APPELLATE
BODY
ANNUAL
REPORT FOR 2014
July
2015
The
Appellate Body welcomes comments and inquiries
regarding this Annual Report at the
following address:
Appellate
Body Secretariat
World
Trade Organization
rue de Lausanne 154
1211 Geneva, Switzerland
e-mail: appellatebody.registry@wto.org
<https://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dispu_e/appellate_body_e.htm>
CONTENTS
FOREWORD................................................................................................................................. 6
1 Introduction.. 7
2 Composition of the Appellate
Body. 9
Table 1: Composition of the Appellate Body in 2014. 11
3 Appeals. 11
Table 2: Panel reports appealed in 2014. 12
Chart 1: Total number of appeals 1995–2014. 13
4 Appellate Body Reports. 13
Table 3: Appellate Body reports circulated in 2014. 13
Table 4: WTO Agreements addressed in Appellate Body
reports circulated in 2014. 14
Chart 2: WTO agreements addressed in appeals
1996–2014. 15
4.1 Appellate
Body Reports, European Communities – Measures Prohibiting
the Importation and Marketing of Seal Products, WT/DS400/AB/R and
WT/DS401/AB/R. 15
4.1.1 Annex
1.1 to the TBT Agreement 16
4.1.2 Articles
I:1 and III:4 of the GATT 1994. 18
4.1.3 Article
XX of the GATT 1994. 20
4.2 Appellate Body Report, United States
– Countervailing and Anti-Dumping Measures on Certain Products from China,
WT/DS449/AB/R. 29
4.2.1 Article 6.2 of the DSU. 29
4.2.2 Article X:2 of the GATT 1994. 31
4.2.3 Article 11 of the DSU. 33
4.2.4 Completion of the analysis. 33
4.3 Appellate
Body Reports, China – Measures Related to the Exportation
of Rare Earths, Tungsten, and Molybdenum, WT/DS431/AB/R;
WT/DS432/AB/R; and WT/DS433/AB/R. 36
4.3.1 Availability
of Article XX of the GATT 1994 – Systemic relationship between China's
Accession Protocol and the Marrakesh Agreement together with its Annexes. 37
4.3.2 Article
XX(g) of the GATT 1994. 41
4.3.3 The
United States' appeal of the panel's decision to reject certain evidence. 45
4.4 Appellate Body Report, United
States – Countervailing Measures on Certain Hot‑Rolled Carbon Steel Flat
Products from India, WT/DS436/AB/R. 46
4.4.1 Public body. 47
4.4.2 Financial contribution. 49
4.4.3 Benefit – "as such" claims. 50
4.4.4 Benefit – "as applied" claims. 54
4.4.5 Specificity. 57
4.4.6 Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement 58
4.4.7 New subsidy allegations in administrative
reviews. 59
4.4.8 Cross-cumulation. 60
4.5 Appellate
Body Report, United States – Countervailing Duty Measures
on Certain Products from China, WT/DS437/AB/R. 61
4.5.1 The panel's terms of reference. 63
4.5.2 Articles 14(d) and 1.1(b) of the
SCM Agreement – Benefit 64
4.5.3 Article 2.1 of the SCM Agreement –
Specificity. 69
4.5.4 Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement –
Facts available. 73
5 Participants and Third
Participants in Appeals. 75
Table 5: Participants and third participants in
appeals for which an Appellate Body report was circulated in 2014 76
Chart 3: WTO Member participation in appeals 1996–2014. 77
6 Working Procedures for
Appellate Review... 78
6.1 Procedural issues arising in appeals in 2014. 78
6.2 Procedural issues arising from appeals. 78
6.2.1 Open oral hearing. 78
6.2.2 Allocation of appeal numbers. 78
6.2.3 Challenge to Notice of Appeal 79
6.2.4 Consolidation
of appellate proceedings. 79
6.2.5 Extension of time to file submissions. 79
6.2.6 Amendments to the official Working Schedule. 80
6.2.7 Timeliness
and adequacy of notifications. 81
6.2.8 Unsolicited
amicus curiae briefs. 81
6.2.9 Extension of time period for circulation of
reports. 81
6.2.10 Request for separate reports. 82
7 Arbitrations under
Article 21.3(c) of the DSU.. 82
8 WTO Technical Assistance AND
TRAINING PLAN.. 82
9 Other Activities. 82
9.1 Briefings, conferences, moot court competitions. 82
9.2 WTO internship programme. 82
9.3 The WTO Digital Dispute Settlement Registry. 83
Annex 1 The
Workload of the Appellate Body........................................................................ 84
Annex 2 Director-General's Speech to the DSB ................................................................... 86
Annex 3 Members of the Appellate Body 2014 – Biographical notes.................................... 92
Annex 4 Welcome of a new Appellate Body Member............................................................ 96
Annex 5 Former Appellate Body Members and Chairpersons................................................ 98
Annex 6 Appeals filed: 1995–2014..................................................................................... 100
Annex 7 Percentage of panel reports appealed by year of adoption:
1995–2014............... 101
Annex 8 WTO agreements adddressed in Appellate Body reports circulated
through 2014 102
Annex 9 Participants and third participants in appeals: 1995–2014.................................... 103
Annex 10 Appellate Body Secretariat participation in the WTO Technical
Assistance and Training Plan in 2014............................................................................................................................. 131
Annex 11 Appellate Body Secretariat
participation in briefings, conferences, and moot court competitions in 2014............................................................................................................................. 132
Annex 12 WTO dispute settlement reports and arbitration awards: 1995–2014................... 133
WTO Abbreviations used in this Annual Report
Abbreviation
|
Description
|
ATC
|
Agreement on Textiles and Clothing
|
Anti-Dumping Agreement
|
Agreement on Implementation of Article VI of the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994
|
CAFC
|
United States Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
|
China's Accession Protocol
|
Protocol on the Accession of the People's Republic of China to the
WTO
|
CVD
|
countervailing duty
|
DSB
|
Dispute Settlement Body
|
DSU
|
Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of
Disputes
|
GATS
|
General Agreement on Trade in Services
|
GATT 1994
|
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994
|
GOC
|
Government of China
|
GOI
|
Government
of India
|
NMDC
|
National Mineral Development Corporation
|
NME
|
non‑market economy
|
OCTG
|
Oil Country Tubular Goods
|
Rules of Conduct
|
Rules of Conduct for the Understanding on Rules and Procedures
Governing the Settlement of Disputes, adopted by the DSB on 3 December
1996, WT/DSB/RC/1
|
SCM Agreement
|
Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
|
SDF
|
Steel Development Fund
|
SOEs
|
state-owned enterprises
|
SPS Agreement
|
Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures
|
TBT Agreement
|
Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade
|
TRIMs Agreement
|
Agreement on Trade-Related Investment Measures
|
TRIPS Agreement
|
Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
|
USDOC
|
United States Department of Commerce
|
USITC
|
United
States International Trade Commission
|
Working Procedures
|
Working Procedures for Appellate Review, WT/AB/WP/6,
16 August 2010
|
WTO
|
World Trade Organization
|
WTO Agreement
|
Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization
|
FOREWORD
In January 2014, the Appellate Body welcomed
a new cycle in the Mayan Calendar, fully aware of the challenges ahead. David
Unterhalter completed his second term in December 2013, and the Appellate Body
was left to function with only six Members for most of 2014. It was not until
September that the Appellate Body reverted to normality with the appointment of
Mr Shree Baboo Chekitan Servansing. Shree has already made his presence
felt in the Appellate Body, and his skills and knowledge continue to make our
institution stronger and wiser.
