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Note: This webpage is prepared by the Secretariat under its own responsibility and is intended only to provide a general explanation of the subject matter it addresses. It is in no way intended to provide legal guidance with respect to, or an authoritative legal interpretation of, the provisions of any WTO agreement. Moreover, nothing in this note affects, nor is intended to affect, WTO members' rights and obligations in any way.
> For a more in-depth discussion of environment-related disputes, see Environment-Related Disputes.
> Secretariat background note on how GATT Article XX is applied in WTO dispute settlement rulings.
GATT Article XX on General Exceptions lays out a number of specific
instances in which WTO members may be exempted from GATT rules. Two
exceptions are of particular relevance to the protection of the
environment: paragraphs (b) and (g) of Article XX. Pursuant to these two
paragraphs, WTO members may adopt policy measures that are inconsistent
with GATT disciplines, but necessary to protect human, animal or plant
life or health (paragraph (b)), or relating to the conservation of
exhaustible natural resources (paragraph (g)).
GATT Article XX on General Exceptions consists of two cumulative
requirements. For a GATT-inconsistent environmental measure to be
justified under Article XX, a member must perform a two-tier analysis
proving:
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first, that its measure falls under at least one of the exceptions (e.g. paragraphs (b) to (g), two of the ten exceptions under Article XX) and, then,
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that the measure satisfies the requirements of the introductory paragraph (the 揷hapeau?of Article XX), i.e. that it is not applied in a manner which would constitute 揳 means of arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination between countries where the same conditions prevail? and is not 揳 disguised restriction on international trade?
Environmental policies covered by Article XX
WTO members' autonomy
to determine their own environmental objectives has been
reaffirmed on a number of occasions (e.g. in US ?
Gasoline, Brazil ?Retreaded
Tyres). The Appellate Body also noted, in the US ?Shrimp case, that conditioning market access on whether exporting
members comply with a policy unilaterally prescribed by the
importing member was a common aspect of measures falling
within the scope of one or other of the exceptions of Article
XX.
In past cases, a number of policies have been found to fall
within the realm of these two exceptions:
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policies aimed at reducing the consumption of cigarettes, protecting dolphins, reducing risks to human health posed by asbestos, reducing risks to human, animal and plant life and health arising from the accumulation of waste tyres (under Article XX(b)); and
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policies aimed at the conservation of tuna, salmon, herring, dolphins, turtles, clean air (under Article XX(g)).
Interestingly, the
phrase 揺xhaustible natural resources?under Article XX(g) has
been interpreted broadly to include not only 搈ineral?or
搉on-living?resources but also living species which may be
susceptible to depletion, such as sea turtles. To support this
interpretation, the Appellate Body noted, in the US ?Shrimp case, that modern international conventions and declarations
made frequent references to natural resources as embracing
both living and non-living resources. Moreover, in order to
demonstrate the exhaustible character of sea turtles, the
Appellate Body noted that sea turtles were included in
Appendix 1 on species threatened with extinction of the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora (揅ITES?.
Also in the US ?Shrimp
case, the Appellate Body accepted as a policy covered by
Article XX(g) one that applied not only to turtles within the
United States waters but also to those living beyond its
national boundaries. The Appellate Body found that there was a
sufficient nexus between the migratory and endangered marine
populations involved and the United States for purposes of
Article XX(g).
Degree of connection between the means and the environmental policy objective
In order for a trade-related environmental measure to be eligible for an exception under Article XX, paragraphs (b) and (g), a member has to establish a connection between its stated environmental policy goal and the measure at issue. The measure needs to be either:
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necessary for the protection of human, animal or plant life or health (paragraph (b)) or
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relating to the conservation of exhaustible natural resources (paragraph (g)).
