GD/111
European Economic Community - Imports of Beef from Canada
Other titles
EEC Import of Beef (Source: GATT Analytical Index)
Products at Issue
Products at issue |
Beef
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Type of product |
Agricultural
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Product sub-type |
Meat products
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Related disputes
GATT | |
WTO |
Key legal aspects
Legal basis |
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Claims raised |
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Defences raised |
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Adjudicators
Type | Panel |
Chairperson | K. Berger (Norway) |
Other members | C.A. Rego Santos-Neves (Brazil), Elvezio Contestabile (Switzerland) |
Type | Panel |
Legal basis at issue |
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Claims at issue |
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Defences at issue |
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No of Pages (total / legal reasoning) | 8 |
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Timeline
Request for consultations | |
Request for establishment | |
Establishment | |
Composition | |
Report | |
Adoption of report |
Outcome
Outcome of the proceedings |
Report adopted
|
Additional Info | L/5099 (23/01/1981) European Economic Community - Imports of Beef from Canada - Recourse to Article XXIII:2 by Canada - Report by the Panel: The matter concerned a challenge by Canada to the EEC regulations pertaining to the implementation of the levy free tariff quota for 10,000 tons of fresh, chilled or frozen high-quality grain fed beef. In Canada's opinion, the exclusion of Canadian beef grades A2, A3 and A4 from Article 1(1)(d) of Commission Regulation (EEC) No. 2972/79 was inconsistent with Article I:1 and the manner in which the quota was implemented was inconsistent with Article II:1(a), since beef from the US was permitted entry while the same quality of beef from Canada was not. The Panel concluded that Regulation No. 2972/79 had the effect of preventing access of "like products" from other origin than the United States, thus being inconsistent with the most-favoured-nation principle in Article I. This was because exports of like products of other origin than that of US were in effect denied access to the EEC market considering that the only certifying agency authorized to certify the meat described in Article 1(1)(d), listed in Annex II of the Regulation, was a US agency mandated to certify only meat from the US. The Panel also that the manner in which the EEC concession on high quality beef was implemented accorded less favourable treatment to Canada than that provided for in the relevant EEC Schedule, thus being inconsistent with the provisions of Article II:1. |