By the end of 2014, the Dispute Settlement
Body had received nearly 500 requests for consultations. In its first 16 years,
the DSB has handled disputes spanning over US$1 trillion in trade flows.
Two thirds of WTO Members have participated in dispute settlement in one
way or another. These numbers are quite telling. Despite the attention given to
emerging regional trade initiatives, our dispute settlement system remains to
be the preferred and perhaps the only forum where international trade disputes are
adjudicated effectively and efficiently.
2014 saw the highest number of total active
disputes at the panel and appeal stages. Thirteen panel reports were appealed in
2014, and the Appellate Body issued eight reports concerning five matters in: EC – Seal Products; US – Countervailing and
Anti-Dumping Measures (China);
China – Rare Earths; US – Carbon Steel (India); and US – Countervailing Measures (China). A ninth Appellate
Body report, in Argentina – Import
Measures, was circulated in January 2015.
The robust level of appeal activity in 2014
confirms the conclusions reached in the Appellate Body's 2013 Workload Paper
(see Annex 1 to the Annual Report for 2013). As indicated in the 2013 Workload Paper,
appeals have increased not only in rate, but also in complexity, to what was
witnessed in the first decade of the WTO dispute settlement mechanism. Disputes
now commonly involve multiple parties advancing a variety of claims, increased
third-party participation, and greater procedural complexity. Looking at it
from a broader context, 2014 has been a "trend-setting year" in terms
of complexity of appeals and the number of panel reports appealed. On average, 68%
of circulated panel reports are appealed. In 2014, that figure rose to 87%.
Be that as it may, 2014 is just the tip of
the iceberg. As the 2013 Workload Paper projected, the upward trend of
dispute settlement activity will continue for the next several years. On top of
the current heavy workload, we anticipate appeals in the aircraft and tobacco
cases, which are on the horizon.
All these facts have increased the burden
that is placed on the dispute settlement system, and on the Appellate Body in
particular, to produce high-quality reports. This significant strain on the
system and its limited resources require effective and innovative solutions.
The Appellate Body, together with the WTO Administration, continue to address
budgetary and human resource issues to meet the challenges posed by the current
workload. Nonetheless, there are structural aspects to these concerns that only
the WTO Membership can address.
We interpret the upsurge in the use of
dispute settlement, and in appeals specifically, as a sign of confidence by the
WTO Membership in the dispute settlement system. We thus consider it our
mission to continue delivering high-quality Appellate Body reports swiftly,
regardless of the number and complexity of appeals filed.
For the past 20 years, the Appellate Body has
served as a model for treaty interpretation and adjudication. Regardless of
one's agreement with our findings, it is uncontested that we adjudicate
disputes on their merits and in a methodical manner. The WTO dispute settlement
system is among the most active, complex, efficient, and sophisticated
international dispute settlement systems. The quality of our reports is our
trademark, and it is non-negotiable. We stand ready with the WTO Membership and
the WTO Administration to address coming challenges and make the system work
better than ever.
Ricardo Ramírez-Hernández
Chair, Appellate Body
World
Trade Organization
Appellate
Body
ANNUAL
REPORT FOR 2014
This
Annual Report summarizes the activities of the
Appellate Body and its Secretariat for the year 2014.
Dispute settlement in the World Trade
Organization (WTO) is regulated by the Understanding on Rules and
Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (DSU), which is contained in
Annex 2 of the Marrakesh Agreement
Establishing the World Trade Organization (WTO Agreement). Article 3.2 of the
DSU states the overarching purposes of the dispute settlement system as such: "The dispute settlement system
of the WTO is a central element in providing security and predictability
to the multilateral trading system." Further, Article 3.2 provides that
the dispute settlement system "serves to preserve the rights and
obligations of Members under the covered agreements, and to clarify the
existing provisions of those agreements in accordance with customary rules of
interpretation of public international law." The dispute settlement system
is administered by the Dispute Settlement Body (DSB), which is composed of all
WTO Members.
A WTO Member may have recourse to the rules
and procedures established in the DSU if it "considers that any benefits
accruing to it directly or indirectly under the covered agreements are being
impaired by measures taken by another Member".[1]
The DSU procedures apply to disputes
arising under any of the covered agreements listed in Appendix 1 to the DSU,
which include the WTO Agreement and all the multilateral agreements
annexed to it relating to trade in goods[2],
trade in services[3],
and the protection of intellectual property rights[4],
as well as the DSU itself. Pursuant to Article 1.2 of the DSU, the special or
additional rules and procedures listed in Appendix 2 of the DSU prevail
over those contained in the DSU to the extent that there is an inconsistency.
The application of the DSU to disputes under the plurilateral trade agreements
annexed to the WTO Agreement[5]
is subject to the adoption of a decision by the parties to each of these
agreements setting out the terms for its application to the individual
agreement.[6]
Proceedings
under the DSU take place in stages. In the first stage, Members are required to
hold consultations with a view to reaching a mutually agreed solution to the
matter in dispute.[7]
If these consultations fail to produce a mutually agreed solution, the dispute
may advance to the adjudicative stage in which the complaining Member requests
the DSB to establish a panel to examine the matter.[8]
Panelists are chosen by agreement of the parties, based on nominations proposed
by the Secretariat.[9]
However, if the parties cannot agree, either party may request the WTO
Director-General to determine the composition of the panel.[10]
Panels shall be composed of well-qualified
governmental and/or non-governmental individuals with expertise
in international trade law or policy.[11]
In discharging its adjudicative function, a panel is required to "make an objective assessment of the
matter before it, including an objective assessment of the facts of the case
and the applicability of and conformity with the relevant covered agreements,
and make such other findings as will assist the DSB in making the
recommendations or in giving the rulings provided for in the covered
agreements."[12]
The panel process includes written submissions by the main parties and also by
third parties that have notified their interest in the dispute to the DSB.
Panels usually hold two meetings with the parties, one of which also includes a
session with third parties. Panels set out their factual and legal findings in
an interim report that is subject to comments by the parties. The final report
is first issued to the parties, and is subsequently circulated to all WTO
Members in the three official languages of the WTO (English, French, and Spanish),
at which time it is also posted on the WTO website.
Article
17 of the DSU establishes a standing Appellate Body. The Appellate Body is
composed of seven Members who are each appointed to a four-year term, with
a possibility to be reappointed once. The expiration dates of terms are
staggered in order to ensure that not all Members begin and complete their
terms at the same time. Members of the Appellate Body must be persons of recognized
authority, with demonstrated expertise in law, international trade, and the
subject matter of the covered agreements generally. They shall be unaffiliated
with any government. Moreover, the Appellate Body membership shall be broadly
representative of the membership of the WTO. Appellate Body Members elect a
Chairperson to serve a one-year term, which can be extended for an additional
one-year period. The
Chairperson is responsible for the overall direction of Appellate Body
business. Each appeal is heard by a Division of three Appellate Body Members.
