On this page:
I. Background
II. Current status of work
III. Trade Facilitation Agreement
IV. Notifications
V. Technical assistance and capacity building
VI. Events
VII. Resources |
News back to top
I.
Background back to top
> Background – early years, from Singapore to Doha
> Negotiating an agreement on trade facilitation
II. Current status of work back to top
Following the dissolution of the Negotiating Group on Trade Facilitation after the conclusion of the negotiations in December 2013, work on trade facilitation primarily takes place in the Preparatory Committee on Trade Facilitation. The Committee, which is open to all WTO members, is mandated under the Bali Ministerial Decision to “perform such functions as may be necessary to ensure the expeditious entry into force of the Agreement and to prepare for the efficient operation of the Agreement upon its entry into force.” The decision tasks the Committee to:
(i) conduct a legal review of the Trade Facilitation Agreement
(ii) receive notifications from members on the commitments they can undertake immediately (Category A commitments )
(iii) draw up a Protocol of Amendment to insert the Agreement into Annex 1A of the WTO Agreement.
The General Council was mandated to meet no later than 31 July 2014 to:
- adopt the Protocol drawn up by the Committee,
- open the Protocol for acceptance until 31 July 2015
- annex to the Agreement notifications of Category A commitments.
Ministers decided that the Protocol would enter into force after two-thirds of the WTO’s membership have completed their domestic ratification process.
The legal review was completed by members in July 2014. Delegations have begun to submit their Category A notifications (see here). Work on the Protocol started but the WTO Director-General Roberto Azevêdo reported to the membership on 31 July that members were unable to reach consensus on the adoption of the Protocol.
III. Trade Facilitation Agreement back to top
The Trade Facilitation Agreement has three sections:
- Section I contains provisions for expediting the movement, release and clearance of goods, including goods in transit. It clarifies and improves the relevant articles (V, VIII and X) of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) 1994. It also sets out provisions for customs cooperation.
- Section II contains special and differential treatment (SDT) provisions that allow developing and least-developed countries (LDCs) to determine when they will implement individual provisions of the Agreement and to identify provisions that they will only be able to implement upon the receipt of technical assistance and support for capacity building.
- To benefit from SDT, a member must categorize each provision of the Agreement, as defined below, and notify other WTO members of these categorizations in accordance with specific timelines outlined in the Agreement (see below).
- Category A: provisions that the member will implement by the time the Agreement enters into force (or in the case of a least-developed country member within one year after entry into force)
- Category B: provisions that the member will implement after a transitional period following the entry into force of the Agreement
- Category C: provisions that the member will implement on a date after a transitional period following the entry into force of the Agreement and requiring the acquisition of assistance and support for capacity building.
For provisions designated as categories B and C, the member must provide dates for implementation of the provisions, as outlined in the following factsheets:
- Section III contains provisions that establish a permanent committee on trade facilitation at the WTO, require members to have a national committee to facilitate domestic coordination and implementation of the provisions of the Agreement. It also sets out a few final provisions.
IV. Notifications back to top
- Notifications of Category A commitments (Document code WT/PCTF/N/*)
> search
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V. Technical assistance and capacity building back to top
Technical assistance for trade facilitation is provided by the WTO, WTO members and other intergovernmental organizations, including the World Bank, the World Customs Organization and the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). In July 2014, the WTO announced the launch of the Trade Facilitation Agreement Facility, which will assist developing and least-developed countries in implementing the WTO’s Trade Facilitation Agreement. It will become operational once the Trade Facilitation Protocol has been adopted.
VI. Events back to top
- Trade Facilitation Conference for African Countries, Nairobi, Kenya
Symposium (13-15 November 2012)
> Agenda with presentations
WTO Symposia on practical experience of implementing trade facilitation reforms, including their costs and benefits:
VII. Resources back to top
WTO resources
Factsheets
Working Papers
Briefing Note
Other resources
Search Documents Online
Documents on Trade
Facilitation bear the document code TN/TF/* for documents under
the Negotiating Group on Trade Facilitation, G/C/W/* and G/L/*
for documents under the Council for Trade in Goods (where *
takes additional values).
These links open a new window: allow a moment for the results to appear.
> help with downloading these documents
- Minutes of the meetings of the Negotiating
Group on Trade Facilitation and of the Preparatory Committee (searches for document code
TN/TF/M/* and WT/PCTF/M/*) > search
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Working documents on Trade
Facilitation (Document code
TN/TF/W/*, G/C/W/* or WT/PCTF/W/*
and keyword
“Trade Facilitation”)
> search
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Working documents on Technical Assistance
on Trade Facilitation
(Document code TN/TF/W/* or G/C/W/* and keyword “Technical
Assistance”) > search
-
Needs Assessment Guide (searches for document code
TN/TF/W/143/*) > search
You can perform more sophisticated searches from the
Documents Online search facility by defining multiple search criteria such as document symbol (i.e. code number),
notification number, requirement subject, trade coverage, full text search or document date.
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