2015-07-09

The following text was adopted by the European Parliament on July 8 (or find it here).

Please also refer to the response on the adoption by Marietje Schaake.

P8_TA-PROV(2015)0252
Negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)
European Parliament resolution of 8 July 2015 containing the European Parliament’s
recommendations to the European Commission on the negotiations for the Transatlantic
Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) (2014/2228(INI))

The European Parliament,

– having regard to the EU directives for the negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade and

Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the EU and the US, unanimously adopted by the

Council on 14 June 20131 and declassified and made public by the Council on 9 October

2014,

– having regard to Articles 168 to 191 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European

Union (TFEU), and in particular to the precautionary principle enshrined in Article

191(2),

– having regard to the Joint Statement of the EU-US Summit of 26 March 20142,

– having regard to the joint statement of 20 March 2015 by Commissioner Cecilia

Malmström and US Trade Representative Michael Froman regarding the exclusion of

public services in EU and US trade agreements,

– having regard to the Council Conclusion on TTIP of 20 March 2015,

– having regard to the Council conclusions on TTIP of 21 November 20143,

– having regard to the joint statement of 16 November 2014 by US President Barack

Obama, Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, European Council President Herman

Van Rompuy, UK Prime Minister David Cameron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel,

French President François Hollande, Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and Spanish

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, following their meeting on the margins of the G20

Summit in Brisbane, Australia1,

– having regard to the European Council conclusions of 26-27 June 20142,

– having regard to President Juncker’s political guidelines of 15 July 2014 addressed to the

next Commission and entitled ‘A New Start for Europe: My Agenda for Jobs, Growth,

Fairness and Democratic Change’3,

– having regard to the Commission’s communication to the College of the Commission of

25 November 2014 on transparency in TTIP negotiations (C(2014)9052)4, to the

Commission decisions of 25 November 2014 on the publication of information on

meetings held between Members of the Commission and organisations or self-employed

individuals (C(2014)9051) and on the publication of information on meetings held

between Directors-General of the Commission and organisations or self-employed

individuals (C(2014)9048), to the judgments and opinions of the Court of Justice of the

European Union (C-350/12 P, 2/13, 1/09) on access to documents of the institutions and

the decision of the European Ombudsman of 6 January 2015 closing her own-initiative

inquiry (OI/10/2014/RA) concerning the European Commission on dealing with requests

for information and access to documents (Transparency),

– having regard to the joint statement of 3 December 2014 by the EU-US Energy Council5,

– having regard to the EU integrated approach to food safety (‘farm to fork’) established in

20046,

– having regard to the Commission report of 13 January 2015 on the online public

consultation on investment protection and investor-to-state dispute settlement (ISDS) in

the TTIP (SWD(2015)0003),

– having regard to the EU’s textual proposals tabled for discussion with the US in the TTIP

negotiating rounds, in particular those which have been declassified and made public by

the Commission, inter alia the EU position papers entitled ‘TTIP regulatory issues -

engineering industries’7, ‘Test–case on functional equivalence: proposed methodology for

automotive regulatory equivalence’8, and ‘Trade and sustainable development

chapter/labour and environment: EU paper outlining key issues and elements for

provisions in the TTIP’9, and the textual proposals on technical barriers to trade (TBT)10,

sanitary and phytosanitary measures (SPS)11, customs and trade facilitation12, small and

medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)1, possible provisions on competition2, possible

provisions on state enterprises and enterprises granted special or exclusive rights or

privileges3, possible provisions on subsidies4, and dispute settlement5, initial provisions on

regulatory cooperation6,

– having regard to the opinion on ‘The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership

(TTIP)’ of the Committee of the Regions (ECOS-V-063) adopted during the 110th

plenary session (11-13 February 2015), and to the opinion of the European Economic and

Social Committee of 4 June 2014 on ‘Transatlantic trade relations and the EESC’s views

on an enhanced cooperation and eventual EU-USA FTA’,

– having regard to the Final Inception Report of 28 April 2014 by ECORYS for the

Commission entitled ‘Trade Sustainability Impact Assessment (Trade SIA) in support of

negotiations of a comprehensive trade and investment agreement between the European

Union and the United States of America’7,

– having regards to the Commission’s 2015 report on Trade and Investment Barriers

(COM(2015)0127) 8,

– having regard to the ‘Detailed Appraisal of the European Commission’s Impact

Assessment on EU-US Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership’ published on

April 2014 by CEPS for the Parliament,

– having regard to its earlier resolutions, in particular those of 23 October 2012 on trade and

economic relations with the United States9, 23 May 2013 on EU trade and investment

negotiations with the United States of America10, and 15 January 2015 on the annual

report on the activities of the European Ombudsman 201311,

– having regard to Rules 108(4) and 52 of its Rules of Procedure,

– having regard to the report of the Committee on International Trade and the opinions of

the Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Committee on Development, the Committee on