The process for the selection of Divisions is designed to ensure randomness,
unpredictability, and opportunity for all Members to serve, regardless of
their national origin. To ensure consistency and coherence in decision-making,
Divisions exchange views with the other four Members of the Appellate Body
before finalizing Appellate Body reports. The Appellate Body receives legal
and administrative support from its Secretariat. The conduct of Members of
the Appellate Body and its staff is regulated by the Rules of Conduct for the
Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes[13]
(Rules of Conduct). These Rules emphasize that Appellate Body Members
shall be independent, impartial, and avoid any direct or indirect conflict
of interest.[14]
Any
party to a dispute, other than WTO Members that were third parties at the panel stage, may appeal a
panel report to the Appellate Body. These third parties may however participate
and make written and oral submissions in the appellate proceedings. The
appeal is limited to issues of law covered in the panel report and legal
interpretations developed by the panel. Appellate proceedings are conducted in
accordance with the procedures established in the DSU and the Working Procedures
for Appellate Review[15]
(Working Procedures), drawn up by the Appellate Body in consultation with the Chairperson of the
DSB and the Director‑General of the WTO, and communicated to WTO
Members. Proceedings
involve the filing of written submissions by the participants and third
participants, as well as an oral hearing. The Appellate Body report is to be
circulated within 90 days of the date when the appeal was initiated,
and is posted on the WTO website immediately upon circulation to Members.
In its report, the Appellate Body may uphold, modify, or reverse the legal
findings and conclusions of a panel.
Panel
and Appellate Body reports must be adopted by WTO Members acting collectively
through the DSB. Under the reverse consensus rule, a report is adopted by the
DSB unless all WTO Members present at the meeting formally object to its adoption.[16]
Upon adoption, Appellate Body reports and panel reports (as modified by
the Appellate Body) become binding upon the parties.
Following the adoption by the DSB of a panel
or Appellate Body report that includes a finding of inconsistency of a
measure of the responding Member with its WTO obligations, Article 21.3
of the DSU provides that the responding Member should, in principle,
comply immediately. However, where immediate compliance is "impracticable", the
responding Member shall have a "reasonable period of time" to
implement the DSB's recommendations and rulings. The "reasonable
period of time" may be determined by the DSB, by agreement between the
parties, or through binding arbitration pursuant to Article 21.3(c) of the
DSU. In such arbitration, a guideline for the arbitrator is that the
reasonable period of time to implement panel or Appellate Body recommendations
should not exceed 15 months from the date of adoption of the panel or Appellate
Body report. However, that time may be shorter or longer, depending upon the
particular circumstances. Arbitrators have indicated that the reasonable period
of time shall be the shortest time possible in the implementing Member's legal
system. To date, arbitrations pursuant to Article 21.3(c) of the DSU have
been conducted by current or former Appellate Body Members acting in an
individual capacity.
Where the parties disagree "as to the
existence or consistency with a covered agreement of measures taken to
comply", the matter may be referred to the original panel in compliance
proceedings under Article 21.5 of the DSU. In these Article 21.5 compliance
proceedings, a panel report is issued and may be appealed to the Appellate Body.
Upon their adoption by the DSB, panel and Appellate Body reports in Article
21.5 compliance proceedings become binding on the parties.
If
the responding Member does not bring its WTO-inconsistent measure into
compliance with its obligations under the covered agreements within the
reasonable period of time, the complaining Member may request negotiations with
the responding Member with a view
to finding mutually acceptable compensation as a temporary and voluntary
alternative to full compliance. Compensation is subject to acceptance by the
complaining Member,
and must be consistent with the WTO agreements. If no satisfactory compensation
is agreed upon, the complaining Member may request authorization from the DSB,
pursuant to Article 22 of the DSU, to suspend the application of concessions or
other obligations under the WTO agreements to the responding Member. The level
of the suspension of concessions or other obligations authorized by the DSB
shall be equivalent to the level of the nullification or impairment resulting
from non-compliance with the DSB recommendations and rulings. The responding Member may request
arbitration under Article 22.6 of the DSU if it objects to the level of
suspension proposed or considers that the principles and procedures concerning
the sector or covered agreement to which the suspension may apply have not been
followed. In principle, the suspension of concessions or other
obligations must relate to the same trade sector or agreement as the measure
found to be inconsistent. However, if this is impracticable or ineffective for
the complaining Member, and if circumstances are serious, the complaining Member
may seek authorization to suspend concessions with respect to other sectors or
agreements. The arbitration under
Article 22.6 shall be carried out by the original panel, if its members are
available. Compensation and the suspension of concessions or other
obligations are temporary measures; neither is to be preferred to full
implementation of a recommendation to bring a measure into conformity with
the covered agreements.[17]
A
party to a dispute may request good offices, conciliation, or mediation as
alternative methods of dispute resolution at any stage of dispute settlement
proceedings.[18]
In addition, under Article 25 of the DSU, WTO Members may have recourse to
arbitration as an alternative to the regular procedures set out in the DSU.[19]
Recourse to arbitration, including the procedures to be followed in such
arbitration proceedings, is subject to mutual agreement of the parties.[20]
The
Appellate Body is a standing body composed of seven Members, each appointed by
the DSB for a term of four years with the
possibility of being reappointed once for another four-year term.
The
second term of office of Mr David Unterhalter expired on 17 December 2013.
In order to fill the vacancy arising from the expiration of
Mr Unterhalter's term, the DSB, at its meeting on 24 May 2013,
launched a selection process for the appointment of a new Appellate Body Member.[21]
Based on the procedures set forth in document WT/DSB/1, the DSB established
a Selection Committee consisting of the Director‑General and the 2013
Chairpersons of the General Council, Goods Council, Services Council, TRIPS
Council, and the DSB.[22]
Four
candidates were nominated by four WTO Members, namely, Australia, Cameroon,
Egypt, and Kenya. These four candidates were interviewed by the Selection
Committee on 21 October 2013. At the DSB meeting held on 22 October, Members
wishing to express their views on any of the candidates were invited to
meet with the Selection Committee. As previously agreed,
the Selection Committee was to make its recommendation to the DSB no
later than 7 November 2013, in order to enable the DSB to consider
the recommendation at its regularly scheduled meeting on 25 November 2013.[23]
However, on 14 November 2013, the Chair of the DSB informed Members that, due
to the intensive consultation process in preparation for the 9th Ministerial
Conference in Bali in December 2013, the Selection Committee had not been able
to complete its deliberations on a recommendation regarding a new Member of the
Appellate Body. The Selection Committee proposed to resume its deliberations in
2014 with a view to making its recommendation as soon as practicable.
At
its meeting on 23 May 2014, the DSB decided to launch a new selection
process for the appointment of an Appellate Body Member.[24]
The DSB also decided that the candidates nominated for the 2013 process would
remain under consideration and that it would not be necessary for Members to
re-nominate them. Based on the procedures set forth in document WT/DSB/1,
the DSB established a Selection Committee consisting of the Director‑General
and the 2014 Chairpersons of the General Council, Goods Council, Services
Council, TRIPS Council, and the DSB.[25]
The 2014 Selection Committee considered seven candidates nominated by seven WTO
Members, namely, Cameroon, Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, Mauritius, Uganda, and
Zimbabwe.[26]
These seven candidates were interview by the Selection Committee on 22 and
23 July 2014. Members wishing to express their views on any of the
candidates were invited to meet with the Selection Committee or send written
comments to the DSB Chair.
