emission starting point and ambition level as regards reducing the average greenhouse gas emissions of light duty vehicles; whereas this area should therefore not be subject to mutual recognition;

AE.     whereas the EU and US legislators and regulators have taken a very different approach to tackling greenhouse gas emissions and addressing climate change; whereas countering the significant threats posed by climate change and maintaining the integrity of adopted climate policy should take priority over trade promotion;

AF.     whereas it is essential for the TTIP to internalise the external climate, health and environmental costs of aviation, shipping and road freight in order to ensure sustainability of global trade in goods; whereas in the absence of effective international action to internalise these costs, the EU should introduce and implement regional non-discriminatory measures to address such externalities;

AG.     whereas the aim of sustainable development provisions in the TTIP should be to ensure that trade and environmental policies are mutually supportive, to promote the optimal use of resources in accordance with the objective of sustainable development, and to strengthen environmental cooperation and collaboration;

AH.     whereas in many areas, such as climate and emissions control policies, the US has lower regulatory standards than the EU, which results in higher production and regulatory compliance costs in the EU than in the US and hence the risk of carbon and emissions leakage;

AI. whereas a reduction of tariffs on those energy-sensitive goods where EU regulatory, environment and climate compliance cost is higher than in the US may result in the competitiveness of EU production decreasing in comparison with US imports that do not bear such costs;

AJ. whereas universal health systems are part of the European social model and Member States have the competence for the management and organisation of health services and medical care;

AK.    whereas Regulation (EU) No 536/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council on clinical trials on medicinal products for human use requires a summary of the results of all clinical trials to be published on a publically accessible database one year after the trial has been completed, and for a full clinical study report to be published once the authorisation process has been completed or the applicant has withdrawn the request for marketing authorisation; whereas US law does not require the same level of transparency;

AL.     whereas it is estimated that pharmaceutical costs represent 1.5 % of European GDP, therefore any increase in intellectual property protection arising from the TTIP might have a negative impact on healthcare costs;

AM.    whereas, according to UNCTAD, environmental and health measures are among the governmental measures that have been challenged most frequently in ISDS cases;

AN.    whereas the Commission decided on 25 November 2014 to increase the transparency of the TTIP negotiations[46]; whereas this decision is welcome; whereas on 7 January 2015, the European Ombudsman also welcomed the progress made by the Commission on making the TTIP negotiations more transparent – however, she also made several recommendations for further improvement[47]; whereas access to US text proposals would also increase transparency;

1.  Calls on the Commission to follow the general principles and objectives of the Council Directives for the negotiation on the TTIP;

2.  Calls on the Commission to ensure that the EU’s policies and principles on protecting and improving the quality of public health, animal health and the environment are upheld throughout the negotiations, both de jure and de facto, and fully reflected in the final TTIP agreement;

3.  Calls on the Commission to guarantee that the TTIP will be without prejudice to the right, the abilities and the legislative procedures of the EU and the Member States to adopt, implement and enforce, in accordance with their respective competences, existing and future measures necessary to pursue legitimate public policy objectives such as public health, animal health and environment protection in a non-discriminatory manner;

4.  Calls on the Commission to ensure that any agreement, be it via the horizontal chapter on regulatory cooperation or any sectoral provisions, does not lead to a lowering of existing environmental, health and food safety standards, and to ensure similarly that it will not affect standards that have yet to be set in areas where the legislation or the standards are very different in the US as compared with the EU, such as, for example, the implementation of existing (framework) legislation (e.g. REACH), or the adoption of new laws (e.g. cloning), or future definitions affecting the level of protection (e.g. endocrine disrupting chemicals);

5.  Calls on the Commission to limit regulatory cooperation to clearly specified sectorial areas where the US and the EU have similar levels of protection, or where there are reasonable grounds to believe, despite diverging levels of protection, that upward harmonisation could be achieved, or is at least worth an attempt; calls on the Commission to ensure that any provisions on regulatory cooperation in the TTIP do not set a procedural requirement for the adoption of Union acts concerned by it nor give rise to enforceable rights in that regard;

6.  Calls on the Commission to ensure that all legislators and all stakeholders concerned by regulatory cooperation are involved in any body that may be created to explore future regulatory cooperation;

7.  Calls on the Commission to ensure that there are no trade-offs between economic goals and public health, food safety, animal welfare and the environment[48]; calls on the Commission to recognise that where the EU and the US have very different rules, there will be no agreement, such as on public healthcare services, GMOs, the use of hormones in the bovine sector, REACH and its implementation, and the cloning of animals for farming purposes, and therefore not to negotiate on these issues;

8.  Calls on the Commission to consider the following regulatory measures or standards as fundamental and which must not be compromised:

     - non-approvals of active substances and EU maximum residue levels for pesticides,

     - regulatory measures with regard to endocrine disrupters,

     - organisational autonomy in the area of water supply and sanitation,

     - the EU’s integrated approach to food safety, including animal welfare provisions,

     - application of EU legislation on food information to consumers,

     - the implementation of Regulation (EU) No 536/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council on clinical trials on medicinal products for human use, and in particular the requirement for full clinical study reports of all clinical trials to be published on a publically accessible database once the authorisation process has been completed,

     - the competence of Member States with regard to the organisation of health systems, including the pricing and reimbursement of medicinal products as well as the access to medicines,

     - the restrictions of ingredients in cosmetic products and the prohibition of animal testing with regard to cosmetic ingredients and final products,

     - the EU’s policies on renewable energy, green technology, and the achievement of EU climate and energy targets,

     - measures to reduce the dependence on fossil fuels, and EU and/or international processes leading to decarbonisation of transport,

     - eco-design requirements for energy-using products;

9.  Calls on the Commission to exclude public and social services from all provisions of the agreement; insists, moreover, that there must be no negative lists, hybrid approaches or ‘ratchet clauses’;

10. Calls on the Commission to ensure that a common approach, regulatory cooperation or mutual recognition, as appropriate, is reached in the following areas, provided the level of EU standards is not compromised:

     - recognition and protection of all European protected designations of origin (PDOs) and protected geographical origins (PGOs) by the US, and ending the misleading use of geographical indications (GIs) in the US,

     - integrated pest management in order to avoid animal and plant pests,

     - reduction of the use of antibiotics in livestock farming, ensuring the effectiveness of antibiotics for both humans and animals,

     - animal identification systems, and compatible traceability provisions to ensure that processed and unprocessed foods containing products of animal origin can be traced throughout the entire food chain,

     - alternative methods to animal testing,

     - inspections related to the production of pharmaceutical products and medical devices,

     - measures to combat obesity, in particular in children,

     - green public procurement,

     - harmonised implementation of the UNECE 1958 Agreement concerning the Adoption of Uniform Technical Prescriptions and the 1998 Agreement on UN Global Technical Regulations,

     - uniform introduction of an improved test cycle in both the EU and the US, based on the Worldwide Harmonised Light Vehicles Test Procedures; market surveillance, conformity of production certification and in-use compliance tests, and transparency of the results,

     - introduction of a global vehicle classification system for light and heavy-duty vehicles,

     - substitution of cyanide in mining;

11. Calls on the Commission to pursue the integration of the existing EU and US early warning systems in the food sector and the improvement of product traceability in the transatlantic trade chain in order to be able to take more rapid action to protect health in the event of a food scare;

12. Calls on the Commission to ensure that the TBT Chapter in the TTIP does not restrict the EU’s and its Member States’ options to adopt measures with the aim of reducing consumption of certain products such as tobacco, foods high in fat, salt and sugar, and harmful use of alcohol;

13. Calls on the Commission to encourage the US side to lift the ban on beef imports from the EU;

14. Calls on the Commission to set up a formal dialogue on animal welfare with the US regulators; calls on the Commission to defend animal welfare provisions so as to achieve harmonisation at the highest level, backed up with the necessary enforcement mechanisms;

15. Calls on the Commission in the context of the chapter on trade and sustainable development to require from the US full compliance with multilateral environmental agreements, such as, inter alia, the Montreal Protocol (ozone), the Basel Convention (trans-boundary shipments of hazardous waste), the Stockholm Convention (persistent organic pollutants), the Rotterdam Convention (trade in hazardous chemicals and pesticides), the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, the Convention on Biological Diversity, and the Kyoto Protocol, before agreeing to regulatory cooperation on these matters;

16. Calls on the Commission to avoid ambiguities, in order to prevent expansive interpretation by arbitration tribunals, by ensuring that the essential terms used in the agreement are clearly defined;

17. Calls on the Commission to oppose the inclusion of ISDS in the TTIP as, on the one hand, this mechanism risks fundamentally undermining the sovereign rights of the EU, its Member States and regional and local authorities to adopt regulations on public health, food safety and the environment, and, on the other hand, it should be up to the courts of the EU and/or of the Member States providing effective legal protection based on democratic legitimacy to decide all expectable dispute cases competently, efficiently and in a cost-saving manner;

18. Calls on the Commission, within the TTIP negotiations, to end fuel tax exemptions for commercial aviation in line with the G20 commitments to phase out fossil fuel subsidies;

19. Calls on the Commission to ensure that Parliament is kept fully informed of the negotiating process;

20. Calls on the Commission to continue increasing transparency in the negotiations, in line with the recommendations by the European Ombudsman of 7 January 2015;

21. Calls on the Commission to urge the US to mirror the EU’s action to increase transparency;

22. Calls on the Commission to ensure that the Trade Sustainability Impact Assessment (SIA) on the TTIP agreement is comprehensive, and updated as soon as a text is consolidated and prior to finalising it, with clear involvement of stakeholders and civil society; considers that the SIA should also thoroughly review and assess any proposed provisions with a view to their potential impact on the regulatory acquis and the EU’s freedom to pursue legitimate public policy objectives in the future, and whether the purported aim could be achieved equally well through other means.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