Economic and Monetary Affairs, the Committee on Employment and Social Affairs, the

Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety, the Committee on

Industry, Research and Energy, the Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer

Protection, the Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development, the Committee on

Culture and Education, the Committee on Legal Affairs, the Committee on Civil Liberties,

Justice and Home Affairs, the Committee on Constitutional Affairs, and the Committee on

Petitions (A8-0175/2015),

A. whereas exports through trade and growth through investments are key drivers of jobs and

economic growth which do not require government investments;

B. whereas the EU’s GDP is heavily dependent on trade and export and benefits from trade

and investment based on rules and whereas an ambitious and balanced agreement with the

US should support the reindustrialisation of Europe and help to achieve the 2020 target for

an increase in the EU’s GDP generated by industry from 15 % to 20 % by strengthening

trans-atlantic trade in both goods and services; whereas it has the potential to create

opportunities especially for SMEs, micro enterprises (in accordance with the definition of

Commission Recommendation 2003/361/EC), clusters and enterprise networks which

suffer disproportionally more from non-tariff barriers (NTBs) than larger companies, as

the latter have economies of scale that allow them easier access to markets on both sides

of the Atlantic; whereas an agreement between the two biggest economic blocs in the

world has the potential to create standards, norms and rules, which will be adopted at a

global level, which would serve to the advantage of third countries as well and which

would prevent a further fragmentation of world trade; whereas failure to negotiate an

agreement will allow other third countries with different standards and values to assume

this role instead;

C. whereas nine Member States of the European Union have already signed a bilateral

agreement with the USA, so allowing TTIP to take inspiration from good practice and

better enable the obstacles encountered by these Member States to be overcome;

D. whereas the recent crises on the EU’s borders and developments around the world show

the need to invest in global governance and a system based on rules and values;

E. whereas, given the growing interconnectedness of global markets, it is crucial that policy

makers shape and promote the interaction of markets; whereas proper trade rules and

removing unnecessary barriers are fundamental to creating added value while maintaining

and developing a strong, competitive and diversified industrial base in Europe;

F. whereas EU’s attempts to deal with the challenges of climate change, environmental

protection and consumer safety have resulted in high regulatory costs for EU enterprises,

coupled with high energy feedstock and electricity prices, which – if left unaddressed in

TTIP – may accelerate the process of delocalization, deindustrialization and job losses

thereby threatening EU reindustrialization and employment targets, that will also defeat

the very policy targets that EU regulations seek to achieve;

G. whereas a well-designed trade agreement could contribute to harnessing the opportunities

of globalisation. Whereas a strong and ambitious trade agreement should not only focus on

reducing tariffs and NTBs but should also be a tool to protect workers, consumers and the

environment; whereas a strong and ambitious trade agreement is an opportunity to create a

framework by strengthening regulation to the highest level, in line with our shared values,

thereby preventing social and environmental dumping and ensuring a high level of

consumer protection in light of the shared objective of open competition on a levelplaying

field;

H. whereas even though, common high standards are in the interest of consumers, it should

be recognised that convergence also makes sense for businesses, as the higher costs

stemming from higher standards may be better compensated by increased economies of

scale in a potential market of 850 million consumers;

I. whereas previous trade agreements have shown significant benefits for the European

economy, it is difficult to assess the real impact of TTIP on both the EU and US

economies and to predict while negotiations are ongoing and studies show contradictory

results; whereas TTIP alone will not resolve longstanding structural economic problems

and their underlying causes in the EU but should be seen as an element in a broader

European strategy to create jobs and growth, and expectations for TTIP should be

commensurate with the level of ambition that will be reached in the negotiations;

J. whereas the consequences of the Russian embargo have clearly demonstrated the

continuous geopolitical relevance of agriculture, the importance of having access to a

range of different agricultural markets and the need for strong and strategic trade

partnerships with reliable trade partners;

K whereas it is important for European agriculture to secure a mutually beneficial trade deal

with the US in order to advance Europe’s position as a key player on the global market

without jeopardising the current quality standards of European agricultural products and

future improvement of those standards, while preserving the European agricultural model

and ensuring its economic and social viability;

L. whereas trade and investment flows are not an end in themselves and the well-being of

ordinary citizens, workers and consumers as well as increased opportunities for business

as drivers of growth and jobs are the benchmarks for a trade agreement; whereas TTIP

should be considered a model for a good trade agreement responding to these

requirements in order to serve as an example for our future negotiations with other trade

partners;

M. whereas a certain degree of confidentiality is required in negotiations in order to achieve a

high quality outcome, and the limited level of transparency in which the negotiations have

been conducted in the past has led to deficiencies in terms of democratic control of the

negotiation process;

N. whereas President Juncker has clearly reiterated in his Political Guidelines that he wants a

balanced and reasonable trade agreement with the United States and that – while the EU

and the US can go a significant step further in recognising each other’s product standards

and working towards transatlantic standards – the EU will not sacrifice its (food)-safety,

health, animal health, social, environmental, and data protection standards and cultural

diversity; recalling that the safety of the food we eat, the protection of Europeans’

personal data and its services of general interest are non-negotiable unless the aim is to

achieve a higher level of protection;