At
its meeting on 26 September 2014, on the basis of the Selection Committee's
recommendation and following consultations with WTO Members, the DSB appointed
Mr Shree Baboo Chekitan Servansing as a member of the Appellate Body for a
four-year term starting on 1 October 2014.[27]
The new member of the Appellate Body was sworn in at a ceremony on 20 October
2014.[28]
The
composition of the Appellate Body in 2014 and the respective terms of office of
its Members are set out in Table 1. Before Mr Servansing's appointment the
Appellate Body was composed of only six members between 12 December 2013
and 30 September 2014.
Table 1: Composition of the Appellate
Body in 2014
Name
|
Nationality
|
Term(s) of
office
|
Ujal Singh Bhatia
|
India
|
2011–2015
|
Seung Wha Chang
|
Korea
|
2012–2016
|
Thomas R. Graham
|
United States
|
2011–2015
|
Ricardo Ramírez-Hernández
|
Mexico
|
2009–2013
2013–2017
|
Shree Baboo Chekitan
Servansing
|
Mauritius
|
2014-2018
|
Peter Van den Bossche
|
Belgium
|
2009–2013
2013–2017
|
Yuejiao Zhang
|
China
|
2008–2012
2012–2016
|
Pursuant
to Rule 5.1 of the Working Procedures, the Members of the Appellate Body re-elected
Mr Ricardo Ramírez-Hernández to serve a second term as Chairperson of the
Appellate Body from 1 January to 31 December 2014.[29]
In December 2014, Mr Peter Van den Bossche was elected to serve as Chairperson
as of 1 January 2015 until 31 December 2015.
Biographical
information about the Members of the Appellate Body is provided in Annex 3.
A list of former Appellate Body Members and Chairpersons is provided in Annex 5.
The
Appellate Body receives legal and administrative support from the Appellate
Body Secretariat, in accordance with Article 17.7 of the DSU. As at 31 December
2014, the Secretariat comprised a Director, fourteen lawyers, one
administrative assistant, and three support staff. Werner Zdouc has been
Director of the Appellate Body Secretariat since 2006.
Pursuant
to Rule 20(1) of the Working Procedures and Article 16(4) of the DSU, an
appeal is commenced by a party to the dispute giving written notice to the DSB
and filing a Notice of Appeal with the Appellate Body Secretariat. Rule 23(1)
of the Working Procedures allows a party to the dispute other than the initial
appellant to join the appeal, or appeal on the basis of other alleged errors,
by filing a Notice of Other Appeal within 5 days of the filing of the Notice of
Appeal.
Thirteen
panel reports concerning seven matters were appealed in 2014. One dispute
related to compliance proceedings, while all remaining disputes related to
original proceedings. "Other appeals" were filed pursuant to Rule 23(1)
of the Working Procedures in nine out of the thirteen disputes. Table 2 sets
out further information regarding appeals filed in 2014.
Table 2: Panel reports appealed in 2014
Panel report
appealed
|
Date of appeal
|
Appellant a
|
Document
symbol
|
Other
appellant b
|
Document
symbol
|
European Communities — Measures
Prohibiting the Importation and Marketing of Seal Products*
|
24 January 2014
|
Canada
|
WT/DS400/8
|
European Union
|
WT/DS400/9
|
European Communities — Measures
Prohibiting the Importation and Marketing of Seal Products*
|
24 January 2014
|
Norway
|
WT/DS401/9
|
European Union
|
WT/DS401/10
|
United States — Countervailing
and Anti-Dumping Measures on Certain Products from China
|
8 April 2014
|
China
|
WT/DS449/6
|
United States
|
WT/DS449/7
|
China — Measures Related to the Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten
and Molybdenum*
|
8 April 2014
|
United States
|
WT/DS/431/9
|
China
|
WT/DS/431/10
|
China — Measures Related to the Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten
and Molybdenum*
|
25 April 2014
|
China
|
WT/DS/432/9
|
-
|
-
|
China — Measures Related to the
Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten and Molybdenum*
|
25 April 2014
|
China
|
WT/DS/433/9
|
-
|
-
|
United States — Countervailing Measures on Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon
Steel Flat Products from India
|
8 August 2014
|
India
|
WT/DS436/6
|
United States
|
WT/DS436/7
|
United States — Countervailing Duty Measures on Certain Products from
China
|
22 August 2014
|
China
|
WT/DS437/7
|
United States
|
WT/DS437/8
|
Argentina — Measures Affecting the Importation of Goods*
|
26 September 2014
|
Argentina
|
WT/DS438/15
|
European Union
|
WT/DS438/16
|
Argentina — Measures Affecting
the Importation of Goods*
|
26 September 2014
|
Argentina
|
WT/DS444/14
|
-
|
-
|
Argentina — Measures Affecting
the Importation of Goods*
|
26 September 2014
|
Argentina
|
WT/DS445/14
|
Japan
|
WT/DS445/15
|
United States – Certain Country of Origin Labelling (COOL)
Requirements: Recourse to Article 21.5 of the DSU by Canada
|
28 November 2014
|
United States
|
WT/DS384/29
|
Canada
|
WT/DS384/30
|
United States – Certain Country of Origin Labelling (COOL)
Requirements: Recourse to Article 21.5 of the DSU by Mexico
|
28 November 2014
|
United States
|
WT/DS386/28
|
-
|
-
|
a Pursuant to Rule 20(1) of the Working
Procedures.
b Pursuant to Rule 23(1) of the Working Procedures.
* Appellate Body reports concerning disputes with the same title were circulated
as a single document.
Information
on the number of appeals filed each year since 1995 is provided in Annex 6.
Chart 1 shows the number of appeals filed each year between 1995 and 2014.
Chart 1: Total number of appeals 1995–2014
The
overall average of panel reports that have been appealed from 1995 to 2014 is 68%.
A breakdown of the percentage of panel reports appealed each year is
provided in Annex 7.
Eight
Appellate Body reports concerning five matters were circulated in 2014, the
details of which are summarized in Table 3. As of the end of 2014, the
Appellate Body has circulated a total of 127 reports.
Table 3: Appellate Body reports circulated in 2014
Case
|
Document symbol
|
Date circulated
|
Date adopted
by the DSB
|
European Communities — Measures Prohibiting the Importation and
Marketing of Seal Products*
|
WT/DS400/AB/R
|
22 May 2014
|
18 June 2014
|
European Communities — Measures Prohibiting the Importation and
Marketing of Seal Products*
|
WT/DS401/AB/R
|
22 May 2014
|
18 June 2014
|
United States — Countervailing and Anti-Dumping Measures on Certain
Products from China
|
WT/DS449/AB/R
|
7 July 2014
|
22 July 2014
|
China — Measures Related to the Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten
and Molybdenum*
|
WT/DS431/AB/R
|
7 August 2014
|
29 August 2014
|
China — Measures Related to the Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten
and Molybdenum*
|
WT/DS432/AB/R
|
7 August 2014
|
29 August 2014
|
China — Measures Related to the Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten
and Molybdenum*
|
WT/DS433/AB/R
|
7 August 2014
|
29 August 2014
|
United States — Countervailing Measures on Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon
Steel Flat Products from India
|
WT/DS436/AB/R
|
8 December 2014
|
19 December 2014
|
United States — Countervailing Duty Measures on Certain Products from
China
|
WT/DS437/AB/R
|
18 December 2014
|
16 January 2015
|
* Appellate Body reports concerning disputes with the
same title were circulated as a single document.
