Earlier this month, Greenpeace Netherlands released
secret documents from the TTIP negotiations – the controversial trade
deal between the United States and Europe that has big implications for
the environment and more than 800 million citizens. Missed it? Wondering
how it affects you? Then keep reading.
Greenpeace
activists project texts of leaked TTIP documents on the Reichstag
Building in Berlin. Leaked TTIP documents confirm major risks for
climate, environment and consumer safety.
1. What is the TTIP?
The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership
(TTIP) is a proposed trade deal between the EU and the US economies. The
negotiation has been kept under wraps for years and the implications
are massive. It would account for about half of the entire world’s GDP,
nearly a third of world trade flows, and would affect pretty much every
sector of the economy - from farming to textiles, and IT to cars.
Hundreds
of Greenpeace activists participate in a mass demonstration targeted
towards US President Obama and German Chancellor Merkel. On the huge
banner it reads: "Yes we can stop TTIP".
2. What will the TTIP actually do?
The aim is to remove so-called trade ‘barriers’ that
could boost trade. Some of these barriers could include health and
safety standards, labelling laws, or insisting on eco-friendly
production processes which protect consumers. But TTIP could alter or
remove these.
After
the leaks, Greenpeace set up a TTIP Documents Transparent Public
Reading Room in Berlin where concerned citizens were able to read the
documents.
3. But cheaper is better right?
In some ways, yes. But you get what you pay for.
For example, the EU does not allow imports of US meat
from animals that have been treated with growth hormones, because this
practice has been linked to cancer and other health concerns. But the US
agriculture industry see these standards as obstacles to trade. This
means that the TTIP could potentially allow a lot more GM food into
Europe, and citizens could soon be eating fruit and vegetables with much
higher pesticide residues, meat from pigs and cattle treated with
growth hormones, or chicken treated with chlorine. Meanwhile, European
producers lose out to cheaper imports.
4. What’s wrong with rinsing chickens in a water and chlorine bath?
Apart from the fact that these are chemicals that are
normally used to clean toilets, it poses a serious health risk -
chlorine is a known carcinogen. In the US meat is also often treated
with antibacterial substances, which have other health and environmental
impacts.
Greenpeace reveals 248 pages of the top secret TTIP documents at the re.publica TEN conference in Berlin.
5. Wow, that’s pretty worrying. What else should I be concerned about?
From an environmental and consumer protection point of view, four aspects are of serious concern.
i. Profit before planet
None of the TTIP papers that Greenpeace Netherlands
leaked reference long-standing environmental protections, like the
“General Exceptions” rule - a nearly 70-year-old rule that allows
nations to regulate trade “to protect human, animal and plant life or
health”. The omission of this suggests what both sides are really in
favour of: profit at the expense of our health and the environment.
ii. Climate protection will be harder under TTIP
Remember how in Paris last year world leaders
recognised the need to keep temperature increase under 1.5 degrees
Celsius? Well, trade should not be excluded from climate action. But nothing indicating
support for climate protection can be found in the texts Greenpeace
Netherlands released. As an example, trade proposals would rule out
regulating the import of carbon-intensive fuels such as oil from the tar
sands.
Two pages of the secret TTIP documents.
iii. Risk management instead of risk avoidance
It’s better to avoid a risk than manage it right? In
2000, the European Commission adopted the “precautionary principle”,
which forces a manufacturer to prove that a product is safe. But in the
TTIP papers there is no mention of the “precautionary principle”, only
of the U.S. demand for a ‘risk-based’ approach. So if EU regulators have
issues, say, with controversial pesticides and want to take preventive
measures, this can be undermined because the precautionary principle is
no longer there.
iv. Big business wants what big business gets
What if you’re concerned about the impacts TTIP has
on environmental and consumer protection and want to do something about
it? Well that would be hard because corporations would be granted a
privileged voice. The leaked papers repeatedly talk about the need for
further consultations with industry. In this way the EU is granting the
private sector great influence, while the public is kept out by keeping
the negotiations secret.
Greenpeace
activists block EU and US negotiators from TTIP Talks in Brussels. The
protesters warn that the TTIP is a threat for democracy, environmental
protection, health standards and working conditions.
6. Hmmm, I don’t like the sound of this. Is there an alternative to the TTIP?
Yes. Basically, the problem with the TTIP is that it makes
trade liberal, almost too liberal, deregulating controversial and risky
products like GMOs, chemicals and hormone-treated meat. What we need
instead is sustainable development. We need international rules for
better trade that promote environmental, social and human well-being.
Trade rules should be democratic and inclusive. They should not grant
privileged treatment for multinationals, but guarantee accountability
through the enforceable protection of human and social rights, and the
environment. Sounds like a better trade deal, don’t you think?
Susan Cohen Jehoram is the TTIP international project lead at Greenpeace Netherlands.
There are many more implications and problems associated with the TTIP. Read more about it here.
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