O. whereas it is important to ensure a satisfactory conclusion of the negotiations on the Safe

Harbor and the Data Protection Umbrella Agreement;

P. whereas President Juncker has also clearly stated in his political guidelines, that he will

not accept that the jurisdiction of courts in the Member States is limited by special

regimes for investment disputes; whereas now that the results of the public consultation on

investment protection and ISDS in the TTIP are available, a reflection process – taking

account of the contributions – is currently being undertaken within and between the three

institutions, while exchanging with civil society and the business sector, on the best way

to achieve investment protection and equal treatment of investors while ensuring states’

right to regulate;

Q. whereas Parliament fully supports both the decision of the Council to declassify the

negotiation directives and the Commission’s transparency initiative; whereas the lively

public debate across Europe on TTIP has shown the need for the TTIP negotiations to be

concluded in a more transparent and inclusive manner taking into account the concerns

voiced by European citizens and communicating the negotiation results to the general

public;

R. whereas since July 2013 talks between the US and the EU have been going on, but up to

now no common text has been agreed;

S. whereas TTIP is expected to be a mixed agreement requiring ratification by the European

Parliament and all 28 EU Member States;

1. Believes that the EU and the US are key strategic partners; stresses that the Transatlantic

Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) is the most significant recent EU-US project and

should reinvigorate the transatlantic partnership as a whole, beyond its trade aspects;

emphasises that its successful conclusion is of high political importance;

2. Addresses, in the context of the ongoing negotiations on TTIP, the following

recommendations to the Commission:

(a) regarding the scope and the broader context:

(i) to ensure that transparent TTIP negotiations lead to an ambitious,

comprehensive and balanced trade and investment agreement of a high

standard that would promote sustainable growth with shared benefits across

Member States, with mutual and reciprocal benefits between the partners,

increase international competitiveness and open up new opportunities for EU

companies, in particular SMEs, support the creation of high-quality jobs for

European citizens, directly benefit European consumers; the content and the

implementation of the agreement are more important than the speed of the

negotiations;

(ii) to emphasise that while the TTIP negotiations consist of negotiations on three

main areas – ambitiously improving reciprocal market access (for goods,

services, investment and public procurement at all levels of government),

reducing NTBs and enhancing the compatibility of regulatory regimes, and

developing common rules to address shared global trade challenges and

opportunities – all these areas are equally important and need to be included in

a comprehensive package; TTIP should be ambitious and binding on all levels

of government on both sides of the Atlantic, the agreement should lead to

lasting genuine market openness on a reciprocal basis and trade facilitation on

the ground, and should pay particular attention to structural measures to

achieve greater transatlantic cooperation while upholding regulatory standards

and consumer protection and preventing social, fiscal and environmental

dumping;

(iii) to keep in mind the strategic importance of the EU-US economic relationship

in general and of TTIP in particular, inter alia as an opportunity to promote the

principles and values, anchored in a rules-based framework, that the EU and

the US share and cherish and to design a common approach and vision to

global trade, investment and trade-related issues such as high standards, norms

and regulations, in order to develop a broader transatlantic vision and a

common set of strategic goals; to bear in mind that given the size of the

transatlantic market, TTIP is an opportunity to shape and regulate the

international trade order in order to ensure that both blocs thrive in an

interconnected world;

(iv) to ensure, especially given the recent positive developments taking place in the

World Trade Organisation (WTO), that an agreement with the US serves as a

stepping-stone for broader trade negotiations and is not pre-empting or

counteracting the WTO process; bilateral and plurilateral trade agreements

should generally speaking be considered as a second-best option and must not

prevent efforts made in order to reach significant improvements on the

multilateral level; TTIP must ensure synergies with other trade agreements

currently being negotiated;

(v) to bear in mind that the TFEU defines EU trade policy as an integral part of the

Union’s overall external action and, therefore, to evaluate the implications of

the final agreement, acknowledging opportunities, such as easier market access

due to common trans-Atlantic standards, and risks, such as trade diversion from

developing countries due to tariff preference erosion;

(vi) to ensure that the agreement guarantees full respect for EU fundamental rights

standards through the inclusion of a legally binding and suspensive human

rights clause as a standard part of EU trade agreements with third countries;

(b) regarding market access:

(i) to ensure that the market access offers in the different areas are reciprocal,

equally ambitious and reflect both parties’ expectations, underlines that the

different proposals for those areas must be balanced;

(ii) to aim at the elimination of all tariff duties while respecting that there are a

number of sensitive agricultural and industrial products on both sides for

which exhaustive lists will have to be agreed upon during the negotiation

process; to foresee for the most sensitive products appropriate transitional

periods and quotas and in a few cases their exclusion, taking into account the

fact that in many cases those products have higher production costs in the EU

owing to EU rules;