The following
table shows which WTO agreements were addressed in the Appellate Body reports
circulated in 2014.
Table 4: WTO Agreements addressed in Appellate Body reports circulated
in 2014
Case
|
Document symbol
|
WTO agreements addressed
|
European
Communities — Measures Prohibiting the Importation and Marketing of Seal
Products*
|
WT/DS400/AB/R
|
GATT 1994
TBT Agreement
|
European Communities — Measures Prohibiting the Importation and
Marketing of Seal Products*
|
WT/DS401/AB/R
|
GATT 1994
TBT Agreement
|
United States — Countervailing and Anti-Dumping Measures on Certain Products
from China
|
WT/DS449/AB/R
|
GATT 1994
SCM Agreement
DSU
|
China — Measures Related to the Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten
and Molybdenum*
|
WT/DS431/AB/R
|
GATT 1994
China's Accession
Protocol
WTO Agreement
DSU
|
China — Measures Related to the Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten
and Molybdenum*
|
WT/DS432/AB/R
|
GATT 1994
China's Accession
Protocol
WTO Agreement
DSU
|
China — Measures Related to the Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten
and Molybdenum*
|
WT/DS433/AB/R
|
GATT 1994
China's Accession
Protocol
WTO Agreement
DSU
|
United States — Countervailing Measures on Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon
Steel Flat Products from India
|
WT/DS436/AB/R
|
GATT 1994
SCM Agreement
WTO Agreement
DSU
|
United States — Countervailing Duty Measures on Certain Products from
China
|
WT/DS437/AB/R
|
SCM Agreement
DSU
|
* Appellate Body reports concerning disputes with the same title were
circulated as a single document.
Chart 2 below shows
the number of times specific WTO agreements have been addressed in the 127 Appellate
Body reports circulated from 1996 through 2014.
Chart 2: WTO agreements addressed in appeals 1996–2014
Annex
8 contains a breakdown by year of the frequency with which the specific
WTO agreements have been addressed in appeals from 1996 through 2014.
The
findings and conclusions contained in the Appellate Body reports circulated in
2014 are summarized below.
These disputes arose from challenges by Canada and Norway (complainants)
to certain measures enacted by the European Union affecting
the importation and placing on the EU market of products derived from seals. Specifically, the complainants challenged EU
Regulation (EC) No. 1007/2009 on trade in seal products
(Basic Regulation) and Commission Regulation (EU) No. 737/2010 laying down
detailed rules for the implementation of Regulation (EC) No. 1007/2009
(Implementing Regulation). Together, these measures prohibit the
importation and placing on the market of seal products other than seal products
derived from hunts conducted by Inuit or other indigenous communities (IC
exception), conducted for marine resource management purposes (MRM exception),
or seal products imported for the personal use of travellers (Travellers exception).
The panel and the Appellate Body referred to these measures collectively
as the "EU Seal Regime".
Before the panel, Canada and Norway claimed
that the EU Seal Regime is inconsistent with Articles I:1, III:4 and XI:1
of the GATT 1994, and Articles 2.2, 5.1.2, and 5.2.1 of the
TBT Agreement. In addition, Canada also claimed that the EU Seal Regime is
inconsistent with Article 2.1 of the TBT Agreement, and Norway
claimed that the regime at issue is inconsistent with Article 4.2 of the
Agreement on Agriculture.
The panel found that the EU Seal Regime
is a "technical regulation" within the meaning of Annex 1.1 to
the TBT Agreement. The panel also found that the EU Seal Regime has a
detrimental impact on the competitive opportunities of Canadian imported seal
products compared to like products from Greenland and certain EU member States.
The panel concluded that the IC exception and the MRM exception under the EU Seal
Regime are inconsistent with Article 2.1 of the TBT Agreement
because the detrimental impact caused by these exceptions does not stem
exclusively from legitimate regulatory distinctions and consequently the
exceptions accord imported seal products treatment less favourable than that
accorded to like domestic and other foreign seal products. The panel further
found that the EU Seal Regime is not inconsistent with Article 2.2 of the
TBT Agreement, because it fulfils the objective of addressing EU public
moral concerns on seal welfare to a certain extent, and no alternative measure
had been demonstrated to make an equivalent or greater contribution to the
fulfilment of the objective as the EU Seal Regime. The panel also
determined that the EU Seal Regime is inconsistent with Article 5.1.2 of
the TBT Agreement because the conformity assessment procedures under the
EU Seal Regime were incapable of enabling trade in qualifying products to
take place as from the date of entry into force of the EU Seal
Regime. The panel, however, rejected the claims under Article 5.2.1 of the
TBT Agreement.
Regarding the remaining claims, the panel
found that (i) IC exception under the EU Seal Regime is inconsistent
with Article I:1 of the GATT 1994 because an advantage granted by the
European Union to seal products originating in Greenland is not accorded
immediately and unconditionally to the like products originating in Canada
and Norway; and (ii) the MRM exception under the EU Seal Regime is
inconsistent with Article III:4 of the GATT 1994 because it accords
imported seal products treatment less favourable than that accorded to like
domestic seal products. The panel, however, rejected the claims under Article XI:1
of the GATT 1994, and Article 4.2 of the Agreement on
Agriculture. In addition, the panel found that (i) the IC exception
and the MRM exception under the EU Seal Regime are not justified under
Article XX(a) of the GATT 1994 because they fail to meet the
requirements under the chapeau; and (ii) the IC exception and the MRM
exception under the EU Seal Regime are not justified under
Article XX(b) of the GATT 1994 because the European Union has
failed to make a prima facie case for its claim.
On appeal, Canada challenged the panel's
intermediate finding under Article 2.1 of the TBT Agreement that the distinction
between commercial and IC hunts is justifiable. Canada also claimed that the panel
acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU by failing to make an
objective assessment of the facts in the context of its findings under Article
2.1 of the TBT Agreement. In addition, Canada and Norway appealed the
panel's findings that (i) the EU Seal Regime is not
inconsistent with Article 2.2 of the TBT Agreement, and (ii) the EU Seal Regime
is provisionally justified under Article XX(a) of the GATT 1994 and the panel's
reasoning with respect to the chapeau of Article XX. Canada and Norway also alleged
that the panel acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU in relation to
its findings under Article 2.1 of the TBT Agreement. Finally, Canada
alleged that the panel acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU in
making certain factual findings in relation to its finding under Article XX(a)
of the GATT 1994.
In its other appeal, the European Union
challenged the panel's finding that the EU Seal Regime is a technical
regulation within the meaning of Annex 1.1 to the TBT Agreement. The European
Union also appealed the panel's interpretation of Articles I:1 and III:4 of the
GATT 1994, as well as the panel's conclusion under Article I:1.
In its cross-appeal, the European Union challenged the panel's finding that the EU
Seal Regime lays down product characteristics, including the applicable
administrative provisions, and requested the Appellate Body to reverse the
panel's conclusion that the EU Seal Regime is a technical regulation within the
meaning of Annex 1.1 to the TBT Agreement.