14.4.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

59

8

2

Members present for the final vote

Margrete Auken, Pilar Ayuso, Zoltán Balczó, Catherine Bearder, Ivo Belet, Biljana Borzan, Nessa Childers, Mireille D’Ornano, Miriam Dalli, Seb Dance, Angélique Delahaye, Jørn Dohrmann, Ian Duncan, Stefan Eck, Eleonora Evi, José Inácio Faria, Francesc Gambús, Iratxe García Pérez, Elisabetta Gardini, Gerben-Jan Gerbrandy, Jens Gieseke, Julie Girling, Sylvie Goddyn, Matthias Groote, Françoise Grossetête, Andrzej Grzyb, Martin Häusling, Anneli Jäätteenmäki, Benedek Jávor, Josu Juaristi Abaunz, Karin Kadenbach, Kateřina Konečná, Giovanni La Via, Peter Liese, Norbert Lins, Valentinas Mazuronis, Susanne Melior, Miroslav Mikolášik, Gilles Pargneaux, Marit Paulsen, Piernicola Pedicini, Bolesław G. Piecha, Pavel Poc, Annie Schreijer-Pierik, Davor Škrlec, Dubravka Šuica, Tibor Szanyi, Nils Torvalds, Glenis Willmott, Jadwiga Wiśniewska, Damiano Zoffoli

Substitutes present for the final vote

Paul Brannen, Renata Briano, Nicola Caputo, Mark Demesmaeker, Herbert Dorfmann, Eleonora Forenza, Esther Herranz García, Peter Jahr, Joëlle Mélin, József Nagy, Younous Omarjee, Sirpa Pietikäinen, Gabriele Preuß, Christel Schaldemose, Bart Staes, Kay Swinburne, Tom Vandenkendelaere

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Ignazio Corrao

25.3.2015

OPINION of the Committee on Industry, Research and Energy

for the Committee on International Trade

on recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Jerzy Buzek

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on Industry, Research and Energy calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

1.  Underlines the importance of a transatlantic market for EU and US citizens and industries; stresses that the main outcome of the negotiations should lead to a deep, comprehensive, ambitious, high-standard free-trade and investment agreement that respects and promotes European values, stimulates sustainable growth, scientific cooperation, innovation and the creation of high-quality jobs and contributes to the wellbeing of European citizens by placing their interests at the heart of the TTIP trade deal; notes that TTIP aims at eliminating tariffs, duties and quotas, but also at regulatory cooperation and high joint standard setting on the global market; notes that efforts on tariff elimination and regulatory harmonisation must be balanced; calls on the Commission to strengthen the process of engaging with citizens and all relevant stakeholders with the aim of accommodating their opinions where possible, of conducting the negotiations as transparently as possible and of publishing all possible negotiating texts and documents, including documents relating to any possible energy and SME chapter, thereby providing maximum levels of transparency for European citizens;

2.  Calls on the Commission to retain the objective of dedicating a specific chapter to energy, including industrial raw materials, in the TTIP with the aim of creating a competitive, transparent and non-discriminatory market which could significantly increase the EU’s energy security, improve diversification of energy sources and lead to lower energy prices; highlights in this regard the importance of renewable energy sources and energy efficiency in increasing energy security; emphasises that this specific chapter must integrate clear guarantees that the EU’s environmental standards and climate action goals must not be undermined and that the EU must retain the freedom to act independently in setting future standards and goals;

3.  Recalls that the European Parliament has to give its consent to this TTIP agreement, without which it cannot enter into force;

4.  Emphasises the need for the EU to establish diverse and reliable energy supply sources; requests in this regard that the Commission ensure a policy of free trade and promote investment with respect to fuels, including LNG and crude oil, while retaining the EU´s right to categorise fuels according to their lifecycle CO2 impact and keeping in mind the EU’s own climate goals;

5.  Calls on the Commission to look beyond export limitations and to work where appropriate on transatlantic harmonisation and convergence of high mutual standards and regulations that define the principles of public support for different energy sources, so as to contain the risk of any distortion of competition, such as for example the definition of co-generation with the use of biomass; encourages the Commission to explore ways to enhance cooperation on energy research, development and innovations and on promotion of cleaner technology;

6.  Points to the current differentials between the USA and the EU not only in energy prices and access to raw materials, but also in per capita CO2 emissions, which result in an unequal playing field in terms of competitiveness and environmental protection; calls on the Commission, therefore, to include a bilateral safeguard clause to provide energy-intensive and carbon-leakage sectors in the EU, including the chemicals, raw materials and steel industries, with appropriate measures for maintaining current customs tariff rates over an adequate fixed transition period after the entry into force of the TTIP with a mandatory review clause; believes that both US and EU companies should be encouraged to increase their resource and energy efficiency; calls on the Commission to take due account of the need to promote the manufacturing industry as a driving force for the reindustrialisation of Europe;

7.  Calls on the Commission to include so-called ‘green services,’ such as the construction, installation, repair and management of environmental goods, in the ongoing negotiations with our transatlantic partners; notes that the European Union is a world leader in the import and export of green goods and services, despite which many barriers remain for European green service providers; notes that the sector has considerable economic potential for the European Union;

8.  Highlights the processes and standards set out under the EU energy labelling and eco-design directives, which should not be compromised on;

9.  Stresses the considerable potential benefits of the TTIP for SMEs; calls on the Commission to ensure that the priorities and concerns of SMEs are taken fully into account in the TTIP negotiations in accordance with the ‘Think Small First’ principle e.g. by means of comprehensive impact assessments, targeted public consultations and involvement of the European SME representatives; recommends that the Commission seek the establishment of a one-stop information system for SMEs and dedicate a specific chapter to SMEs, in which the reduction of administrative burdens should be considered in compliance with the relevant regulatory frameworks; calls on the Commission to provide for the protection and enhancement of pro-SME policies and support schemes;

10. Calls on the Commission to provide for user-friendly rules of origin (RoO) that can be easily applied by EU exporters and to minimise unnecessary obstacles to trade and red-tape created by ROO, especially for SMEs;

11. Recalls that in comparison with the EU public procurement market, the US market remains extremely closed to foreign companies; requests that the Commission facilitate reciprocity and more active participation of EU firms, including SMEs, in US public procurement at all government levels, as this can contribute to stimulating private-sector innovation and to the emergence of new, high-growth, innovative companies and sectors; stresses that this possibility must not undermine the capacity of EU governments to maintain their public services;

12. Notes that different regulatory approaches in the European Union and the US are costly for industries on both sides of the Atlantic; believes that there are significant efficiency gains to be tapped by aligning these approaches while still allowing authorities in the European Union and in the Unites States to maintain and achieve high quality standards and safety for their citizens;

13. Expects the Commission to address in the negotiations the issue of the ‘Buy American’, ‘Jones’ and ‘Domestic Content’ Acts, which in practice significantly handicap EU companies in their access to the US market, especially in the dredging and engineering sector;

14. Reminds the Commission about the importance of maintaining the current high levels of safety, security, personal data protection and internet openness, neutrality and independence, while welcoming the potential benefits of market access and regulatory alignment and mutual recognition, including the establishment of common global principles in standards and technical specifications in the area of ICT;

15. Calls for open competition in and development of the digital economy, which is by nature global but has its main bases in the EU and the USA; emphasises that the digital economy must be central to the transatlantic market, with leverage in the global economy and in opening up global markets further;

16. Reminds the Commission, regarding information society services and telecommunications services, that it is of particular importance that the TTIP ensure a level playing field with equal and transparent access based on reciprocity for EU service companies to the US market and with an obligation on US service providers to respect and comply with all relevant industry and product safety standards and consumer rights when providing services in Europe or to European customers;

17. Calls on the Commission, with a view to preventing the wholesale relocation of EU manufacturing sectors and mass job losses in the Member States, to conduct a comparative analysis of the competitiveness of EU manufacturing sectors and their counterparts in the United States;

18. Requests that the chapter on intellectual property rights also provide for enhanced protection and recognition of European Geographical Indications;

19. Calls on the Commission to guarantee the validity of all Geographic Indicators (GIs) as part of the TTIP agreement, including for non-agrarian products; reminds the Commission of the economically vital higher value that GI status brings.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

24.3.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

49

14

0

Members present for the final vote

Bendt Bendtsen, Reinhard Bütikofer, Jerzy Buzek, Pilar del Castillo Vera, Christian Ehler, Fredrick Federley, Ashley Fox, Adam Gierek, Juan Carlos Girauta Vidal, Theresa Griffin, Marek Józef Gróbarczyk, András Gyürk, Roger Helmer, Eva Kaili, Barbara Kappel, Krišjānis Kariņš, Seán Kelly, Jeppe Kofod, Miapetra Kumpula-Natri, Janusz Lewandowski, Ernest Maragall, Edouard Martin, Nadine Morano, Dan Nica, Angelika Niebler, Miroslav Poche, Miloslav Ransdorf, Michel Reimon, Herbert Reul, Paul Rübig, Algirdas Saudargas, Jean-Luc Schaffhauser, Neoklis Sylikiotis, Dario Tamburrano, Patrizia Toia, Evžen Tošenovský, Claude Turmes, Miguel Urbán Crespo, Vladimir Urutchev, Adina-Ioana Vălean, Kathleen Van Brempt, Henna Virkkunen, Martina Werner, Hermann Winkler, Flavio Zanonato, Carlos Zorrinho

Substitutes present for the final vote

Pervenche Berès, Simona Bonafè, Cornelia Ernst, Yannick Jadot, Werner Langen, Marian-Jean Marinescu, Morten Messerschmidt, Dominique Riquet, Inmaculada Rodríguez-Piñero Fernández, Anne Sander, Paul Tang, Pavel Telička, Anneleen Van Bossuyt, Cora van Nieuwenhuizen

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Isabella Adinolfi, Ignazio Corrao, Antanas Guoga

25.3.2015

OPINION of the Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection

for the Committee on International Trade

on the recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Dita Charanzová

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

Addresses, in the context of the ongoing negotiations on TTIP, the following recommendations to the Commission:

