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Official name: | Australia — Measures Affecting Importation of Salmon (WT/DS18) |
Parties: |
Complainant: Canada Respondent: Australia Third Parties: EC, India, Norway, US |
Under dispute: | Australia’s ban on importation of fresh chilled or frozen salmon, allegedly to protect the domestic salmon population from a number of diseases. Canada claimed that salmon imported for human consumption was very unlikely to lead to the introduction of these diseases. |
Panel: |
Mr. Michael Cartland, Chairman (Hong Kong) Mr. Kari Bergholm (Finland) Ms. Claudia Orozco (Colombia) |
Experts consulted: |
Dr. David E. Burmaster, Alceon Corporation, United States Dr. Christopher J. Rodgers, fish disease consultant, Spain Dr. James Winton, National Fisheries and Research Center, US Fish and Wildlife Service, United States Dr. Marion Wooldridge, Department of Risk Research, Central Veterinary Laboratory, United Kingdom |
Calendar: |
Panel established: 10 April 1997 Panel report issued: 12 June 1998 Appellate Body report issued: 20 October 1998 Reports adopted by the DSB: 6 November 1998 Arbitrator’s determined deadline for compliance: 6 July 1999 Article 21.5 panel established to examine compliance: 28 July 1999 Arbitration established on level of “retaliation”: 28 July 1999 Article 21.5 panel report issued: 18 February 2000 Article 21.5 panel report adopted by the DSB: 20 March 2000 Mutually acceptable solution reported on 18 May 2000 |
Experts consulted by Article 21.5 panel: |
Dr. Gideon Br點kner, Director, Food Safety and Veterinary
Public Health, South Africa Dr. Alasdair McVicar, Principle Scientific Officer, Aberdeen Marine Laboratory, Scotland, United Kingdom Dr. Marion Wooldridge, Department of Risk Research, Veterinary Laboratories Agency, United Kingdom |
Salmon — the findings at a glance Measure at issue: Australia’s ban on importation of fresh chilled or frozen salmon, allegedly to protect the domestic salmon population from a number of diseases. Canada claimed that salmon imported for human consumption was very unlikely to lead to the introduction of these diseases. Panel findings:
Appellate Body findings:
Article 21.5 (Compliance) Panel findings:
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