The Appellate Body explained that, since Annex 1.1 describes a technical
regulation by reference to a "document" and makes clear that it is
"compliance" with the content of the document laying down product
characteristics or their related processes and production methods (PPMs) that
must be found to be "mandatory", the scope of Annex 1.1 is limited to
those documents that establish or prescribe something and thus have a certain
normative content. With respect to the meaning of the term "product
characteristics", the Appellate Body recalled its observations in EC – Asbestos that the "characteristics" of a
product include "objectively definable 'features', 'qualities',
'attributes', or other 'distinguishing mark' of a product" that might
relate, inter alia, to "a product's
composition, size, shape, colour, texture, hardness, tensile strength,
flammability, conductivity, density, or viscosity". Further, the Appellate
Body noted that, in EC – Asbestos,
the Appellate Body had described these characteristics as "features and
qualities intrinsic to the product itself" and had added that
"product characteristics" within the meaning of Annex 1.1 may also
include "related 'characteristics'". In addition, the Appellate Body
explained that the reference to "or their related processes and production
methods" in the first sentence of Annex 1.1 indicates that the subject
matter of a technical regulation may also consist of the laying down of PPMs that
are related to product characteristics.
According to the Appellate Body, in order to determine whether a measure
lays down related PPMs, a panel should examine whether the PPMs prescribed by
the measure have a sufficient nexus to the characteristics of a product in
order to be considered related to those characteristics.
Turning to the term "applicable administrative provisions" in
the first sentence of Annex 1.1 to the TBT Agreement, the Appellate Body
noted that this term is linked to the words "product characteristics or
their related processes and production methods" by the conjunctive
"including". Recalling the ordinary meaning of the words
"provision" and "administrative", the Appellate Body
noted that the word "applicable" in this context indicates that the
relevant "administrative provisions" must "refer" to or be
"relevant" to the product characteristics or their related PPMs as
prescribed in the relevant document. The Appellate Body further explained that
the second sentence of Annex 1.1 enumerates specific elements that technical
regulations "may also include or deal exclusively with", namely,
"terminology, symbols, packaging, marking or labelling requirements"
as they apply to a product, process or production method. The use of the words
"also include" and "deal exclusively with" at the beginning
of the second sentence indicates that the second sentence includes elements
that are additional to, and may be distinct from, those covered by the first
sentence of Annex 1.1.
With regard to the panel's analysis of the EU Seal Regime, the Appellate
Body found that the panel's conclusion that the measure lays down product
characteristics appeared to be based on a single component of the measure,
namely the prohibition on seal-containing products. Referring to its report in EC – Asbestos, the Appellate Body explained that the panel
should have examined the design and operation of the measure while seeking to
identify its "integral and essential" aspects before reaching a final
conclusion as to legal characterization of the measure as a whole. The
Appellate Body considered that the panel therefore erred to the extent it reached a final conclusion as to the legal character
of the measure on the basis of an examination of the aspect of the EU Seal
Regime that sets out a "prohibition on seal-containing products"
taken alone. The Appellate Body further noted that a prohibition of pure
seal products also found in the EU Seal Regime does not prescribe or
impose any "characteristics" on such products and considered
that the panel should have assessed the relevance of this aspect of the measure
in order to determine whether it was an integral and essential aspect of the
measure, and, if so, the weight that should be ascribed to it in characterizing
the EU Seal Regime as a whole.
The Appellate Body then turned to examine the EU Seal Regime as it
applies to products containing seal as an input ("mixed" products).
The Appellate Body noted that the prohibition on "mixed" products
could be seen as imposing certain objective features or characteristics on all
products by providing that they may not contain seal. However, this was but one
of the components of the EU Seal Regime and had to be analysed together with
the other components of the measure. Referring to its report in EC – Asbestos, the Appellate Body noted that, in that case,
the measure at issue regulated asbestos-containing products due to the
carcinogenicity or toxicity of the physical properties of the
products at issue, i.e. the fact that those
products contained asbestos fibres. By contrast, the Appellate Body
pointed out that the EU Seal Regime does not prohibit seal-containing
products merely because they contain seal as an input;
instead, the prohibition is imposed based on criteria
relating to the identity of the hunter or the type or purpose of the hunt from
which the product is derived.
The Appellate Body next addressed the European Union's argument that the
panel erred in considering that the word "applicable" pertains to
products rather than "product characteristics or their related processes
and production methods". The Appellate Body explained that the clause
"including applicable administrative provisions" in Annex 1.1 refers
to provisions to be applied by virtue of a governmental mandate in relation to
either product characteristics or their related PPMs. Insofar as the essential
and integral aspects of the EU Seal Regime do not set out product
characteristics, the Appellate Body found that the relevant administrative provisions
cannot be characterized as being applicable to product characteristics.
Although the administrative provisions under the EU Seal Regime
"apply" to products containing seal, this did not, in the Appellate
Body's view, mean that the measure at issue amounts to a technical regulation
for that reason alone, since these administrative provisions only serve to
identify the exempted products, and are an ancillary aspect of the measure.
Having reviewed
the relevant aspects of the EU Seal Regime, the Appellate Body explained that,
to the extent that the measure regulates the placing on the EU market of pure seal products, it does not prescribe or impose any "characteristics" on
the products themselves. To the extent the measure prohibits the placing on the
EU market of seal-containing products, it could be seen as imposing certain
"objective features, qualities or characteristics" on all products by
providing that they may not contain seal. However, the Appellate Body was not
persuaded that this constitutes the main feature of the measure at issue. The
Appellate Body added that the EU Seal Regime's prohibition of "mixed"
products differs, to a considerable extent, from the prohibitive aspects of the
French Decree under EC – Asbestos.
The Appellate Body further noted that, when the prohibitive aspects of the EU
Seal Regime are considered together with the IC and MRM exceptions, it becomes
clear that the EU Seal Regime is not concerned with the banning of the
placing of seal products on the EU market as such; instead, the measure
establishes the conditions for placing on the market based on criteria relating
to the identity of the hunter and/or the type or purpose of the hunt from which
the product is derived. That being the main feature of the EU Seal Regime,
the Appellate Body did not consider that the measure as a whole lays down
product characteristics. For these reasons, the Appellate Body reversed the panel's
findings in that respect. Since the panel's conclusion that the EU Seal Regime
constitutes a technical regulation was based on its intermediate finding that
the EU Seal Regime lays down product characteristics, the Appellate Body also reversed
the panel's finding that the EU Seal Regime constitutes a technical
regulation within the meaning of Annex 1.1.
In the event the Appellate Body were to reverse the panel's finding that
the EU Seal Regime lays down "product characteristics" and/or
"applicable administrative provisions" within the meaning of Annex
1.1 of the TBT Agreement, Canada and Norway had requested that the
Appellate Body complete the analysis and find that the EU Seal Regime
constitutes a "technical regulation" within the meaning of Annex 1.1
to the TBT Agreement. Thus, the Appellate Body turned to Norway's and Canada's
requests. The Appellate Body noted that in order to complete the analysis it
would have to determine whether the EU Seal Regime lays down "related processes
and production methods" and therefore qualifies as a technical regulation
even though it does not lay down product characteristics. The Appellate Body
recalled that Norway and Canada presented arguments on PPMs to the panel in the
alternative; however, the panel did not consider it necessary to examine whether
the EU Seal Regime lays down PPMs since it had already found the EU Seal Regime
to lay down product characteristics. The Appellate Body noted that, during the
hearing, Canada confirmed that it had not argued that the IC and MRM exceptions
are "related PPMs", and Norway indicated that it did not
consider that the conditions under the exceptions, by themselves,
constitute "related PPMs". The Appellate Body recalled that it had on
previous occasions refused to complete the analysis in the absence of a full
exploration of the issues before the panel that could give rise to concerns
about due process. Since neither the panel, nor the complainants, addressed in
detail whether the EU Seal Regime lays down "related process and production
methods" within the meaning of Annex 1.1, the Appellate Body considered it
inappropriate to complete the legal analysis in this respect.