(a) regarding political priorities

i.   to ensure that the main outcome of the negotiations is an ambitious and comprehensive agreement, bringing significant new market access opportunities for EU companies, particularly SMEs, and benefits for citizens, consumers and workers while preserving the European model of a highly competitive social market economy;

ii.   to ensure that the Agreement not only cuts down barriers but also aims to promote and safeguard the European high level of consumer protection enshrined in the TFEU, in particular with regard to information, and to keep in mind that in most sectors EU and US standards and regulatory environments ensure this high level; to note therefore that approximating our regulations must serve to establish high-quality standards and laws which could form a new global benchmark and de facto international standards;

iii.  to maintain the highest possible level of transparency of the negotiations, including access to the negotiating texts, and consultation with civil society throughout the process;

(b) regarding full and transparent access for EU service providers – no barriers to mobility of professionals

i.   to insist, while safeguarding the freedom of EU Member States in providing, commissioning and funding public services in compliance with the Treaties, that EU service providers must have full market access to liberalised services in the US under transparent, reciprocal and fair rules at both federal and sub-federal levels and on an equal footing with local service providers;

ii.   to ensure that the Agreement does not endanger the high quality of EU public services and to use the same safeguarding measures and definitions found in other free trade agreements (FTAs), such as the CETA, to protect them, particularly in the case of publicly financed health, education, social services, water production, distribution and treatment, measures of local governments and audio-visual;

iii.  to ensure mutual recognition of professional qualifications between the Parties, notably via the creation of a legal framework with federal states that have regulatory powers in this domain, and to promote mobility across the Atlantic through visa facilitation for professionals from all the EU Member States in sectors covered by the Agreement;

iv.  to promote, in parallel with the negotiations, entry by the Parties into talks aimed at an additional agreement lifting work permit requirements, so as to create maximum mobility of workers between the Parties;

(c) regarding fair and transparent procurement at all levels

i.   to take an ambitious approach to the chapter on public procurement and to ensure that European economic operators, particularly SMEs, have the ability to participate, in the US market on a non-discriminatory basis at any level of government; to ensure reciprocal and transparent access in order to counterbalance the existing asymmetric situation and to examine the possibility of EU companies being granted exemptions from national and local purchasing clauses in federal, and where possible, state legislation;

ii.   to ensure that the new public procurement and concession directives are complied with in the negotiations, in particular as regards the definition of public-public cooperation, exclusions, SMEs access and the use of the MEAT criteria;

iii.  to clarify that the right to decide on the form of service provision remains unaffected and that the ratchet clause contained in the services chapter cannot therefore be applied to services awarded by the contracting authority to a private third party by means of a public contract and provided after the end of the contract by that authority as proprietary or in-house transactions;

iv.  to build on the outcome of the Government Procurement Agreement (GPA) in terms of coverage, rules and disciplines and that it simplifies and streamlines procedures while providing for increased transparency;

v.  with regard to the fact that public procurement represents a substantial part of the EU’s and other trading partners’ economies and therefore is a key economic interest for the EU, to underline that it must be part of any final comprehensive agreement;

(d) regarding transatlantic standards as global standards

i.   to stress that, while safeguarding the protection achieved by EU standards and technical regulations, the Agreement should go beyond the WTO Technical Barriers to Trade Agreement in areas such as conformity assessment, technical requirements and standards, as well as providing for more transparency in the preparation, adoption and application of technical regulations and standards;

ii.   to this end, to ensure that European companies are able to consult one US information point that can provide information about standards across all sectors; to firmly defend the work of the EU in standardisation and to promote its principles, namely coherence, transparency, openness, consensus, voluntary application, independence from special interests and efficiency;

iii.  to set up an ambitious, transparent and effective cooperation and dialogue mechanism aimed at creating common standards where possible, and to ensure that there is no unintended divergence in future standards in key sectors covered by the Agreement with the belief that such standards, especially in innovative fields, should be agreed and promoted in all international fora; to take account of the challenges that arise from aligning the differently structured and motivated US standardisation system with the European mechanism;

iv.  to emphasise that internationally agreed ISO and IEC standards, where existing and up to date, should be adopted by the US and the EU, for example in the electronic devices sector;

(e) regarding making technical barriers to transatlantic trade history

i.   to aim to continue to guarantee a high level of product safety within the Union while eliminate unnecessary duplication of testing that causes a waste of resources, in particular on low-risk products; to ensure the recognition by the US of self-declaration of conformity on products, where allowed by EU law;

ii.   to support, with complete respect for regulatory autonomy, the establishment of a mandatory structural dialogue, sharing of best regulatory practices and cooperation between regulators in the sectors covered by the Agreement; to stress that this should involve early warning mechanisms and exchanges at the time of preparation of regulations; to encourage improved regulatory cooperation in other sectors and to promote the EU market surveillance system with a view to ensuring high consumer protection standards;

iii.  to endeavour to ensure that regulatory cooperation does not increase the administrative burden while keeping in mind that regulatory divergences are a central non-tariff barrier (NTB) to trade, in particular in the engineering sector, comprising electrical and mechanical machinery, appliances and equipment, and that regulators should explore ways to promote compatibility and regulatory symmetry, such as mutual recognition, harmonisation or alignment of requirements;

iv.  to insist on the fact that the Agreement is to be without prejudice to the right to regulate in accordance with the level of health safety, consumer, labour and environmental protection and cultural diversity that each side deems appropriate; in this context, to insist on the importance of the precautionary principle as set out in Article 191 of the TFEU; to emphasise that regulatory cooperation must be transparent and that the European Parliament should contribute to the work of future institutions;

v.  to remember that the recognition of equivalence of the greatest possible number of vehicle safety regulations would be one of the most important achievements of the Agreement and that this will require verifying that the EU and US regulations provide for a similar level of protection without lowering the level of protection in the EU; to stress that this must be a step towards full regulatory convergence in the sector; to point out that, nonetheless, especially in the area of automotive safety, there are many differences between US and EU products, and to urge the strengthening of EU-US cooperation in the framework of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE), especially regarding new technologies, as well as in other international standard-setting fora;

(f) regarding customs and trade facilitation, in particular for SMEs

i.   given that SMEs are disproportionately affected by NTBs, which the Agreement must seek to reduce or eliminate completely, to urge that a coherent framework, including the presence of a specific chapter for SMEs in the Agreement, be established to allow SMEs to raise NTB issues with the appropriate authorities;

ii.   to ensure that the Agreement makes it easier for SMEs to participate in transatlantic trade and reduce costs, by modernising, digitising, simplifying and streamlining procedures, by eliminating double certification requirements and by raising the de minimis threshold for customs duties and non-randomised controls;

iii.  to strongly support the idea of creating, along the lines of that in the EU, a free US online helpdesk for SMEs where smaller firms can find all the information they need to export to, import from or invest in the US, including on customs duties, on taxes, on regulations, on customs procedures and on market opportunities;

iv.  to address customs issues that go beyond the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) rules and stress that, in order to achieve real administrative burden removal, there is a need to work towards a minimum degree of regulatory alignment on customs and border-related policies and practices;

(g) regarding clear rules of origin

i.   to establish common rules to define the origin of products, which should be clear and easily applicable for business, and to consider current and future trends in production, as well as future possible cumulation with countries with which the Parties have FTAs;

ii.   to guarantee that the Agreement includes provisions preventing the illegitimate use of EU denominations of geographical indications, which would mislead consumers, and to safeguard these schemes, which have contributed substantially to consumer protection and the provision of clear and succinct information regarding product origin; to view the negotiations as an opportunity to move towards high common standards for compulsory origin marking of products that will afford consumers genuine guarantees and create a level playing field for economic operators with regard to access to the two markets.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

24.3.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

20

18

1

Members present for the final vote

Dita Charanzová, Carlos Coelho, Sergio Gaetano Cofferati, Lara Comi, Daniel Dalton, Nicola Danti, Pascal Durand, Vicky Ford, Ildikó Gáll-Pelcz, Evelyne Gebhardt, Maria Grapini, Antanas Guoga, Sergio Gutiérrez Prieto, Liisa Jaakonsaari, Antonio López-Istúriz White, Jiří Maštálka, Marlene Mizzi, Jiří Pospíšil, Virginie Rozière, Christel Schaldemose, Andreas Schwab, Olga Sehnalová, Igor Šoltes, Ivan Štefanec, Catherine Stihler, Róża Gräfin von Thun und Hohenstein, Mylène Troszczynski, Anneleen Van Bossuyt, Marco Zullo

Substitutes present for the final vote

Emma McClarkin, Roberta Metsola, Franz Obermayr, Adam Szejnfeld, Ulrike Trebesius, Sabine Verheyen, Inês Cristina Zuber

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Jonathan Arnott, Philippe De Backer, Andrey Novakov

16.4.2015

OPINION of the Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development

for the Committee on International Trade

on Recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteurs: Paolo De Castro, James Nicholson

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

A. whereas the EU agricultural sector is a very sensitive and essential part of the TTIP negotiations and stands to benefit from new or increased market access opportunities;

B.  whereas a major barrier to agri-food trade between the EU and the US, and one which makes trade in certain items impossible, is the lack of common standards in this area;

C. whereas the consequences of the Russian embargo have clearly demonstrated the continuous geopolitical relevance of agriculture, the importance of having access to a range of different agricultural markets and the need for strong and strategic trade partnerships with reliable trade partners;

D. whereas trade negotiations with the US are a major opportunity to improve US access to certain EU export products, such as fruit and vegetables, wine, and certain products with high added value;

E.  whereas the TTIP is an opportunity to ease reciprocal regulatory burdens that unnecessarily hamper trade, by providing more and transparent information such as the details that should be included on a label, to clarify administrative and customs procedures and to align and simplify regulatory regimes where feasible;

F.  whereas it is important for European agriculture to secure a mutually beneficial trade deal with the US in order to advance Europe’s position as a key player on the global market without jeopardising the current quality standards of European agricultural products and future improvement of those standards, while preserving the European agricultural model and ensuring its economic and social viability;

G. whereas the TTIP is an opportunity to set high standards globally and to supplement standards on both continents, especially at times when new economic actors that do not share the EU or US commitment to rule-based trade, high levels of consumer protection, environmental standards and animal welfare are gaining scale;

