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Commercial Diplomats Regulation Authority - Commercial Diplomatic Education - Extraterritorial Body - Justice and Judicial - Qualified Certified Diplomat - Trade Negotiations and Commercial Diplomacy - Commercial Diplomatic Law - Managing International Commercial Disputes - Managing International Trade Disputes - Managing International Investment Disputes - International Trade Arbitration - International Investment Arbitration - International Commercial Arbitration
Responsible Commercial Diplomatic Education - Commercial Diplomatic Law - Qualified Certified Diplomat - Trade Negotiations and Commercial Diplomacy - Commercial Diplomatic Law - Managing International Commercial Disputes - Managing International Trade Disputes - Managing International Investment Disputes - International Trade Arbitration - International Investment Arbitration - International Commercial Arbitration

2005 corruption multi-media and promotional materials 

 "....an ambassador's job is government to government primarily, but it's also to be a commercial diplomat"

Amb. Anthony Harrington

 

'In many significant offshore financial centres, specialist commercial judges exist where formal specialist courts do not'

The Hon. Justice L. Kawaley

Commercial Judge

Supreme Court,

Bermuda


 Press Releases 

2009 PRESS RELEASES

6 November 2009

DISPUTE SETTLEMENT

WTO disputes reach 400 mark

On the eve of its 15th "birthday", the WTO earlier this month reached the milestone of having the 400th trade dispute brought to the body's dispute settlement mechanism. "This is surely a vote of confidence in a system which many consider to be a role model for the peaceful resolution of disputes in other areas of international political or economic relations," said Director-General Pascal Lamy to mark the occasion.

On the eve of its 15th "birthday", the World Trade Organization (WTO) earlier this month reached the milestone of having the 400th trade dispute brought to the body's dispute settlement mechanism. Since coming into existence in January 1995, the WTO's 153 members initiated an average of approximately 27 disputes per year under the provisions of the Dispute Settlement Understanding, the WTO treaty governing the settlement of all disputes among the organization's members.

"This is surely a vote of confidence in a system which many consider to be a role model for the peaceful resolution of disputes in other areas of international political or economic relations," said WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy to mark the occasion. "All the political muscle-flexing and grandiloquence is discarded at the door once the case enters the WTO."

Of the 400 cases filed so far, approximately half have eventually been settled directly between the parties, under the system's mandatory consultation requirements, without going to litigation. Of the remainder, 169 have been the subject of panel and, where appealed, Appellate Body proceedings, 17 are currently in adjudication, and 12 are still the subject of active consultation between the parties.

"The dispute settlement system is widely considered to be the jewel in the crown of the WTO," said DG Lamy. "Some critics claim that the system is monopolized by the developed countries, especially the US and EC. Certainly, these two trading giants are the most frequent users of the system. This is not surprising since they are the world's biggest traders, as is increasingly the case with China. But the figures also show that developing countries do not play coy hand-maidens to their richer trading partners. During the period 1995-2009, developing countries have been complainants in more than 45 per cent of all cases, and have been respondents in more than 42 per cent of the cases.

"No trade negotiator enters a negotiation without some assurance that the agreements he negotiates will be underpinned by a credible dispute settlement system. The ongoing review of the functioning of the WTO's dispute settlement system has given rise to many proposals for clarification and improvement. But WTO Members agree that, as the bedrock of the multilateral trading system, the dispute settlement system will not be subject to any seismic shift in its fundamental structure as a result of the Members' deliberations," said DG Lamy.

WTO members involved in disputes
(Total No. of disputes: 400 as of 2 November 2009)

Member

Complainant

Respondent

Antigua and Barbuda

1

0

Argentina

15

16

Australia

7

10

Bangladesh

1

0

Belgium

0

3

Brazil

24

14

Canada

33

15

Chile

10

13

China

6

17

Chinese Taipei

3

0

Colombia

5

3

Costa Rica

4

0

Croatia

0

1

Czech Rep

1

2

Denmark

0

1

Dominican Republic

0

3

Ecuador

3

3

Egypt

0

4

European Communities

81

66

France

0

3

Germany

0

1

Greece

0

2

Guatemala

7

2

Honduras

6

0

Hong Kong, China

1

0

Hungary

5

2

India

18

20

Indonesia

4

4

Member

Complainant

Respondent

Ireland

0

3

Japan

13

15

Korea

13

14

Malaysia

1

1

Mexico

21

14

Netherlands

0

1

New Zealand

7

0

Nicaragua

1

2

Norway

3

0

Pakistan

3

2

Panama

5

1

Peru

2

4

Philippines

5

5

Poland

3

1

Portugal

0

1

Romania

0

2

Singapore

1

0

Slovak Rep

0

3

South Africa

0

3

Spain

0

1

Sri Lanka

1

0

Sweden

0

1

Switzerland

4

0

Thailand

13

3

Trinidad & Tobago

0

2

Turkey

2

8

United Kingdom

0

2

United States

93

107

Uruguay

1

1

Venezuela

1

2

Summary of disputes (as of 2 November 2009)

To date, 400 disputes have been brought to the WTO, of which:

  • 84 appear to have been resolved bilaterally but for which no outcome notified to WTO

  • 95 were resolved bilaterally for which outcome notified to WTO

  • 23 were resolved bilaterally after a panel was established but before the panel was composed

  • 12 are currently the subject of active consultations between parties

  • 186 went into litigation

Disputes per Year:

Year

Disputes

1995

25

1996

39

1997

50

1998

41

1999

30

2000

34

2001

23

2002

37

2003

26

2004

19

2005

11

2006

21

2007

13

2008

19

2009

12
(as of 2 Nov.)

  

  

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