Having reversed the panel's finding that the EU Seal Regime constitutes
a technical regulation, and having found that it was unable to complete
the legal analysis, the Appellate Body declared moot
and of no legal effect the panel's findings under Articles 2.1, 2.2, 5.1.2, and 5.2.1 of the
TBT Agreement.
The European Union appealed the panel's
interpretation of Articles I:1 and III:4 of the GATT 1994, claiming
that the panel erred in finding that the legal standard of the
non-discrimination obligations under Article 2.1 of the TBT Agreement does not
apply equally to claims under Articles I:1 and III:4 of the GATT 1994. The
European Union also appealed the panel's conclusion under Article I:1 but not
under Article III:4.
The Appellate Body began by making some
general observations about the similarities and differences between
Articles I:1 and III:4 of the GATT 1994. First, although the MFN and national
treatment obligations under the GATT 1994 are both fundamental
non-discrimination obligations under the GATT 1994, their points of comparison
for determining whether a measure discriminates between like products are not
the same. Second, the Appellate Body highlighted the textual differences
between the two provisions, noting that the national treatment obligation under
Article III:4 is expressed through a "treatment no less
favourable" standard, whereas the legal standard under Article I:1 is
expressed through an obligation to extend any "advantage"
granted by a Member to any product originating in or destined for any
other country "immediately and unconditionally" to the
"like product" originating in or destined for any other Members.
Third, notwithstanding the textual differences between the two provisions,
each provision is concerned with prohibiting discriminatory measures by
requiring the equality of competitive opportunities for like products. Against
this background, the Appellate Body examined, separately, the panel's
interpretation of Articles I:1 and III:4.
Turning to address the European Union's
appeal as it related to Article I:1 of the GATT 1994, the Appellate Body
considered that an interpretation of the proper legal standard under
Article I:1 must take into account the fundamental purpose of Article I:1,
namely, to preserve the equality of competitive opportunities for like imported
products from all Members. The Appellate Body noted that Article I:1 requires
that any advantage granted by a Member to imported products must be made
available "unconditionally" to like imported products from any other
Members. However, insofar as Article I:1 is concerned with protecting
expectations of equal competitive opportunities for like imported products from
all Members, the Appellate Body explained that Article I:1 does not prohibit a
Member from attaching any conditions to the grant of an "advantage"
within the meaning of Article I:1. Instead, the Appellate Body explained that Article I:1
prohibits those conditions that have a detrimental impact on the competitive
opportunities for like imported products from any Member. Conversely, the
Appellate Body noted that Article I:1 permits regulatory distinctions to be
drawn between like imported products, provided that such distinctions do not result
in a detrimental impact on the competitive opportunities for like imported
products from any Member. Thus, the Appellate Body rejected the European
Union's argument that, for the purposes of establishing an inconsistency with
Article I:1, it must be demonstrated that the detrimental impact of a measure
on competitive opportunities for like imported products does not stem
exclusively from a legitimate regulatory distinction. Instead, the Appellate
Body considered that where a measure modifies the conditions of competition
between like imported products to the detriment of the imported products at
issue, it is inconsistent with Article I:1.
Turning to address the European Union's
appeal of the panel's interpretation of the legal standard under Article III:4
of the GATT 1994, the Appellate Body noted the European Union's argument that
WTO jurisprudence under Article III:4 establishes that the analysis of whether
imported products are accorded treatment less favourable than that accorded to
like domestic products, "goes beyond" a consideration of the
detrimental effect of a measure on the competitive opportunities for like
imported products. The Appellate Body recalled that, in
US – Clove Cigarettes, it
had clarified that a violation of Article III:4 had not been established
in Dominican Republic – Import and Sale of Cigarettes,
since, in that dispute, the detrimental impact on competitive opportunities for
like imported products was not attributable to the specific measure at issue. Thus,
the Appellate Body had clarified that the detrimental impact on competitive
opportunities for like imported products must be attributable to, or have a
genuine relationship with, the measure at issue. The Appellate Body therefore rejected
the European Union's argument that its report in Dominican
Republic – Import and Sale of Cigarettes stands for the proposition
that, under Article III:4, a panel must examine whether the detrimental impact
that a measure has on competitive opportunities for like imported products
stems exclusively from a legitimate regulatory distinction.
The European Union also relied on the
Appellate Body's statement in EC – Asbestos
that "a Member may draw distinctions between products which have been
found to be 'like', without, for this reason alone, according to the group
of 'like' imported products 'less favourable treatment' than that accorded to
the group of 'like' domestic products". In the European Union's view,
this statement supports its contention that, for the purposes of establishing a
violation of Article III:4, a finding that a measure has a detrimental
impact on competitive opportunities for like imported products is not
dispositive.
The Appellate Body considered that the
statement of the Appellate Body in EC – Asbestos,
on which the European Union relied, merely highlighted that
Article III:4 does not require the identical treatment of imported and
like domestic products, but rather the equality of competitive conditions
between these like products. In this regard, neither formally identical, nor
formally different, treatment of imported and like domestic products
necessarily ensures equality of competitive opportunities for imported and
domestic like products. However, in the Appellate Body's view, regulatory
distinctions between imported and like domestic products constitute less
favourable treatment of imported products, under Article III:4, where such
distinctions modify the conditions of competition in the relevant market to the
detriment of like imported products.
The European Union further asserted that the panel's
interpretation of the legal standard under Article III:4 failed to take account
of the general principle, expressed in Article III:1 of the GATT 1994,
that internal regulations should not be applied "so as to afford
protection" to domestic production. The Appellate Body considered that
although the general principle expressed in Article III:1 informs the rest
of Article III, including Article III:4, the extent to which this general
principle informs the other paragraphs of Article III depends on the textual
connection between Article III:1 and the other paragraphs of Article III.
Noting that Article III:4 does not explicitly refer to Article III:1, the
Appellate Body considered that Article III:4 is, itself, an expression of the
principle set forth in Article III:1, such that if there is "less
favourable treatment" of the group of "like" imported products,
"protection" is afforded to the group of "like" domestic
products.
The European Union also suggested that, since
the list of possible legitimate objectives that may factor into an analysis
under Article 2.1 of the TBT Agreement is open, a divergent approach to de facto discrimination under the GATT 1994 could lead
to a situation where, under Article 2.1, a technical regulation that has a
detrimental impact on imports would be permitted if such detrimental impact
stems from a legitimate regulatory distinction, while, under Articles I:1
and III:4 of the GATT 1994, the same technical regulation would be
prohibited if the objective that it pursues does not fall within the closed
list of the subparagraphs of Article XX of the GATT 1994. In the Appellate
Body's view, this argument was predicated on a perceived imbalance between,
on the one hand, the scope of a Member's right to regulate under Article
XX of the GATT 1994, and, on the other hand, the scope of that right under
Article 2.1 of the TBT Agreement. The Appellate Body dismissed this
argument, noting that under the TBT Agreement, the balance between the desire
to avoid creating unnecessary obstacles to international trade under the fifth
recital, and the recognition of Members' right to regulate under the sixth
recital, is not, in principle, different from the balance set out in the
GATT 1994, where obligations such as national treatment in
Article III are qualified by the general exceptions provision of
Article XX.