H. whereas the Commission has given assurances that respect for European food safety, human, plant and animal health, animal welfare, and environmental and consumer protection standards will be a fundamental and uncompromisable tenet of the negotiations for European agriculture and will confirm and strengthen the EU standards within an open, fair, modern and global trade policy system;

I.   whereas the main obstacles to EU-US trade in agricultural and food products lie in the behind-the-border issues of internal regulation and non-tariff barriers;

J.   whereas TTIP negotiations should give priority to consumer interests;

K. whereas the harmonisation of EU and US rules must not under any circumstances jeopardise consumer health or lower the quality standards that must be met by US products placed on the European market;

L.  whereas geographical indications are independent intellectual property rights and not a species of brand;

M. whereas, thanks to advances in research, the development of ex-ante assessments of the risks related to the harmfulness of food can be supported by using advanced computational methods based on the analysis of large volumes of data and backed up by high-performance computing structures that are able to improve the application of the precautionary principle;

1.  Calls on the Commission to:

a. ensure that any deal reached is global and balanced and covers all of the sectors coming under the TTIP, bearing in mind that agriculture must not be used as a bargaining chip in efforts to secure access to the US market for other sectors and that agriculture is a highly strategic political issue on which food security and the way of life of all Europeans depend;

b. prioritise an ambitious and balanced result of the negotiations for agriculture, a sector whose key components (market access, geographical indications and sanitary and phytosanitary measures) should be tackled early, on the basis of a detailed map of all relevant US barriers, and in parallel in the negotiation process, whilst maintaining food safety standards and consumer protection, in order to give Parliament sufficient time and clarity to discuss and evaluate this chapter with stakeholders, European citizens, civil society and social partners, focusing in particular on farmers and small family holdings;

c. establish a modern and improved Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) mechanism in the TTIP, that does not undermine the sovereign rights of the EU, the Member States, and the regional and local authorities, but provides a fair opportunity for foreign investors to seek and achieve redress of grievances;

d. firmly commit to the strict preservation of current and future standards on food safety and human health, plant health and crop and environmental protection, consumer protection and animal health and welfare, as defined under EU legislation; ensure that the enhancement of these standards is in no way hampered in the future, that EU fundamental values such as the precautionary principle and sustainable farming are not undermined, and that EU citizens can continue to have confidence in the traceability and labelling of products on the EU market ; and outline specific measures to uphold the precautionary principle in negotiations;

e. ensure, therefore, that the competent EU authorities are involved in the control and verification of establishments, facilities and products eligible for exports to the EU with respect to the sanitary or phytosanitary requirement applicable in the US, and expresses concerns regarding the Commission’s textual proposal to the US in this respect, bearing in mind that, in prior EU trade agreements, the EU retained the ability to audit and verify the control programme of other parties to the agreements and calling on the Commission to maintain this approach;

f.  make every effort to ensure that agricultural imports are allowed into the EU only if they have been produced in a manner consistent with European consumer protection, animal welfare and environmental protection standards and minimum social standards;

g. bear in mind that the TTIP negotiations cannot in themselves change the implementation of or proposals for legislation in any area, including European food safety, SPS standards, animal welfare and environmental measures;

h. ensure a positive and ambitious final outcome of the negotiations for agriculture, reflecting both the offensive and defensive interests of the EU agricultural sector concerning the abolition or reduction of both tariff and non-tariff barriers, including in particular sanitary and phytosanitary standards and procedures, securing a strong position for high-quality European products so that EU producers make genuine gains in terms of access to the US market, and consider that measures to protect consumers and their health or maintain food safety should not be regarded as non-tariff barriers;

i.  encourage exchanges of know-how between both sides regarding food safety and security;

j.  negotiate a flexible scheme for plant health checks on European exports that upholds safety standards without harming European exports to the US market and thereby making for an increase in exports to the US;

k. secure a level playing field, by encouraging fair fiscal policies and trade practices for food products and by treating as sensitive those products or sectors for which direct and indirect competition would expose EU agricultural producers, including smallholder farmers, either in the EU as a whole or in individual regions thereof, to excessive pressure or unfair competition, for example in cases where regulatory conditions and related costs of production, such as animal housing requirements, in the EU diverge from those in the US, and consider all possible options for treatment of all sensitive products, including tariff reduction and limited tariff rate quotas;

l.  make every effort to have a safeguard clause incorporated into the agreement, as is clearly set out in the negotiating mandate, which would be invoked where a rise in imports of a particular product threatened to cause serious harm to domestic food production;

m. submit, as already called for by several Member States, a summary of the concessions granted in the trade agreements already concluded and in those being negotiated, so that an overview of all these concessions can be obtained per product, without which it is impossible to negotiate on sensitive products;

n. inform Parliament and the public as early as possible about a potential list of sensitive products so that all stakeholders have enough time to consider and assess the proposals as soon as possible and before the end of the negotiations;

o. secure appropriate legal protection on the US market for EU geographical indications and quality EU agricultural products, and measures to deal with improper use and misleading information and practices, and secure protection regarding the labelling, traceability and genuine origin of agricultural products as an essential element of a balanced agreement;

p. include in the TTIP the agreement on organic products, extended to those not already covered (wine);

q. incorporate the 2006 wine agreement between the EU and the USA into the TTIP, deleting the 17 semi-generic names contained in that sectoral agreement;

r.  take into account the fact that US farm income support in times of global price volatility could put EU farmers at a competitive disadvantage and that EU crisis management measures should be re-evaluated in order to reflect changing market conditions;

s.  create a bilateral joint working committee for permanent trade discussions on agriculture in order to anticipate and eliminate trade irritants through an early warning system in the event of regulatory evolutions and promote regulatory convergence;

t.  engage in a fully transparent, timely and comprehensive manner with the European Parliament, all national parliaments and agricultural stakeholders on all aspects of the negotiations, and ensure compliance with all legislation on which our European agricultural and social model is based;

u. ensure that the US ban on beef imports from the EU is lifted;

v. ensure a level playing field by introducing a labelling requirement for imported products that are produced by methods that do not comply with EU standards on animal welfare, food safety, and human and animal health;

w. submit without delay a clear and objective study on the impact of the TTIP on European agriculture, sector by sector, particularly its impact on small family farms, and engage in a timely and transparent manner with research institutions, both public and private, that work in the area of food safety and can provide considerable input into all aspects of the negotiations.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

14.4.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

27

18

0

Members present for the final vote

Clara Eugenia Aguilera García, Eric Andrieu, Richard Ashworth, José Bové, Paul Brannen, Daniel Buda, Nicola Caputo, Matt Carthy, Michel Dantin, Paolo De Castro, Albert Deß, Diane Dodds, Herbert Dorfmann, Edouard Ferrand, Luke Ming Flanagan, Martin Häusling, Esther Herranz García, Jan Huitema, Jarosław Kalinowski, Elisabeth Köstinger, Zbigniew Kuźmiuk, Philippe Loiseau, Mairead McGuinness, Nuno Melo, Giulia Moi, James Nicholson, Maria Noichl, Marit Paulsen, Marijana Petir, Laurențiu Rebega, Jens Rohde, Lidia Senra Rodríguez, Czesław Adam Siekierski, Marc Tarabella, Janusz Wojciechowski, Marco Zullo

Substitutes present for the final vote

Bas Belder, Rosa D’Amato, Angélique Delahaye, Peter Eriksson, Fredrick Federley, Ivan Jakovčić, Manolis Kefalogiannis, Momchil Nekov, Stanislav Polčák, Sofia Ribeiro, Annie Schreijer-Pierik, Molly Scott Cato, Estefanía Torres Martínez

17.4.2015

OPINION of the Committee on Culture and Education

for the Committee on International Trade

on recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Helga Trüpel

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on Culture and Education calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

–   having regard to Article 167 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU),

–   having regard to the EU directives for the negotiation on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership between the EU and the US adopted by Council on 14 June 2013, that were made public by the Council on 9 October 2014,

A. affirming the EU’s legal commitment to the 2005 UNESCO Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions;

B.  recalling that, under Article 167 of the TFEU, ‘the Union shall take cultural aspects into account in its action under other provisions of the Treaties’, in order to respect and to promote the diversity of cultures; recalling that these other provisions include the common commercial policy as defined in Article 207 of the TFEU;

C.  reaffirming that existing and future provisions and policies in support of the cultural sector, in particular in the digital world, lie outside the scope of the TTIP negotiations;

D.  recognising the special role of services of general interest – in particular in education – as defined in Article 14 of the TFEU and Protocol No 26 to the TFEU;

E.  recognising that cultural diversity is a feature of the EU because of Europe’s history, its rich variety of traditions and strong cultural and creative industries, and that the promotion of cultural diversity will remain a guiding principle, just as it has been in other EU trade agreements;

F.  recalling that cultural and creative industries contribute around 2.6 % of EU GDP, with a higher growth rate than the rest of the economy; underlining the fact that the development of trade in cultural and creative industry goods and services will constitute an important driver of economic growth and job creation in Europe;

G. recalling that it is standard practice to exclude subsidies, in particular for the cultural and educational sectors, from EU trade agreements;

1.  Addresses the following recommendations to the Commission:

     (a) ensure, via a legally binding general clause applicable to the complete agreement, in full compliance with the GATS and the UNESCO Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions and fully respecting Member States’ practices, that the parties to the agreement reserve the right to adopt or maintain any measure (in particular of a regulatory and/or financial nature) with respect to the protection or promotion of cultural and linguistic diversity, media pluralism and media freedom, and to preserve or develop, in accordance with the principle of technological neutrality, a regime for audiovisual services, both online and offline, in line with democratic, social and cultural requirements;

     (b) ensure that the exception for audiovisual services, including online services, is future-proofed and shall neither be called into question by any provisions of the future agreement, such as those on investment, nor be hampered by technological developments, for instance the convergence of audiovisual, telecommunications and e-commerce services;

     (c) continue the current efforts to increase transparency and promote an even closer engagement with Parliament and full involvement of civil society and social partners, given the potential impact which the TTIP will have on the lives of EU citizens;

     (d) ensure that services with a strong cultural component, such as libraries, archives or museums, will not be challenged by the TTIP agreement beyond the EU’s commitments in existing agreements;