To determine whether a measure is ?span class="paraboldcolourtext">necessary?to protect human, animal or plant life or health under Article XX(b), a process of weighing and balancing a series of factors has been used by the Appellate Body, including the contribution made by the environmental measure to the policy objective, the importance of the common interests or values protected by the measure and the impact of the measure on international trade. If this analysis yields a preliminary conclusion that the measure is necessary, this result must be confirmed by comparing the measure with its possible alternatives, which may be less trade restrictive while providing an equivalent contribution to the achievement of the objective pursued.
In the Brazil ?Retreaded Tyres case, for instance, the Appellate Body
found that the import ban on retreaded tyres was 揳pt to produce a
material contribution to the achievement of its objective? i.e. the
reduction in waste tyre volumes. The Appellate Body also found that the
proposed alternatives, which were mostly remedial in nature (i.e. waste
management and disposal), were not real alternatives to the import ban,
which could prevent the accumulation of tyres.
The Appellate Body also recognized in Brazil ?Retreaded Tyres that certain complex environmental problems
may be tackled only with a comprehensive policy comprising a
multiplicity of interacting measures. The Appellate Body pointed out
that the results obtained from certain actions ?for instance, measures
adopted in order to address global warming and climate change ?can only
be evaluated with the benefit of time.
In EC ?Asbestos,
the Appellate Body also found, as a result of a process of weighing and
balancing a series of factors, that there was no reasonably available
alternative to a trade prohibition. This was clearly designed to achieve
the level of health protection chosen by France and the value pursued by
the measure was found to be 揵oth vital and important in the highest
degree? The Appellate Body made the point that the more vital or
important the common interests or values pursued, the easier it was to
accept as necessary measures designed to achieve those ends.
For a measure to be ?span class="paraboldcolourtext">relating? to the conservation of natural resources, a substantial relationship between the measure and the conservation of exhaustible natural resources needs to be established. In the words of the Appellate Body, a member has to establish that the means (i.e. the chosen measure) are 搑easonably related?to the ends (i.e. the stated policy goal of conservation of exhaustible natural resources). Moreover, in order to be justified under Article XX(g), a measure affecting imports must be applied 搃n conjunction with restrictions on domestic production or consumption?(the even-handedness requirement).
In the US ?
Gasoline case, the United States had adopted a measure regulating
the composition and emission effects of gasoline in order to reduce air
pollution in the United States. The Appellate Body found that the chosen
measure was 損rimarily aimed at?the policy goal of conservation of
clean air in the United States and thus fell within the scope of
paragraph (g) of Article XX. As far as the second requirement of
paragraph (g) is concerned, the Appellate Body ruled that the measure
met the 揺ven-handedness?requirement, as it affected both imported and
domestic products.
In the US ?Shrimp case, the Appellate Body considered that the general structure and
design of the measure in question were 揻airly narrowly focused?and
that it was not a blanket prohibition of the importation of shrimp
imposed without regard to the consequences to sea turtles; thus, the
Appellate Body concluded that the regulation in question was a measure
搑elating to?the conservation of an exhaustible natural resource within
the meaning of Article XX(g). The Appellate Body also found that the
measure in question had been made effective in conjunction with the
restrictions on domestic harvesting of shrimp, as required by Article
XX(g).
The importance of the manner in which trade-related environmental measures are applied
The introductory clause
of Article XX (its chapeau) emphasizes the manner in which the measure in
question is applied. Specifically, the application of the
measure must not constitute a 搈eans of arbitrary or
unjustifiable discrimination?or a 揹isguised restriction on
international trade?
The chapeau requires that the measure does not constitute an
abuse or misuse of the provisional justification made
available under one of the paragraphs of Article XX, that is
to say, is applied in good faith. In Brazil ?Retreaded Tyres, the Appellate Body recalled that
the chapeau serves to ensure that members' right to avail
themselves of exceptions is exercised in good faith in order
to protect legitimate interests, not as a means to circumvent
one member's obligations towards other WTO members. In other
words, Article XX embodies the recognition by WTO members of
the need to maintain a balance between the right of a member
to invoke an exception and the rights of the other members
under the GATT.