(iii) to have a safeguard clause incorporated into the agreement, as is clearly set

out in the negotiating mandate, which would be invoked where a rise in

imports of a particular product threatened to cause serious harm to domestic

production, with specific reference to food production and to the energyintensive,

carbon-leakage, chemicals, raw materials and steel sectors in the

EU;

(iv) to keep in mind that as the EU is the largest trading bloc worldwide there are

important offensive interests for the EU in the highly specialised services

sector, for instance in the area of engineering and other professional services,

telecommunication, financial or transport services;

(v) to increase market access for services according to a “hybrid list approach”,

using for market access “positive lists”, whereby services that are to be

opened up to foreign companies are explicitly mentioned and new services

are excluded while ensuring that possible stand-still and ratchet clauses only

apply to non-discrimination provisions and allow for enough flexibility to

bring services of general economic interest back into public control as well as

to take into account the emergence of new and innovative services and using

“negative list approach” for national treatment;

(vi) the negotiations should meaningfully address and remove the current US

restrictions on maritime and air transport services owned by European

businesses as a result of US legislation such as the Jones Act, Foreign

Dredging Act, the Federal Aviation Act and the US Air Cabotage law and in

relation to capital restrictions on foreign ownership of airlines, which

seriously hinders market access for EU companies as well as innovation in

the US itself;

(vii) to build on the joint statement reflecting the negotiators’ clear commitment to

exclude current and future Services of General Interest as well as Services of

General Economic Interest from the scope of application of TTIP, (including

but not limited to water, health, social services, social security systems and

education), to ensure that national and if applicable local authorities retain the

full right to introduce, adopt, maintain or repeal any measures with regards to

the commissioning, organisation, funding and provision of public services as

provided in the Treaties as well as in the EU’s negotiating mandate; this

exclusion should apply irrespective of how the services are provided and

funded;

(viii) to strive hard to ensure mutual recognition of professional qualifications,

notably via the creation of a legal framework with federal states that have

regulatory powers in this domain, in order to enable EU and US professionals

to practise on either side of the Atlantic and to facilitate mobility of investors,

professionals, highly -skilled workers and technicians between the EU and

the US in sectors covered by TTIP;

(ix) to bear in mind that visa facilitation for European service and goods providers

is a key element for taking advantage of the agreement and to increase, in the

context of the negotiations, political pressure on the US to guarantee full visa

reciprocity and equal treatment for all citizens of EU Member States without

discrimination as regards their access to the US;

(x) to combine market access negotiations on financial services with convergence

in financial regulation at the highest level, in order to support the introduction

and compatibility of necessary regulation in order to reinforce financial

stability, to ensure adequate protection for consumers of financial goods and

services and support ongoing cooperation efforts in other international

forums, such as the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and the

Financial Stability Board; to ensure that these cooperation efforts do not limit

the EU and member states regulatory and supervisory sovereignty, including

their ability to ban certain financial products and activities;

(xi) to establish enhanced cooperation between the EU, the Member States and

the US, including mechanisms for more efficient international cooperation

with the aim to set global higher standards against financial and tax

criminality and corruption;

(xii) to ensure that the EU’s acquis on data privacy is not compromised through

the liberalisation of data flows, in particular in the area of e-commerce and

financial services, while recognizing the relevance of data flows as a

backbone of transatlantic trade and the digital economy; to incorporate, as a

key point, a comprehensive and unambiguous horizontal self-standing

provision, based on Article XIV of the General Agreement on Trade in

services (GATS), that fully exempts the existing and future EU legal

framework for the protection of personal data from the agreement without

any condition that it must be consistent with other parts of the TTIP; to

negotiate provisions which touch upon the flow of personal data only if the

full application of data protection rules on both sides of the Atlantic is

guaranteed and respected to cooperate with the United States in order

to encourage third countries to adopt similar high data protection standards

around the world;

(xiii) to keep in mind that the consent of the European Parliament to the final TTIP

agreement could be endangered as long as the US blanket mass surveillance

activities are not completely abandoned and an adequate solution is found for

the data privacy rights of EU citizens, including administrative and judicial

redress, as stated in the paragraph 74 of Parliament’s resolution of 12 March

20141;

(xiv) to ensure that the trust between the EU and US, which was damaged by mass

surveillance scandals, be rapidly and fully restored;

(xv) to include am ambitious chapter on competition ensuring that European

competition law is properly respected particularly in the digital world; to

ensure that private companies can compete fairly with state-owned or statecontrolled

companies; to ensure that state subsidies to private companies

should be regulated and subject to a transparent control system;

(xvi) to call for open competition in and development of the digital economy,

which is by nature global but has its main bases in the EU and the USA; to

emphasise in the negotiations that the digital economy must be central to the

transatlantic market, with leverage in the global economy and in opening up

global markets further;