     (e) confirm that fixed book price systems and price fixing for newspapers and magazines will not be challenged by the obligations under the TTIP agreement;

     (f)  ensure with a general clause the right of EU Member States to adopt or maintain any measure with regard to the provision of all educational and cultural services which work on a non-profit-basis and/or receive public funding to any degree or state support in any form, and to ensure that privately funded foreign providers meet the same quality and accreditation requirements as domestic providers;

     (g) specify that nothing in the agreement shall affect the ability of the EU or EU Member States to subsidise and provide financial support to cultural industries and cultural, educational, audiovisual and press services;

     (h) ensure that EU plastic artists receive a percentage of the selling price of their works of art when they are resold by an art-market professional, thereby encouraging European artists to market their works in the US.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

16.4.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

24

2

4

Members present for the final vote

Isabella Adinolfi, Dominique Bilde, Andrea Bocskor, Silvia Costa, Jill Evans, Giorgos Grammatikakis, Rikke Karlsson, Andrew Lewer, Svetoslav Hristov Malinov, Curzio Maltese, Fernando Maura Barandiarán, Luigi Morgano, Momchil Nekov, Michaela Šojdrová, Yana Toom, Helga Trüpel, Sabine Verheyen, Julie Ward, Bogdan Brunon Wenta, Bogdan Andrzej Zdrojewski, Milan Zver, Krystyna Łybacka

Substitutes present for the final vote

Sylvie Guillaume, Mary Honeyball, Marc Joulaud, Dietmar Köster, Ilhan Kyuchyuk, Michel Reimon, Hermann Winkler

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Remo Sernagiotto, Dario Tamburrano

4.5.2015

OPINION of the Committee on Legal Affairs

for the Committee on International Trade

on recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Dietmar Köster

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on Legal Affairs calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

A. whereas, since judicial systems both in the European Union and in the United States of America function effectively, there is no need for any private investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanisms in this agreement;

B.  whereas the European Union and the USA have efficient national legal frameworks and are governed by the rule of law;

C. whereas international trade and investment agreements concluded by EU institutions are subject to the rights guaranteed by the EU and the principles underlying the protection of those rights in the EU, such as the precautionary principle, which applies to environmental, health and consumer protection;

D. whereas nine EU Member States have concluded bilateral investment protection agreements with the USA granting US undertakings the right to bring complaints against those Member States, and whereas numerous bilateral agreements between EU Member States contain some ISDS clauses, but Regulation No 912/2014 states that existing bilateral investment agreements to which Member States are parties are to be replaced by the inclusion of an investment chapter in the TTIP, even without ISDS;

E.  whereas the negotiations at issue are intended to result in an ambitious agreement which will protect the European model of the social market economy, as provided for by the Treaties of the European Union which will be accompanied by a significant improvement for the public, employees and consumers and by an opening-up of the market for undertakings based in the European Union, including SMEs;

F.  whereas international agreements are a basis for legal certainty and predictability and whereas there have been many cases in which the EU and other States have brought legal action against the USA under the aegis of the WTO because the USA was believed to have failed to comply with its international obligations;

G. whereas Article 1 of the Treaty on European Union provides that: ‘decisions are taken as openly as possible and as closely as possible to the citizen’; whereas Article 10(3) of the TEU provides that: ‘decisions shall be taken as openly and as closely as possible to the citizen’; whereas, under Article 218(10) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, the European Parliament has the right to ‘be immediately and fully informed at all stages of the procedure’ in the negotiation and conclusion of agreements between the Union and third countries; and whereas, in the decision closing her own-initiative inquiry OI/10/2014/RA, the European Ombudsman emphasised the need for transparency in TTIP negotiations and public access to TTIP documents;

1.  Addresses the following recommendations to the Commission:

     a.  Observes that the reservations felt by the public should be reflected in negotiations on trade and investment agreements;

     b.  Observes that treating local and foreign investors equitably is not possible under the reforms incorporated in CETA for mechanisms for the settlement of disputes between States and investors;

     c.  Observes that ensuring that foreign investors are treated in a non-discriminatory fashion and have a fair opportunity to seek and achieve redress of grievances can be achieved without the inclusion in the TTIP of investment protection standards or an ISDS mechanism; is of the firm opinion that any TTIP agreement should not contain any investment protection standards or ISDS mechanism as the existing level of investment protection in the EU and the US is fully sufficient to guarantee legal security;

     d.  Calls on the Commission to make publicly accessible the consolidated text versions combining EU and US positions on draft chapters and thereby ensure equal access to information for all interested stakeholders during all stages of the negotiations;

     e.  Observes that existing dispute settlement mechanisms display serious weaknesses in terms of both procedure and substance;

     f.   Calls on to Commission to oppose the inclusion of an ISDS mechanism in the TTIP, given the developed legal systems of the EU and US and the fact that a state-to-state dispute settlement system and the use of national legal and judicial systems are the most appropriate tools to address investment disputes;

     g.  Stresses that the democratic legitimacy of the EUʼs trade policy needs to be strengthened; calls on the Commission to take account of responses to the public consultation it conducted and especially the 97 % of responses opposed to an ISDS;

     h.  Calls on the Commission to ensure that foreign investors are treated in a non-discriminatory fashion and have a fair opportunity to seek and achieve redress of grievances, while benefiting from no greater rights than domestic investors, and to oppose the inclusion of ISDS in the TTIP, as other options to enforce investment protection are available, such as domestic remedies;

     i.   Calls on the Commission to ensure that, if a dispute settlement mechanism is adopted, its decisions on individual cases will not replace the national law of the contracting parties which is in force or render it ineffective, and that amendments by future legislation – provided that they are not made retroactive – cannot be contested under such a dispute settlement mechanism;

     j.   Calls on the Commission to guarantee that the established regulatory systems on both sides of the Atlantic and the role of the European Parliament in the EU’s decision-making procedure and its powers of scrutiny of the EU's regulatory processes will be fully and completely respected in creating the framework for future cooperation;

     k.  Calls on the Commission to make clear to the negotiating partner that the precautionary principle is one of the fundamental principles of European environmental, health and consumer protection policy and is the basis for prompt, proactive negotiations to avoid putting the health of people, animals and plants at risk and damaging the environment, and to ensure that the negotiations do not result in the diluting of the precautionary principle which operates in the EU, particularly in the areas of environmental, health, food and consumer protection;

     l.   Calls on the Commission to ensure that the adoption of national legislation continues to be performed exclusively by legitimate legislative bodies of the EU, promoting the highest standards of protection for citizens, including in the areas of health, safety, the environment, consumer and workers’ rights, and public services of general interest; considers it vital to preserve the sovereign right of the Member States to claim a derogation for public and collective services, such as water, health, education, social security, cultural affairs, media matters, product quality and the right of self-government of municipal and local authorities, from the scope of TTIP negotiations; urges the Commission to ensure that any procedures in the context of regulatory cooperation fully respect the legislative competences of the European Parliament and the Council, in strict accordance with the EU Treaties and do not delay directly or indirectly the European legislative process;

     m. Stresses that, while neither EU Member States nor the European Union have taken a decision on comprehensive harmonisation of the right to intellectual property, including copyright, trade marks and patents, the Commission ought not to negotiate on these interests in CETA or the TTIP;

     n.  Considers it to be of great importance that the EU and the US remain committed and engaged in global multilateral patent harmonisation discussions through existing international bodies and thus cautions against attempting to introduce provisions on substantive patent law, in particular with regard to issues relating to patentability and grace periods, into the TTIP;

     o.  Calls on the Commission to ensure that the TTIP negotiations also address the need for enhanced recognition, and to preserve the protection of, certain products of which the origin is of high importance; points out, therefore, that effectively ensuring the application of the EU geographical indication is essential in order to be able to enforce those rules; calls on the Commission, in this connection, to ensure that the cultural exception rules continue to be excluded from the negotiating mandate;

     p.  Calls on the Commission, with regard to market access, to ensure adequate provisions to exclude sensitive services such as public services and public utilities (including water, health, social security systems and education), allowing national and local authorities enough room for manoeuvre to legislate in the public interest; observes that, for these services, an explicit exception, based on Article 14 of the TFEU in conjunction with Protocol 26, must be incorporated in the agreement, irrespective of who provides them and in what form and how they are financed; notes that a joint declaration reflecting the negotiators’ clear commitment to exclude these sectors from the negotiations would be very helpful in this regard;

     q.  Calls on the Commission to ensure in particular that all matters benefiting European artists and producers are included in the cultural exception rules;

     r.   Calls on the Commission to give guarantees regarding inclusion of the publishing sector in the cultural exception;

     s.   Observes that, in the field of public procurement, social and ecological procurement criteria and their possible extension must not be called into question;

     t.   Calls on the Commission to ensure that both contracting parties undertake, in particular, to respect and implement core ILO labour standards and the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises; considers that compliance with labour and social standards must be effectively secured in case of conflict;

     u.  Stresses that under no circumstances may the right to codetermination, works constitution and free collective bargaining or other protective rights for workers, the environment and consumers be interpreted as ‘non-tariff trade barriers’;

     v.  Observes, furthermore, that unclear definitions of legal terms in CETA and the TTIP such as ‘fair and equitable treatment’ or ‘indirect expropriation’ must be rejected.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

16.4.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

12

11

2

Members present for the final vote

Max Andersson, Joëlle Bergeron, Marie-Christine Boutonnet, Jean-Marie Cavada, Therese Comodini Cachia, Mady Delvaux, Rosa Estaràs Ferragut, Laura Ferrara, Lidia Joanna Geringer de Oedenberg, Mary Honeyball, Sajjad Karim, Dietmar Köster, Gilles Lebreton, António Marinho e Pinto, Jiří Maštálka, Emil Radev, Julia Reda, Evelyn Regner, Pavel Svoboda, Axel Voss, Tadeusz Zwiefka

Substitutes present for the final vote

Daniel Buda, Angel Dzhambazki, Jytte Guteland, Heidi Hautala, Constance Le Grip, Angelika Niebler, Virginie Rozière

