
Proposals are posted on the WTO website.
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In a Canadian National Post column under the heading "Trading
Away the Public Interest" on 26 June 2000, Mr. Murray Dobbin
claimed that negotiations under the GATS "may abolish
regulation" designed to protect health standards and other public
interests. Commenting on a recent tragedy involving polluted water
supplies, he argued that although it might be hoped that the
subsequent investigation would lead to the reestablishment of high
standards for health protection and public service, the expansion of
the GATS "could make returning to saner times all but
impossible". "At stake are issues as diverse as how strict
our standards are for hospitals … and the treatment and testing of
drinking water."
Leaving aside the facts that neither Canada nor
any other Government has made commitments on water distribution, that
foreign suppliers in Canada would have to meet the same standards as
Canadian companies, that the right to regulate and to introduce new
regulations is explicitly guaranteed in the GATS, and that the GATS
has no power to abolish regulation, it is not true that any GATS
provision would make difficult the "reestablishment of high
standards for health protection". The protection of health is
explicitly recognized in the GATS as a policy concern of overriding
importance. Article XIV contains a General Exception saying that
"nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to prevent the
adoption or enforcement by any Member of measures necessary to protect
human, animal or plant life or health." The same applies to
safety. This means that the need to act to protect health or safety
would entitle a Government to violate any other provision in the GATS,
including its own market-access commitments. |