(xvii) to keep in mind regarding information society services and

telecommunications services, that it is of particular importance that the TTIP

ensure a level playing field with equal and transparent access based on

reciprocity for EU service companies to the US market and with an obligation

on US service providers to respect and comply with all relevant industry and

product safety standards and consumer rights when providing services in

Europe or to European customers;

(xviii) to ensure via a legally binding general clause applicable to the entire

agreement, in full compliance with the UNESCO Convention on the

protection and promotion of the diversity of cultural expressions, that the

parties, reserve their right to adopt or maintain any measure (in particularly

those of a regulatory and/or financial nature) with respect to the protection or

promotion of cultural and linguistic diversity, in line with the relevant

Articles as established in the Treaty on the Functioning of the European

Union, as well as media freedom and media pluralism, irrespective of the

technology or distribution platform used and keeping in mind that the

mandate given to the European Commission by the Member States explicitly

excludes the audiovisual services;

(xix) to specify that nothing in the agreement shall affect the ability of the EU or

EU Member States to subsidise and provide financial support to cultural

industries and cultural, educational, audiovisual and press services;

(xx) to confirm that fixed book price systems and price fixing for newspapers and

magazines will not be challenged by the obligations under the TTIP

agreement;

(xxi) to ensure with a general clause the right of EU Member States to adopt or

maintain any measure with regard to the provision of all educational and

cultural services which work on a non-profit basis and/or receive public

funding to any degree or state support in any form, and to ensure that

privately funded foreign providers meet the same quality and accreditation

requirements as domestic providers;

(xxii) given the huge interest on the part of European companies, notably SMEs, in

obtaining non-discriminatory access to public contracts in the US both at

federal and sub-federal level, for example for construction services, civil

engineering, transport and energy infrastructure and goods and services, to

have an ambitious approach to the chapter on public procurement, while

respecting the compliance of the chapter with the new EU public procurement

and concession directives, with a view to remedying, in line with the principle

of reciprocity, the large disparity that currently exists in the degree of

openness of the two public procurement markets on both sides of the Atlantic

by significantly opening up the US market (still governed by the Buy

American Act of 1933) at federal and sub-federal level alike building on

commitments made in the Agreement on Government Procurement (GPA)

and by removing the restrictions that currently apply at federal, state and local

level alike in the United States; and to set up mechanisms to guarantee that

commitments entered into by the US federal authorities will be honoured at

all political and administrative levels;

(xxiii) to ensure, with the aim of creating open, non-discriminatory and predictable

procedural requirements ensuring equal access for EU and US companies,

especially SMEs, when tendering for public contracts, that the US increases

the transparency of the adjudication process in force on its territory;

(xxiv) to promote EU-US cooperation at the international level in order to promote

common sustainability standards for public procurement at all federal and

sub-federal levels of government, inter alia in the implementation of the

recently revised Government Procurement Agreement; and the adoption and

observation of social responsibility standards by businesses based on the

Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises of the Organisation for Economic

Co-operation and Development (OECD);

(xxv) to ensure that the US states are included in the negotiation process in order to

achieve meaningful results in opening up US public procurement contracts to

EU companies;

(xxvi) to be aware regarding public procurement of the sensitive nature of the fields

of defence and security and to take into account the objectives set by the

Heads of States and Governments during the 2013 Defence Council to

promote the establishment of a European security and defence market and of

a European defence technological and industrial base (EDTIB);

(xxvii) to ensure that the negotiations on rules of origin aim at reconciling the EU

and US approaches and at establishing effective rules of origin, thereby

avoiding that rules of origin are undermined by other agreements, to consider

the negotiations as an opportunity to move towards common standards for

compulsory origin marking of products; given the conclusion of the

negotiations for the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA)

between the EU and Canada and the potential upgrade of the EU-Mexico free

trade agreement, the possibility and scope of cumulation will need to be

considered; however to keep in mind that the purpose of TTIP is to facilitate

trade in genuinely US and EU made products and not to allow imports from

third countries, therefore exclusions for certain products will need to be

considered on a case by case basis and exclusions from all type of cumulation

should be granted for sensitive sectors;

(xxviii) to ensure that TTIP is an open agreement, and to look for ways in which

valued partners, which have an interest in the TTIP negotiations because of

Customs Union agreements with either the EU or the US, can be more

actively informed of the developments;

(c) regarding regulatory cooperation and coherence pillar and NTBs:

(i) to ensure that the regulatory cooperation chapter promotes a transparent,

effective, pro-competitive economic environment through the identification and

prevention of potential future non-tariff barriers to trade, which

disproportionately affect SME’s, and the facilitation of trade and investment

while developing and securing the highest levels of protection of health and

safety in line with the precautionary principle laid down in Article 191 TFEU,

consumer, labour environmental and animal welfare legislation and of cultural

diversity that exists in the EU; to support, whilst fully respecting regulatory

autonomy, the establishment of a structured dialogue and cooperation between

regulators in the most transparent way possible and involving stakeholders; to

include cross-cutting disciplines on regulatory coherence and transparency for

the development and implementation of efficient, cost-effective, and more

compatible regulations for goods and services; negotiators on both sides need

to identify and to be very clear about which technical procedures and standards

are fundamental and cannot be compromised, which ones can be the subject of

a common approach, which are the areas where mutual recognition based on a

common high standard and a strong system of market surveillance is desirable

and which are those where simply an improved exchange of information is

possible, based on the experience of several years of talks in a variety of fora

including the Transatlantic Economic Council and the High Level Regulatory

Cooperation Forum to ensure similarly that it will not affect standards that have

yet to be set in areas where the legislation or the standards are very different in

the US as compared with the EU, such as, for example, the implementation of

existing (framework) legislation (e.g. REACH), or the adoption of new laws

(e.g. cloning), or future definitions affecting the level of protection (e.g.

endocrine disrupting chemicals); to ensure that any provisions on regulatory

cooperation in the TTIP do not set a procedural requirement for the adoption of

Union acts concerned by it nor give rise to enforceable rights in that regard;

(ii) to base negotiations on SPS and TBT measures on the key principles of the

multilateral SPS and TBT agreements and to protect European SPS standards

and procedures; to aim in the first place at the elimination or significant

reduction of excessively burdensome SPS measures including related import

procedures; in particular to ensure that pre-approvals, obligatory protocols or

pre-clearance inspections are not applied as a permanent import measure; to

achieve increased transparency and openness, mutual recognition of equivalent

standards, exchanges of best practices, strengthening of dialogue between

regulators and stakeholders and strengthening of cooperation in international

standards-setting bodies; to ensure in negotiations on SPS and TBT measures,

that the high standards that have been put in place in order to ensure food

safety, human, animal or plant life or health in the EU are not compromised in

any way;

(iii) to recognise that, where the EU and the US have very different rules, there will

be no agreement, such as on public healthcare services, GMOs, the use of

hormones in the bovine sector, REACH and its implementation, and the

cloning of animals for farming purposes, and therefore not to negotiate on these

issues;

(iv) to encourage the US side to lift the ban on beef imports from the EU;

(v) with regard to the horizontal regulatory cooperation chapter, to foster bilateral

regulatory cooperation in order to avoid unnecessary divergence, particularly as

regards new technologies and services, for the benefit of European and US

competitiveness and consumer choice; to achieve this through enhanced

information exchange and to improve the adoption and implementation of

international instruments, whilst respecting the subsidiarity principle, on the

basis of successful precedents such as ISO standards or under the United

Nations Economic Commission for Europe’s (UNECE) World Forum for

Harmonisation of Vehicle Regulations (WP.29); to remember that the

recognition of equivalence of the greatest possible number of vehicle safety

regulations based on a verified equivalent level of protection would be one of

the most important achievements of the agreement; to ensure that the prior

impact assessment for each regulatory act should measure its impact on

consumers and the environment next to its impact on trade and investment; to

promote regulatory compatibility without compromising the legitimate

regulatory and policy objectives and the competences of the EU and US

legislators;

(vi) to aim to continue to guarantee a high level of product safety within the Union

while eliminate unnecessary duplication of testing that causes a waste of

resources, in particular on low-risk products;

(vii) to address customs issues that go beyond the WTO Trade Facilitation

Agreement (TFA) rules and stress that, in order to achieve real administrative

burden removal, there is a need to work towards a maximum degree of

regulatory alignment on customs and border related policies and practices;

(viii) to define clearly, in the context of future regulatory cooperation, which

measures concern TBT and duplicated or redundant administrative burdens and

formalities and which are linked to fundamental standards and regulations, or

procedures serving a public policy objective;

(ix) to fully respect the established regulatory systems on both sides of the Atlantic,

as well as the European Parliament’s role within the EU’s decision-making

process and its democratic scrutiny over EU regulatory processes when

creating the framework for future cooperation while at the same time ensuring

the utmost transparency and being vigilant about having a balanced

involvement of stakeholders within the consultations included in the

development of a regulatory proposal and not do delay the European legislative

process; to specify the role, the composition and the legal status of the

Regulatory Cooperation Body, taking into consideration that any direct and

compulsory application of its recommendations would imply a breach of the

law-making procedures laid down in the Treaties; to also monitor that it fully

preserves the capacity of national, regional and local authorities to legislate

their own policies, in particular social and environmental policies;

(d) regarding the rules:

(i) to combine negotiations on market access and regulatory cooperation with the

establishment of ambitious rules and principles bearing in mind that each pillar

has specific sensitivities, on issues such as, but not limited to, sustainable

development, energy, SMEs, investment and state-owned enterprises;