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Inês Cristina Zuber

7.4.2015

OPINION of the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs

for the Committee on International Trade

on recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Jan Philipp Albrecht

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

–   having regard to the Council negotiating directives for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership between the European Union and the United States of America,

–   having regard to its resolution of 23 May 2013 on EU trade and investment negotiations with the United States of America[49], in particular paragraph 13 thereof,

–   having regard to its resolution of 12 March 2014 on the US NSA surveillance programme, surveillance bodies in various Member States and their impact on EU citizens’ fundamental rights and on transatlantic cooperation in Justice and Home Affairs[50],

A. whereas the Union is bound by the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (the Charter), including Article 8 thereof on the right to the protection of personal data, and by Article 16 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) on the same fundamental right, as a key pillar of EU primary law which must be fully respected by all international agreements;

B.  whereas the Union is bound by Article 2 of the Treaty on European Union (TEU), inter alia, to uphold the values of democracy and the rule of law;

C. whereas the Union is bound by Articles 20 and 21 of the Charter to uphold the principles of equality before the law and freedom from discrimination;

D. whereas Articles 1 and 10(3) TEU both stipulate that decisions must be taken as openly and as closely as possible to the citizen; whereas transparency and open dialogue between the partners, including citizens, are of the utmost importance during the negotiations and also in the implementing phase; whereas Parliament endorses the Ombudsman’s call for a transparent approach;

E.  whereas ongoing negotiations on international trade agreements, including the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) and the Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA), also touch upon international data flows while excluding privacy and data protection entirely, which will be discussed in parallel within the framework of the ‘US-EU Safe Harbor’ and of the US-EU Data Protection Umbrella Agreement;

F.  whereas in the seventh round of negotiations for the TTIP the US negotiators proposed a draft chapter on e-commerce; whereas this draft is not available to Members of the European Parliament; whereas the draft US text on e-commerce for the TiSA would undermine EU rules and safeguards for the transfer of personal data to third countries; whereas Parliament reserves the right to express its opinion after consulting any future text proposals and drafts of the TTIP agreement;

G. whereas citizens of a state which is a contracting party in a free trade area ought to enjoy ease of access to the entire area;

H. whereas most EU Member States and the United States have ratified the OECD Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business Transactions; whereas several EU Member States and the US have ratified the UN Convention against Corruption; whereas several EU Member States and the US are members of the Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering;

1.  Addresses the following recommendations to the Commission:

     (a) to ensure that the agreement guarantees full respect for EU fundamental rights standards through the inclusion of a legally binding and suspensive human rights clause as a standard part of EU trade agreements with third countries;

     (b) to keep in mind that the consent of the European Parliament to the final TTIP agreement could be endangered as long as the blanket mass surveillance activities are not completely abandoned and an adequate solution is found for the data privacy rights of EU citizens, including administrative and judicial redress, as stated in paragraph 74 of Parliament’s aforementioned resolution of 12 March 2014;

     (c)  to take immediate measures to ensure, in particular, that the recommendations made in Parliament’s aforementioned resolution of 12 March 2014 concerning the development of a European strategy for IT independence and an EU cyber strategy are implemented;

     (d) to incorporate, as a key priority, a comprehensive and unambiguous horizontal self-standing provision, based on Article XIV of the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), that fully exempts the existing and future EU legal framework for the protection of personal data from the agreement, without any condition that it must be consistent with other parts of the TTIP, and to ensure that the agreement does not preclude the enforcement of exceptions for the supply of services which are justifiable under the relevant World Trade Organisation rules (Articles XIV and XIVbis of the GATS);

     (e) to ensure that personal data can be transferred outside the Union only if the provisions on third-country transfers in EU data protection laws are complied with; to negotiate on provisions which touch upon the flow of personal data only if the full application of EU data protection rules is guaranteed and respected;

     (f)  to ensure that the draft chapter on e-commerce proposed by US negotiators in the seventh TTIP negotiation round is not accepted as a basis for negotiations, should it contain similar conditions to those set out in the US draft chapter on e-commerce for the TiSA negotiations; to oppose the US draft TiSA chapter on e-commerce with regard to personal data; to ensure a satisfactory conclusion of the negotiations on the Safe Harbor and the Data Protection Umbrella Agreement;

     (g) to keep in mind that EU rules on the transfer of personal data may prohibit the processing of such data in third countries if they do not meet the EU adequacy standard; to insist that any requirements for the localisation of data processing equipment and establishments be in line with EU rules on data transfers; to cooperate with the US and other third countries in the appropriate settings with a view to adopting adequate high data protection standards around the world, in particular in the framework of the Safe Harbor and the Data Protection Umbrella Agreement;

     (h) to ensure that decisions on legal conflicts about fundamental rights are made only by competent ordinary courts; to ensure that provisions on investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) do not prevent equal access to justice or undermine democracy;

     (i)   to show full regard for the need for transparency and accountability in the negotiations throughout the entire process, and to fulfil its obligation under Article 218(10) TFEU, which a recent Court of Justice ruling confirmed as being of statutory character[51], to keep Parliament fully informed on an immediate basis at all stages of the negotiations; to ensure public access to relevant negotiation documents from all parties, with the exception of those which are to be classified with clear justification on a case-by-case basis, with a public justification of the extent to which access to the undisclosed parts of the document in question is likely to specifically and actually undermine the interests protected by the exceptions, in line with Regulation (EC) No 1049/2001 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 30 May 2001 regarding public access to European Parliament, Council and Commission documents[52]; to ensure that the agreement in no way weakens the laws of the EU or of its Member States on public access to official documents;

     (j)  to increase, in the framework of the negotiations, political pressure on the US to guarantee full visa reciprocity and equal treatment for all citizens of the EU Member States without discrimination as regards their access to the US;

     (k) to include a clause on corruption, tax fraud, tax evasion and money laundering in the agreement in order to establish enhanced cooperation between the Member States and the US, including mechanisms for more efficient international cooperation, mutual legal assistance, asset recovery, technical assistance, exchange of information and implementation of international recommendations and standards.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

31.3.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

41

10

2

Members present for the final vote

Jan Philipp Albrecht, Heinz K. Becker, Michał Boni, Caterina Chinnici, Rachida Dati, Agustín Díaz de Mera García Consuegra, Frank Engel, Cornelia Ernst, Laura Ferrara, Monika Flašíková Beňová, Ana Gomes, Nathalie Griesbeck, Sylvie Guillaume, Jussi Halla-aho, Monika Hohlmeier, Filiz Hyusmenova, Sophia in ‘t Veld, Iliana Iotova, Eva Joly, Sylvia-Yvonne Kaufmann, Barbara Kudrycka, Kashetu Kyenge, Marju Lauristin, Juan Fernando López Aguilar, Roberta Metsola, Louis Michel, Claude Moraes, Péter Niedermüller, Judith Sargentini, Birgit Sippel, Branislav Škripek, Helga Stevens, Traian Ungureanu, Marie-Christine Vergiat, Udo Voigt, Josef Weidenholzer, Cecilia Wikström, Kristina Winberg, Tomáš Zdechovský

Substitutes present for the final vote

Laura Agea, Carlos Coelho, Pál Csáky, Dennis de Jong, Edouard Ferrand, Marek Jurek, Jean Lambert, Luigi Morgano, Artis Pabriks, Barbara Spinelli, Kazimierz Michał Ujazdowski, Axel Voss

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Dario Tamburrano, Janusz Wojciechowski

16.4.2015

OPINION of the Committee on Constitutional Affairs

for the Committee on International Trade

on Recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Esteban González Pons

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on Constitutional Affairs calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

–       having regard to the case‑law of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU), in particular Case C-350/12[53] and Opinions 2/13[54] and 1/09[55],

A.     whereas the Lisbon Treaty extends the scope of the Common Commercial Policy to include foreign direct investment, and whereas it significantly increases Parliament’s powers in the field of international trade agreements by strengthening its right to be informed regularly, and by enhancing its decision-making competence by requiring its consent at the end of negotiations, thereby providing for the direct representation of the citizens in the adoption of international trade agreements;

B.     whereas in its Opinion 2/13, the CJEU stated that the competence of the EU in the field of international relations, and its capacity to conclude international agreements, necessarily entail the power to submit to the decisions of a court which is created or designated by such agreements as regards the interpretation and application of their provisions; whereas the Court nevertheless also declared that an international agreement may affect its own powers only if the indispensable conditions for safeguarding the essential character of those powers are satisfied and that, as a consequence, there is no adverse effect on the autonomy of the EU legal order:

1.      Addresses, in the context of the ongoing negotiations on TTIP, the following recommendations to the Commission:

(d)    regarding the rules:

(i)     to evaluate the implications of TTIP in order to ensure policy coherence, namely with regard to the consistency between the different areas of EU’s external action, and between these and its other policies;

(ii)     to specify the role and powers of the Regulatory Cooperation Council as well as the legal quality of its findings, taking into consideration that the regulatory cooperation should respect the EU’s current constitutional and institutional framework as well as the competence of European, national and local authorities to legislate their own policies, in particular social and environmental policies, and that any direct application of its recommendations for the relevant EU instances would imply a breach of the law-making procedures laid down in the Treaties, and would therefore undermine the democratic process as well as the European public interest;

(iii)    to ensure that no standards are lowered inside the European legal framework;

(iv)    as TTIP is expected to be a ‘living agreement’, to which additional sectorial annexes may be added in the future, to ensure that this mechanism guarantees the possibility for parliamentary oversight such that Parliament and the US Congress are kept informed and can initiate, shape and control the regulatory dialogue foreseen by the TTIP, respecting the legislative parliamentary rights;

(v)    considers the very high level of protective measures and standards that exist in the EU, and that have been agreed upon through democratic processes, to be an achievement worthy of protection to the highest degree, and demands that the legal standards that exist in the EU and its Member States, such as with regard to product safety, health, the social sphere, the environment, climate, foodstuff and animal protection, and consumer and data protection rights, may in no way be lowered;

