GD/145
EEC - Panel on Newsprint
Other titles
EEC Newsprint (Source: GATT Analytical Index)
Products at Issue
Products at issue |
Newsprint
|
Type of product |
Non-agricultural
|
Product sub-type |
Paper products
|
Related disputes
GATT | |
WTO |
Key legal aspects
Legal basis |
|
Claims raised |
|
Defences raised |
|
Adjudicators
Type | Panel |
Chairperson | Gardner Patterson (United States) |
Other members | Alberto Dumont (Argentina), M. Shaton (Israel) |
Type | Panel |
Legal basis at issue |
|
Claims at issue |
|
Defences at issue |
|
No of Pages (total / legal reasoning) | 16 (and 5 annex) |
|
|
|
|
|
Timeline
Request for consultations | |
Request for establishment | |
Establishment | |
Composition | |
Report | |
Adoption of report |
Outcome
Outcome of the proceedings |
Report adopted
|
Additional Info | L/5680 (17/10/1984) Panel on Newsprint - Report of the Panel: In its Regulation No. 3684/83 of 22 December 1983, the EC had, for the year 1984, opened a duty-free tariff quota of 500,000 tonnes for newsprint, whereas the commitment in its GATT Schedule LXXII provided for an annual duty-free quota of 1.5 million tonnes. The Panel found that although in the formal sense the EC had not modified its GATT concession, it had in fact changed its GATT commitment unilaterally, by limiting its duty-free tariff quota for MFN suppliers for 1984 to 500,000 tonnes. The Panel considered the arguments advanced by the EC relating to Article XIII but concluded that the conditions for its application had not been fulfilled because the EEC Regulation 3684/83 did not in fact constitute a change in the administration or management of the tariff quota from a global quota system to a system of country shares, as had been asserted by the EC. The Panel therefore concluded that the EC, in unilaterally establishing for 1984 a duty-free quota of 500,000 tonnes, had not acted in conformity with its obligations under Article II of the GATT. While holding that the right of Canada to compete within a duty-free tariff quota of 1.5 million tonnes had been impaired by the EC action, the Panel recognized, however, that as a result of newsprint imports from EFTA countries entering the EC market duty-free since 1 January 1984 under the terms of the free-trade agreements, the value of the EC concession had greatly increased for non-EFTA suppliers and especially for Canada as the most important MFN supplier. The Panel concluded that this justified the EC engaging in renegotiations under Article XXVIII. Finally, The Panel noted the statement by the EC that, should the Panel consider the action taken by the EC as not being in conformity with the GATT, they might proceed to option(b) under which the tariff quota would be maintained at 1.5 million tonnes but that imports from all sources, including the EFTA countries, would be recorded against that quota. While the Panel could find no specific GATT provision forbidding such action and no precedents to guide it, it considered that this would not be an appropriate solution to the problem and would create an unfortunate precedent. |