WTO backs EU in seal ban battle with Canada and Norway
By Korea HeraldPublished : Nov. 26, 2013 - 19:46
The WTO on Monday ruled in favor of the European Union in a bitter battle with Canada and Norway over its ban on the import and sale of seal products.
The Geneva-based World Trade Organization said that while its disputes panel found merit in the countries’ complaint lodged against the EU, that was outweighed by the 2010 ban that “fulfills the objective of addressing EU public moral concerns on seal welfare to a certain extent.”
Canada said it would appeal the decision, while critics warned that the moral grounds defence justifying the EU ban could be widely applied to all sorts of products.
“Canada remains steadfast in its position that the seal harvest is a humane, sustainable and well-regulated activity. Any views to the contrary are based on myths and misinformation, and the Panel’s findings should be of concern to all WTO members,” said a Canadian government statement.
The European Union had argued that scientific evidence backed its claims that slaughter methods, such as using a club with a metal spike on it to stun seals before killing them, were cruel.
It also underlined that the EU public was overwhelmingly in favour of the ban.
Canada and Norway kill tens of thousands of seals per year, and say hunting is an age-old method allowing Atlantic fishing communities to earn an income, as well as to manage fish stocks and thereby the environment.
They insist their seal-hunting methods are humane and provided counter-arguments to the WTO from scientists. They said the methods were no worse than those used in commercial deer-hunting which is widespread in the EU.
They also called the ban trade discriminatory because seal products from EU members Sweden and Finland enjoyed unimpeded market access within the bloc. The EU rejected that argument.
Canada’s indigenous Inuits are exempt from the ban. (AFP)
The Geneva-based World Trade Organization said that while its disputes panel found merit in the countries’ complaint lodged against the EU, that was outweighed by the 2010 ban that “fulfills the objective of addressing EU public moral concerns on seal welfare to a certain extent.”
Canada said it would appeal the decision, while critics warned that the moral grounds defence justifying the EU ban could be widely applied to all sorts of products.
“Canada remains steadfast in its position that the seal harvest is a humane, sustainable and well-regulated activity. Any views to the contrary are based on myths and misinformation, and the Panel’s findings should be of concern to all WTO members,” said a Canadian government statement.
The European Union had argued that scientific evidence backed its claims that slaughter methods, such as using a club with a metal spike on it to stun seals before killing them, were cruel.
It also underlined that the EU public was overwhelmingly in favour of the ban.
Canada and Norway kill tens of thousands of seals per year, and say hunting is an age-old method allowing Atlantic fishing communities to earn an income, as well as to manage fish stocks and thereby the environment.
They insist their seal-hunting methods are humane and provided counter-arguments to the WTO from scientists. They said the methods were no worse than those used in commercial deer-hunting which is widespread in the EU.
They also called the ban trade discriminatory because seal products from EU members Sweden and Finland enjoyed unimpeded market access within the bloc. The EU rejected that argument.
Canada’s indigenous Inuits are exempt from the ban. (AFP)
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Articles by Korea Herald