(vi)    to oppose the inclusion of an ISDS mechanism in TTIP, given the EU’s and the US’ developed legal systems, and given the fact that a state-to-state dispute settlement system and the use of national courts are the most appropriate tools for addressing investment disputes;

(vii)   taking into account the fact that the US and EU jurisdictions are not at risk of political interference in the judiciary or of denying justice to foreign investors, an investor-state dispute settlement, based on private arbitration, may undermine the right to regulate in the public interest of the European Union and of the Member States’ national, regional and local authorities, in particular with regard to social and environmental policies, and would therefore not respect the constitutional framework of the EU; to propose a permanent solution for resolving disputes between investors and states, where potential cases are treated transparently by professional judges in public trials subsequent to which at least one appeal may be lodged;

(e)    regarding transparency, civil society involvement and public outreach:

(iii)    while a certain extent of confidentiality is admissible and comprehensible during negotiations on a trade agreement of such high economic and political importance, to continue and strengthen its effort to render the TTIP negotiations more transparent and accessible to the public, inter alia by making public all the EU negotiating texts that the Commission already shares with Member States and Parliament, as the European institutions should be at the forefront of promoting transparency;

(iv)    to inform Parliament immediately and fully of all steps in the procedure, in accordance with the CJEU’s judgment in Case C-358/11; to ensure that all MEPs have access to all restricted documents and to include the consolidated texts in the list of documents that can be consulted by MEPs;

(v)    to implement the recommendations of the European Ombudsman from 6 January 2015 to further enhance the legitimacy and transparency of the negotiating process by fully complying, proactively and comprehensively, with the rules on public access to documents in all the official languages of the EU on its website, and by ensuring balanced and transparent public participation by Member State parliaments;

(vi)    calls, therefore, on the Commission to support and continue negotiations with the Council to unblock the amendment to Regulation (EC) Nº 1049/2001 regarding public access to documents;

(vii)   to check the legal implications of a mixed-type agreement; to fully involve national parliaments in the debate on the specifics of TTIP and keep them regularly informed on the course of negotiations, paying attention to their feedback, especially since this agreement will most likely end up as a ‘mixed-type’ agreement, requiring ratification by national parliaments;

(viii)  to create without delay a mandatory transparency register to be used by all European institutions in order to ensure full overview of the lobbying activities associated with the TTIP negotiations.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

16.4.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

13

9

2

Members present for the final vote

Mercedes Bresso, Elmar Brok, Fabio Massimo Castaldo, Richard Corbett, Pascal Durand, Esteban González Pons, Danuta Maria Hübner, Ramón Jáuregui Atondo, Constance Le Grip, Jo Leinen, Petr Mach, Maite Pagazaurtundúa Ruiz, György Schöpflin, Pedro Silva Pereira, Barbara Spinelli, Claudia Tapardel, Kazimierz Michał Ujazdowski, Rainer Wieland

Substitutes present for the final vote

Max Andersson, Gerolf Annemans, Marcus Pretzell, Helmut Scholz

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Rosa Estaràs Ferragut, José Inácio Faria, Gabriel Mato, Ramón Luis Valcárcel Siso

30.4.2015

OPINION of the Committee on Petitions

for the Committee on International Trade

on Recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)

(2014/2228(INI))

Rapporteur: Jarosław Wałęsa

SUGGESTIONS

The Committee on Petitions calls on the Committee on International Trade, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions into its motion for a resolution:

–   having regard to the directives for the negotiations on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the European Union and the United States of America of 14 June 2013,

–   having regard to Articles 206 and 207 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,

–   having regard to its earlier resolutions of 23 October 2012 on trade and economic relations with the United States[56], 23 May 2013 on trade and investment negotiations with the United States of America[57], and 12 March 2014 on the US NSA surveillance programme, surveillance bodies in various Member States and their impact on EU citizens’ fundamental rights and on transatlantic cooperation in Justice and Home Affairs[58],

–   having regard to its resolution of 15 January 2015 on the annual report on the activities of the European Ombudsman 2013,

–   having regard to petitions 1221-13, 1635-13, 1960-13, 2694-13, 2721-13, 2859-13, 0149‑14, 0184-14, 0195-14, 0242-14, 0589-14, 0706-14, 0722-14, 0738-14, 0783-14, 0949-14, 0973-14,1032-14,1122-14,1336-14,1575-14, 1649-14, 2062-14, 2143-14, 2268-14, 2314‑14, 2328-14, 2647-14 and 0033-15,

–   having regard to the European Ombudsman’s investigation into the transparency of, and public participation in, the negotiations on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (OI/10/2014/RA),

–   having regard to the outcome of the public consultation launched by the Commission concerning investment protection and Inter-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) in the TTIP,

–   having regard to the letter of 5 June 2014 from the EU’s chief negotiator, Ignacio García-Bercero, to his American counterpart, Daniel Mullany, in which he stated that ‘all documents related to the negotiations will remain closed to the public for up to 30 years’,

A. whereas the Commission is currently negotiating on behalf of the European Union a deep, comprehensive and high-standards trade and investment partnership agreement with the United States (the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership or TTIP) which aims to foster and facilitate commercial exchange of goods and services and enhance investment, inter alia through the removal of trade barriers; whereas a significant number of European citizens have voiced legitimate concerns that this agreement would threaten fundamental EU regulations, in particular in the fields of labour rights, environmental protection and food and safety standards;

B.  whereas President Juncker had invited each member of the incoming Commission to ‘make public all the contacts and meetings we hold with professional organisations or self-employed individuals on any matter relating to EU policy-making and implementation’ regarding the wide-ranging trade and investment partnership agreement with the US that the Commission is currently negotiating on behalf of the EU; whereas the only effective way to avoid public confusion and misunderstanding is more transparency and a greater effort to proactively inform public debate;

C. whereas the objective of the TTIP is to increase trade and investment between the EU and the US without impinging on the principles established in the acquis communautaire or on sustainable economic growth, the creation of decent jobs or the promotion of the European social model;

D. whereas the negotiations have attracted unprecedented public interest, given the potential economic, social and political implications of the TTIP and the secretive manner in which the negotiations have been conducted;

E.  whereas former Commission President José Manuel Barroso called on civil society to play a constructive and engaged part in the TTIP negotiations;

F.  whereas civil society has expressed concerns over the TTIP;

G. whereas on 10 September 2014 the Commission refused to register the European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI) ‘Stop TTIP’, taking the view that it fell outside the framework of the Commission’s powers to submit a proposal for a legal act of the Union for the purpose of implementing the Treaties; whereas a ‘Stop TTIP’ initiative has since been launched outside the procedure laid down in Regulation 211/2011 and has already collected more than one million signatures; whereas the Committee on Petitions has received a number of petitions raising concerns over the TTIP; whereas the petitioners’ main concerns are related to risks regarding the safety and quality of food imports, the transfer of data from the EU to the US, in particular information collected by the US regarding natural and legal persons (the right of EU citizens to ‘digital self-determination’), the lack of transparency of the negotiations, the potential negative economic impact of TTIP, in particular in terms of employment and wages, and the transfer of public authorities’ right to regulate to corporations via the ISDS mechanism;

H. whereas the right of EU citizens to benefit from public access to documents held by EU institutions is a fundamental right aimed at ensuring that they can participate in EU decision-making and hold the EU and its institutions to account, thus enhancing the democratic nature of the Union;

I.   whereas all the petitions received by EU citizens, gathering tens of thousands of signatures of EU citizens, have a clearly critical position towards the TTIP negotiation and warn about the threat that such an agreement would pose to the European way of life, especially in the social, economic, environmental and democratic fields;

J.   whereas the European Ombudsman’s investigation of July 2014 regarding the transparency of the TTIP scrutinised the withholding of key documents and alleged granting of privileged access to certain stakeholders; whereas the Ombudsman has received more than 6 000 emails in response to his public consultations on the TTIP;

K.  whereas in the social field the diverse petitions express deep concern regarding the potential negative impact of the agreement on public health, health systems in the EU and public services in general, as well as pension schemes; whereas fears are emerging concerning the worsening of working conditions, given the lack of regulation of labour relations and the absence of a culture of collective agreements in the US;

L.  whereas, after research, the European Ombudsman expressed her concern at the lack of transparency and public participation in the negotiations for the TTIP;

M. whereas most of the petitions received call explicitly either for a halt to the negotiations to be determined by the Commission or for the ultimate rejection of the agreement by the European Parliament;

1.  Underlines the importance of developing balanced trade relationship and investment relations between the European Union and the United States of America with adequate safeguards to provide the highest labour, social, health and environmental standards on a global level in order to help, and with the aim of helping, growth and employment as well as generating new economic opportunities and regulating globalisation so that social and environmental dumping is excluded;

2.  Welcomes the objective of lifting technical barriers to trade and reducing unnecessary regulatory incompatibilities between the EU and the US which are not justified by different approaches to protection and risk management, such as duplication of procedures, inconsistent product requirements and double testing;

3.  Calls on the Commission to oppose the inclusion of ISDS in the TTIP should negotiations continue, as other options to enforce investment protection are available, such as domestic remedies;

4.  Notes that regulatory compatibility is to be without prejudice to public services or to the overarching sovereign right to regulate in accordance with the precautionary principle in the areas of health, access to medicines, data protection safety, consumer rights, labour rights, environmental protection, animal welfare,² precautionary consumer protection and cultural diversity, as deemed appropriate by each side’s public authorities;

5.  Calls on the Commission to ensure that the EU’s environmental standards remain at the current levels;

6.  Highlights that cultural services and products should be considered, and therefore treated, differently from other commercial services and products, as provided for under the so-called cultural exception;

7.  Stresses the importance of the mobility package and of establishing visa reciprocity for citizens of all EU Member States, recalling that visa facilitation for European service and goods providers is one of the key elements for taking full advantage of the TTIP agreement;

8.  Highlights that the US has not ratified the International Labour Organisation (ILO) conventions on core labour standards covering such rights as collective bargaining, freedom of association and the right to organise;

9.  Stresses that democratic decision-making in the workplace risks being undermined if the protection of workers is regarded as a trade barrier;