(ii) to ensure that the sustainable development chapter is binding and enforceable

and aims at the full and effective ratification, implementation and enforcement

of the eight fundamental International Labour Organisation (ILO) conventions

and their content, the ILO’s Decent Work Agenda and the core international

environmental agreements; provisions must be aimed at further improving

levels of protection of labour and environmental standards; an ambitious trade

and sustainable development chapter must also include rules on corporate

social responsibility based on OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises

and clearly structured dialogue with civil society;

(iii) to ensure that labour and environmental standards are not limited to the trade

and sustainable development chapter but are equally included in other areas of

the agreement, such as investment, trade in services, regulatory cooperation and

public procurement;

(iv) to ensure that labour and environmental standards are made enforceable, by

building on the good experience of existing FTAs by the EU and US and

national legislation; to ensure that the implementation of and compliance with

labour provisions is subjected to an effective monitoring process, involving

social partners and civil society representatives and to the general dispute

settlement which applies to the whole agreement;

(v) to ensure, in full respect of national legislation, that employees of transatlantic

companies, registered under EU member state law, have access to information

and consultation in line with the European works council directive;

(vi) to ensure that the economic, employment, social, and environmental impact of

TTIP, is also examined by means of a thorough and objective ex-ante trade

sustainability impact assessment (SIA) in full respect of the EU Directive on

SIA, with clear and structured involvement of all relevant stakeholders,

including civil society; asks the Commission to conduct comparative in-depth

impact studies for each Member State and an evaluation of the competitiveness

of EU sectors and their counterparts in the US with the aim to make projections

on job losses and gains in the sectors affected in each Member State, whereby

the adjustment costs could be partly taken up by EU and Member State

funding;

(vii) to retain the objective of dedicating a specific chapter to energy, including

industrial raw materials; to ensure that in course of the negotiations the two

sides examine ways to facilitate energy exports, so that TTIP would abolish any

existing restrictions or impediments of export for fuels, including LNG and

crude oil, between the two trading partners, with the aim of creating a

competitive, transparent and non-discriminatory energy market thereby

supporting a diversification of energy sources, contributing to security of

supply and leading to lower energy prices emphasises that this energy chapter

must integrate clear guarantees that the EU’s environmental standards and

climate action goals must not be undermined; to encourage EU-US cooperation

to end fuel tax exemptions for commercial aviation in line with the G-20

commitments to phase out fossil fuel subsidies;

(viii) to ensure that the right of either partner to govern and to regulate the

exploration, exploitation and production of energy sources remains untouched

by any agreement, but that the principle of non-discrimination is applied once

exploitation is decided; to keep in mind that nothing in the agreement should

undermine legitimate non-discriminatory democratic decisions with regard to

energy production, in accordance with the precautionary principle; to ensure

that access to raw materials as well as to energy should also be granted on a

non-discriminatory basis for companies from either the EU or the US and

quality standards for energy products must be respected, including those for

energy products related to their impact on CO2 emissions such as the one

enshrined in the Fuel Quality Directive;

(ix) to ensure that TTIP supports the use and promotion of green goods and

services, including through facilitating their development, and simplifies their

exports and imports thereby tapping into the considerable potential for both

environmental and economic gains offered by the transatlantic economy and

complementing the on-going plurilateral negotiations on the Green Goods

agreement with the aim of contributing to fight combat global warming and to

create new jobs in the green economy;

(x) to ensure that TTIP serves as a forum for the development of ambitious and

binding common sustainability standards for energy production and energy

efficiency, always taking into account and adhering to existing standards on

both sides such as the EU energy labelling and eco-design directives and to

explore ways to enhance cooperation on energy research, development and

innovation and promotion of low-carbon and environmentally friendly

technologies;

(xi) to ensure that TTIP contributes to the sustainable management of fishery

resources, particularly through cooperation between the parties in combatting

illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing (IUU);

(xii) to ensure that TTIP includes a specific chapter on SME’s in TTIP based on the

joint commitment of both negotiating parties and aims at creating new

opportunities in the US for European SMEs (including micro enterprises), on

the basis of SME exporters’ actual reported experience, for instance by

eliminating double certification requirements, by establishing a web-based

information system about the different regulations and best practices, by

facilitating access to support schemes for SME, by introducing ‘fast-track’

procedures at the border or by eliminating specific tariff peaks that continue to

exist; it should establish mechanisms for both sides to work together to

facilitate SMEs’ participation in transatlantic trade and investment, for instance

through a common SME ‘one-stop shop’ with SMEs stakeholders playing a key

role in its establishment, which would provide specific information they need

to export to, import from or invest in the US, including on customs duties, on

taxes, on regulations, on custom procedures and on market opportunities;

(xiii) to ensure that TTIP contains a comprehensive chapter on investment including

provisions on both market access and investment protection, recognising that

access to capital can stimulate jobs and growth; the investment chapter should

aim at ensuring non-discriminatory treatment for the establishment of European

and US companies in each other’s territory, while taking account of the

sensitive nature of some specific sectors; these should look to enhance Europe

as a destination for investment, increase confidence for EU investment in the

US and also address investors’ obligations and responsibilities by referring,

inter alia, to the OECD principles for multinational enterprises and to the UN

principles on Business and human rights as benchmarks;

