Full Description
This book explores the role of trade remedies in liberalising environmental trade and discouraging environmentally harmful trade. As trade remedies can pose a significant obstacle to environmental trade, this book outlines how trade negotiators can implement restrictions on the application of trade remedies on environmental goods. It also assesses whether and how investigating authorities can account for differences in environmental protection standards in trade remedy investigations and considers what a possible 'trade remedy' for environmental harm might look like. Although the book concludes that trade remedies will remain a trade instrument primarily driven by economic and competitiveness concerns, it demonstrates how environmental considerations can guide trade remedy policy, how investigating authorities can properly account for the environmental costs of production, and how the limited policy space available in the WTO Agreements on Trade Remedies can be used to pursue green policy goals.
Contents
Introduction.- A Role for Trade Remedies in Greening International Trade?.- WTO Rules for Greening Trade Remedies.- The Use of Trade Remedies on Green Goods.- Low Environmental Standards and the ASCM Rules.- Low Environmental Standards and the ADA Rules.- Low Environmental Standards and the SGA Rules.- Environmental Injury and Trade Remedy Rules.- Concluding Remarks.