10. Notes the fact that the Commission has made real efforts to make the TTIP negotiating process more transparent, especially in the light of the publication of the European directives for the negotiations on the TTIP (1103/13 CL 1); notes that this essential document was only disclosed on 9 October 2014 while the negotiations started in June 2013; recalls that the Commission is in all circumstances legally obliged to comply with the rules on public access to documents set out in Regulation 1049/2001; regrets that the access given to Members of the European Parliament to TTIP negotiating texts has been to date extremely limited; highlights that the documents available in the EP secured reading room do not contain any consolidated material or any text tabled by the US; highlights the need to ensure transparency through a direct and open dialogue in the form of public consultations with all stakeholders;

11. Welcomes the inquiry of the European Ombudsman regarding the need for a more proactive disclosure of the documents; urges the Commission to rapidly implement the Ombudsman’s recommendations related to public access to consolidated negotiating texts, greater proactive disclosure of TTIP documents and increased transparency as regards meetings held by Commission officials on TTIP with business organisations, lobby groups or NGOs; believes that a more proactive approach to transparency on the part of the Commission could make the negotiating process more democratic and legitimate in the eyes of citizens, and therefore urges the Commission to publish all negotiating documents, including US offers to the EU, following the practice for all international trade negotiations conducted within the framework of the World Trade Organisation, and to promote more comprehensive participation and involvement of the various stakeholders in the negotiating process, and in particular of civil society and consumers’ organisations;

12. Calls on the Commission to ensure that the list of TTIP documents available on its dedicated trade policy website is accessible, comprehensive, exhaustive and thorough, and to facilitate access to this information by holding regular meetings with unions, NGOs and civil society organisations; stresses that the most important documents, especially on the EU negotiating positions, should be available in all official EU languages, thus ensuring that all EU citizens have genuine access to the documents and fully understand them;

13. Asks the Commission to inform Parliament immediately and in full of all steps in the procedure, in accordance with the CJEU judgment in Case C-358/11; asks it, moreover, to ensure that all MEPs have access to all restricted documents and to include the consolidated texts in the list of documents consultable by MEPs;

14. Regrets that the petition filed by over one and a half million Europeans was not classified by the Commission as a ‘European Citizens’ Initiative’, owing to the limitations of the ECI legislative framework; regrets that in effect these limitations entail that any ECI on trade issues could be admissible only after the entry into force of a trade agreement, and that ECIs aimed at influencing ongoing trade negotiations are not permitted in the current framework;

15. Considers that in the public interest, data protection should not be used as an automatic obstacle to public scrutiny of lobbying activities in the context of TTIP and that it is possible to deal with data protection concerns by informing participants when they are invited to meetings of the intention to disclose their names and making it clear that the TTIP must not undermine either the right of EU citizens to digital self-determination or compliance with the European legislation on data protection and, in particular, must take account of the European Court of Justice ruling (C-132/12) on the ‘right to be forgotten’ and the proposed General Data Protection Regulation; asks the Commission to ensure that data protection is not included in the negotiations, so as to comply with Articles 7 and 8 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union;

16. Highlights the sensitivity of certain areas of negotiation in which compromises cannot be accepted, such as the agricultural sector, where perceptions of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), labelling information requirements, cloning, environmental requirements and all other consumer and animal health standards are divergent between the EU and the US; encourages the Commission to adopt, in this regard, a ‘positive list approach’, as a prerequisite to clarify the issue for all stakeholders; therefore calls for these areas not be subjected to regulatory cooperation or to any additional rules on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Standards and Technical Barriers to Trade; calls, in the case of areas in which trade in sensitive sectors already occurs, such as GMOs, for the establishment of clear labelling rules that would reinforce consumer choice;

17. Highlights the high levels of public scrutiny given to the agreement via petitions, which have raised strong concerns over the transparency of the negotiations and the adverse effects on workers’ rights and public services, including healthcare, social services, education, water and sanitation;

18. Calls on the Commission to firmly commit to the strict preservation of standards on food safety, human and animal health and animal welfare, as defined under EU legislation, and to ensure that fundamental values of the EU such as the precautionary principle, the recognition of animals as sentient beings as enshrined in Article 13 TFEU, and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union are not undermined and will be respected;

19. Calls on the Commission to prevent products that have not been produced in line with EU standards on food safety, human and animal health and animal welfare from entering the EU market;

20. Calls on the Commission to ensure that products such as GMOs or products coming from cloned animals and their descendants, and with substances banned in the EU, do not enter the EU market or end up in the EU food chain;

21. Emphasises that consumer protection and compliance with higher European quality and safety standards for foods and products, the highest standards of environmental protection and the strictest controls on industrial emissions in the EU and the US, as well as proper safeguards to protect citizens’ data, should be at the centre of the TTIP negotiations, notably resulting in:

     - full transparency and public accessibility of the clinical data from clinical trials for pharmaceuticals;

     - full transparency and public accessibility of the clinical data from clinical investigations for medical devices;

     - protection of human, animal or plant life or health through respect and upholding of the sensitivities and fundamental values of either side, such as the EU’s precautionary principle,

     and stresses that the negotiators should not consider any commitments on data protection within the framework of TTIP pending the conclusion of ongoing legislative work in this field in the EU and US;

22. Emphasises that respect for each state’s sovereignty and the sovereignty of the European Union itself to pass legislation and regulate the economy must be the core of the TTIP negotiations;

23. Calls on the Commission to indicate how and when it will implement each measure that has been suggested and how it will follow up on the above-mentioned petitions; considers that as the negotiations are ongoing, it would be helpful if the Commission could follow up within two months, i.e. by 31 May 2015;

24. Notes that the Commission received a total of nearly 150 000 responses to its public consultation on investment protection and Investor-to-State Dispute Settlement in the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership Agreement, 97 % of which rejected the inclusion of ISDS in TTIP; stresses that the compatibility of any ISDS with the EU judicial system, and in particular the issue of respect for the CJEU’s jurisdiction and governments’ right to regulate, are widely shared concerns among respondents; notes that, unusually, many submissions came from individual respondents, which highlights the scale of public mobilisation over TTIP, and that some respondents, such as trade unions or big civil society organisations, represent large numbers of individual members vastly in excess of the total number of responses received by the Commission; highlights that investment protection provisions should guarantee states’ ability to regulate, and believes that in this regard the CJEU should maintain exclusive jurisdiction over the definitive interpretation of European Union law.

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

16.4.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

25

2

3

Members present for the final vote

Marina Albiol Guzmán, Margrete Auken, Beatriz Becerra Basterrechea, Heinz K. Becker, Soledad Cabezón Ruiz, Andrea Cozzolino, Pál Csáky, Miriam Dalli, Rosa Estaràs Ferragut, Eleonora Evi, Lidia Joanna Geringer de Oedenberg, Sylvie Goddyn, Peter Jahr, Rikke Karlsson, Jude Kirton-Darling, Svetoslav Hristov Malinov, Notis Marias, Edouard Martin, Roberta Metsola, Julia Pitera, Gabriele Preuß, Laurențiu Rebega, Sofia Sakorafa, Jarosław Wałęsa, Cecilia Wikström, Tatjana Ždanoka

Substitutes present for the final vote

Michela Giuffrida, Jérôme Lavrilleux, Josep-Maria Terricabras, Ángela Vallina, Rainer Wieland

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Isabella Adinolfi, José Blanco López, Paul Brannen

RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE

Date adopted

28.5.2015

 

 

 

Result of final vote

+:

–:

0:

28

13

0

Members present for the final vote

William (The Earl of) Dartmouth, Tiziana Beghin, David Borrelli, Daniel Caspary, Marielle de Sarnez, Christofer Fjellner, Eleonora Forenza, Yannick Jadot, Ska Keller, Jude Kirton-Darling, Bernd Lange, Jörg Leichtfried, David Martin, Emmanuel Maurel, Emma McClarkin, Anne-Marie Mineur, Alessia Maria Mosca, Franz Obermayr, Artis Pabriks, Franck Proust, Godelieve Quisthoudt-Rowohl, Inmaculada Rodríguez-Piñero Fernández, Tokia Saïfi, Matteo Salvini, Marietje Schaake, Helmut Scholz, Joachim Schuster, Joachim Starbatty, Adam Szejnfeld, Iuliu Winkler

Substitutes present for the final vote

Goffredo Maria Bettini, Dita Charanzová, Georgios Epitideios, Seán Kelly, Sander Loones, Gabriel Mato, Adina-Ioana Vălean, Jarosław Wałęsa

Substitutes under Rule 200(2) present for the final vote

Theresa Griffin, Evžen Tošenovský, Cecilia Wikström

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  • [14]          http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/january/tradoc_153026.pdf
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  • [16]          http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/january/tradoc_153028.pdf
  • [17]          http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/january/tradoc_153029.pdf
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  • [21]          http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/february/tradoc_153120.pdf
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  • [25]          Texts adopted, P7_TA(2013)0227.
  • [26]          Texts adopted, P8_TA(2015)0009.
  • [27]      http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_MEMO-13-94_en.htm
  • [28]             Texts adopted, P7_TA(2013)0227.
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    http://www.ustr.gov/sites/default/files/FINAL-2014-SPS-Report-Compiled_0.pdf
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    http://www.ustr.gov/sites/default/files/2014%20TBT%20Report.pdf
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  • [38]             http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/03/26/press-conference-president-obama-european-council-president-van-rompuy-a
  • [39]             See 2014 Report on Technical Barriers to Trade by the US Trade Representative, p. 45.
  • [40]             For the US, see the 2013 and 2014 Reports on Technical Barriers to Trade by the US Trade Representative.
  • [41]              http://www.globalmeatnews.com/Industry-Markets/Canada-to-develop-hormone-free-beef-for-EU
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  • [46]              C(2014)9052 final.
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  • [49]  Texts adopted, P7_TA(2013)0227.
  • [50]  Texts adopted, P7_TA(2014)0230.
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  • [52]  OJ L 145, 31.5.2001, p. 43.
  • [53]  Case C-350/12, Council of the European Union v Sophie in’t Veld.
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  • [58]  Texts adopted, P7_TA(2014)0230.