(xiv) to ensure that investment protection provisions are limited to postestablishment

provisions and focus on national treatment, most-favoured

nation, fair and equitable treatment and protection against direct and indirect

expropriation, including the right to prompt, adequate and effective

compensation; standards of protection and definitions of investor and

investment should be drawn up in a precise legal manner protecting the right to

regulate in the public interest, clarifying the meaning of indirect expropriation

and preventing unfounded or frivolous claims; free transfer of capital should be

in line with the EU treaty provisions and should include a prudential carve-out

not limited in time in the case of financial crises;

(xv) to ensure that foreign investors are treated in a non-discriminatory fashion,

while benefiting from no greater rights than domestic investors, and to replace

the ISDS system with a new system for resolving disputes between investors

and states which is subject to democratic principles and scrutiny, where

potential cases are treated in a transparent manner by publicly appointed,

independent professional judges in public hearings and which includes an

appellate mechanism, where consistency of judicial decisions is ensured, the

jurisdiction of courts of the EU and of the Member States is respected, and

where private interests cannot undermine public policy objectives;

(xvi) to ensure that TTIP includes an ambitious, balanced and modern chapter on and

precisely defined areas of intellectual property rights, including recognition and

enhanced protection of geographical indications and reflects a fair and efficient

level of protection, without impeding the EU’s need to reform its copyright

system and while ensuring a fair balance of IPRs and the public interest, in

particular the need to preserve access to affordable medicines by continuing to

support the TRIPS flexibilities;

(xvii) to consider it to be of great importance that the EU and the US remain

committed and engaged in global multilateral patent harmonisation discussions

through existing international bodies and thus cautions against attempting to

introduce provisions on substantive patent law, in particular with regard to

issues relating to patentability and grace periods, into the TTIP;

(xviii) to ensure that the IPR chapter does not include provisions on the liability of

internet intermediaries or on criminal sanctions as a tool for enforcement, as

having been previously rejected by Parliament including the proposed ACTA

treaty;

(xix) to secure full recognition and strong legal protection of EU geographical

indications and measures to deal with improper use and misleading information

and practices; to guarantee the labelling, traceability and genuine origin of

these products for consumers and the protection of the know-how of producers

as an essential part of a balanced agreement;

(e) regarding transparency, civil society involvement, public and political outreach:

(i) to continue ongoing efforts to increase transparency in the negotiations by

making more negotiation proposals available to the general public, to

implement the recommendations of the European Ombudsman, in particular

relating to the rules on public access to documents;

(ii) to translate these transparency efforts into meaningful practical results, inter

alia by reaching arrangements with the US side to improve transparency,

including access to all negotiating documents for the Members of the European

Parliament, including consolidated texts, while at the same time maintaining

due confidentiality, in order to allow Members of Parliament and the Member

States to develop constructive discussions with stakeholders and the public,; to

ensure that both negotiating parties should justify any refusal to disclose a

negotiating proposal;

(iii) to promote an even closer engagement with the Member States, who were

responsible for the negotiating mandate which directed the European

Commission to open negotiations with the US, with the aim of forging their

active involvement in better communicating the scope and the possible benefits

of the agreement for European citizens, as committed to in the Council

Conclusions adopted on 20 March 2015, in order to ensure a broad, fact-based

public debate on TTIP in Europe with the aim of exploring the genuine

concerns surrounding the agreement;

(iv) to reinforce its continuous and transparent engagement with a wide range of

stakeholders, throughout the negotiation process; encourages all stakeholders to

participate actively and to put forward initiatives and information relevant to

the negotiations;

(v) to encourage Member States to involve national parliaments in line with their

respective constitutional obligations, to provide all the necessary support for

Member States to fulfil this task and to strengthen outreach to national

parliaments, in order to keep national parliaments adequately informed on the

ongoing negotiations;

(vi) to build on the close engagement with Parliament and to seek an even closer,

structured dialogue, which will continue to closely monitor the negotiating

process and to engage on its part with the Commission, the Member States, and

the US Congress and Administration, as well as with stakeholders on both sides

of the Atlantic, in order to ensure an outcome which will benefit citizens in the

EU, the US and beyond;

(vii) to ensure that TTIP and its future implementation is accompanied by a

deepening of transatlantic parliamentary cooperation, on the basis and using the

experience of the Transatlantic Legislators Dialogue, leading in future to a

broader and enhanced political framework to develop common approaches,

reinforce the strategic partnership and to improve global cooperation between

the EU and US;

3. Instructs its President to forward this resolution containing the European Parliament’s

recommendations to the Commission and, for information, to the Council, the

governments and parliaments of the Member States, and the US Administration and

Congress.

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