WTO jurisprudence has highlighted some of the circumstances
which may help to demonstrate that the measure is applied in
accordance with the chapeau. These include relevant
coordination and cooperation activities undertaken by the
defendant at the international level in the trade and
environment area, the design of the measure, its flexibility
to take into account different situations in different
countries as well as an analysis of the rationale put forward
to explain the existence of a discrimination (the rationale
for the discrimination needs to have some connection to the
stated objective of the measure at issue).
The role of international coordination and cooperation
In the US ?
Gasoline decision, the Appellate Body considered that the
United States had not sufficiently explored the possibility of
entering into cooperative arrangements with affected countries
in order to mitigate the administrative problems raised by the
United States in their justification of the discriminatory
treatment.
Moreover, in the US ?Shrimp case, the fact that the United States had 搕reated WTO members
differently?by adopting a cooperative approach regarding the
protection of sea turtles with some members but not with
others also showed that the measure was applied in a manner
that discriminated among WTO members in an unjustifiable
manner.
At the compliance stage, in US ?Shrimp
(Article 21.5), the Appellate Body found that, in view of
the serious, good faith efforts made by the United States to
negotiate an international agreement on the protection of sea
turtles, including with the complainant, the measure was now
applied in a manner that no longer constitutes a means of
unjustifiable or arbitrary discrimination.
The Appellate Body also acknowledged that, ?as far as
possible', a multilateral approach is strongly preferred?over
a unilateral approach. But, it added that, although the
conclusion of multilateral agreements was preferable, it was
not a prerequisite to benefit from the justifications in
Article XX to enforce a national environmental measure.
The flexibility of the measure to take into account different situations in different countries
In the US ?Shrimp
case, the Appellate Body was of the view that rigidity and
inflexibility in the application of the measure (e.g. by
overlooking the conditions in other countries) constituted
unjustifiable discrimination. It was deemed not acceptable
that a member would require another member to adopt
essentially the same regulatory programme without taking into
consideration that conditions in other members could be
different and that the policy solutions might be ill-adapted
to their particular conditions.
In order to implement the panel and Appellate Body
recommendations, the United States revised its measure and
conditioned market access on the adoption of a programme
comparable in effectiveness (and not essentially the same) to
that of the United States. For the Appellate Body, in US ?Shrimp
(Article 21.5), this allowed for sufficient flexibility in
the application of the measure so as to avoid 揳rbitrary or
unjustifiable discrimination?
The text of GATT Article XX
揝ubject to the requirement that such measures are not applied in a manner which would constitute a means of arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination between countries where the same conditions prevail, or a disguised restriction on international trade, nothing in this Agreement [the GATT] shall be construed to prevent the adoption or enforcement by any contracting party of measures: ...
(b) necessary to protect human, animal or plant life or health;...
(g) relating to the conservation of exhaustible natural resources if such measures are made effective in conjunction with restrictions on domestic production or consumption. ...?br>
(Article XIV of the GATS contains the
same introductory clause and the same paragraph (b) ?but it does not
contain an equivalent to paragraph (g))
The design of the measure
Finally, an
environmental measure may not constitute a 揹isguised
restriction on international trade? i.e. may not result in
protectionism. In past cases, it was found that the protective
application of a measure could most often be discerned from
its 揹esign, architecture and revealing structure? For
instance, in US ?Shrimp
(Article 21.5), the fact that the revised measure allowed
exporting countries to apply programmes not based on the
mandatory use of TEDs, and offered technical assistance to
develop the use of TEDs in third countries, showed that the
measure was not applied so as to constitute a disguised
restriction on international trade.
> Introduction
> Key GATT disciplines
> Other relevant WTO texts
> Environment-related disputes
TEDs?
A TED (turtle excluder device) is a trapdoor installed inside a trawling net which allows shrimp to pass to the back of the net while directing sea turtles and other unintentionally caught large objects out of the net.