For these reasons, the Appellate Body upheld
the panel's finding that the legal standard for the non-discrimination
obligations under Article 2.1 of the TBT Agreement does not apply equally to
claims under Articles I:1 and III:4 of the GATT 1994. As a result, the
Appellate Body also upheld the panel's conclusion that the measure at issue is
inconsistent with Article I:1 because it does not "immediately and
unconditionally" extend the same market access advantage to Canadian
and Norwegian seal products that it accords to seal products originating
from Greenland.
The Appellate Body recalled that it had
declared moot and of no legal effect the panel's conclusions under Articles 2.1
and 2.2 of the TBT Agreement. However, to the extent that the panel had
relied on certain of its findings and reasoning in the context of its analysis
under the TBT Agreement when addressing claims and arguments under Article
XX of the GATT 1994, the Appellate Body explained that it would refer to those
findings and reasoning in considering the participants' claims and arguments on
appeal under Article XX.
The Appellate Body noted that the panel
sought first to identify the "objective" of the EU Seal Regime
in the context of its analysis under Article 2.2 of the TBT Agreement, and
relied on that assessment in its analysis under Article XX of the GATT 1994. In
the context of Article XX, the Appellate Body explained that the panel's
characterization of the objective of the measure has implications both in
respect of the analysis under subparagraph (a), as well as under the chapeau.
Accordingly, before addressing the claims on appeal directed at the panel's
analysis under Article XX, the Appellate Body addressed the panel's
characterization of the objective of the EU Seal Regime and the
parties' arguments relating thereto. Norway challenged the panel's finding that
the "sole objective" of the EU Seal Regime is to address EU public
moral concerns regarding seal welfare. In Norway's view, the panel committed a
number of legal and factual errors in reaching the conclusion that the EU Seal
Regime does not pursue objectives relating to the protection of IC interests
and the promotion of MRM interests. The European Union maintained that the panel
correctly found that the "principal" or "main" objective of
the EU Seal Regime is to address public moral concerns with regard to the
welfare of seals.
The Appellate Body began by noting that, in
order to identify a measure's objective, a panel must take account of all
evidence put before it in this regard, including the texts of statutes,
the legislative history, and other evidence regarding the structure and
operation of the measure at issue. The Appellate Body also noted that, a
panel's identification of the objective of a measure is a matter of legal
characterization subject to appellate review under Article 17.6 of the DSU.
Contrary to what Norway argued, the Appellate Body considered that the panel
did not find that addressing EU public moral concerns regarding seal welfare
was the "sole objective" of the EU Seal Regime. Instead, while the panel
identified the "principal objective" of the EU Seal Regime as being
"to address public concerns on seal welfare",
the panel found that the interests, inter alia,
of indigenous communities and those for marine management purposes had
been "accommodated" in the measure as well. Thus, when the panel
stated that the other interests must be distinguished from the "main
objective" of the measure "as a whole", according to the
Appellate Body, it was commenting on how the relative significance of the
policy interests played out in the measure, suggesting that such other interests
were not manifest in the objective of the measure in the same manner as
concerns regarding seal welfare. Finally, the Appellate Body noted that
although the panel did not determine the moral content of such other interests,
either alone or as part of a single moral standard for seal welfare, the panel
also did not accept the European Union's contention that the benefits to
Inuit communities "outweighed" concerns in respect of seal welfare in
indigenous community hunts. The Appellate Body also recalled that the panel did
not consider that the evidence before it supported the European Union's
position that the EU public attributes a higher moral value to the
protection of Inuit interests as compared to seal welfare.
For these reasons, the Appellate Body rejected
Norway's claim that the panel erred in its characterization of the objective of
the EU Seal Regime. Having reviewed the panel's findings and the
participants' arguments on appeal, the Appellate Body considered that the
principal objective of the EU Seal Regime is to address EU public moral
concerns regarding seal welfare, while accommodating other interests so as to
mitigate the impact of the measure on those interests.
Norway submitted that the panel erred by
seeking to justify under Article XX(a) of the GATT 1994 the EU Seal Regime
as a whole, instead of the aspects of the measure – namely, the IC and MRM
exceptions – giving rise to WTO-inconsistency under Articles I:1 and III:4
of the GATT 1994. The Appellate Body noted that the general exceptions of
Article XX apply to "measures" that are to be analysed under the
subparagraphs and chapeau, and not to any inconsistency with the GATT 1994
that might arise from such measures. With respect to the claims under
Article I:1 of the GATT 1994, the Appellate Body considered that the
existence of the permissive component in the form of the IC exception
alone cannot be considered to confer an advantage to seal products of
Greenlandic origin, unless it is compared to the treatment of seal products of
Canadian and Norwegian origin. The Appellate Body thus noted that it is
only the combined operation of the permissive aspect of the EU Seal Regime
(i.e. the IC exception which grants market access to seal products of
Greenlandic origin), together with its prohibitive aspect (i.e. the
"ban" which restricts market access for Canadian and Norwegian seal
products), that leads to a finding of de facto
discrimination under Article I:1. The Appellate Body noted that, in the
present case, the panel's analysis correctly focused on determining whether
these WTO-inconsistent aspects of the measure are justified under
Article XX(a). The Appellate Body therefore
rejected Norway's claim, and found that the panel did not err in concluding
that the analysis under Article XX(a) of the GATT 1994 should examine both
the prohibitive and permissive aspects of the EU Seal Regime.
Canada maintained that the panel erred in
finding that the EU Seal Regime is a measure taken "to protect public
morals" within the meaning of Article XX(a). Relying on the panel report
in
EC – Asbestos, Canada argued
that the use of the phrase "to protect" in Article XX(a)
requires the identification of a risk to public morals against which the EU
Seal Regime seeks to protect. In Canada's view, the evidence it submitted
established that the welfare risks associated with commercial seal hunts are
"commonplace" in situations that involve the killing of animals,
especially in the context of wildlife hunts, regardless of whether they take
place inside or outside the European Union. On this basis, Canada argued that
the panel failed to consider whether the risks associated with commercial seal
hunts "exceeded the accepted level of risk of compromised animal
welfare".
The Appellate Body noted that the statement
of the panel in EC – Asbestos – that "the
notion of 'protection' … impl[ies] the existence of a health risk" – was
made in the context of Article XX(b) which focuses on the protection of
"human, animal or plant life or health". Referring to the concepts of
"risk" and "protection" embodied in the SPS Agreement, the
Appellate Body noted that the protection of human, animal, or plant life or
health may suggest a particular focus on the protection from or against certain
dangers or risks. However, the notion of risk in the context of Article XX(b)
is difficult to reconcile with the subject-matter of protection under Article
XX(a), namely, public morals. The Appellate Body explained that while the focus
on the dangers or risks to human, animal, or plant life or health in the
context of Article XX(b) may lend itself to scientific or other methods of
inquiry, such risk-assessment methods do not appear to be of much assistance or
relevance in identifying and assessing public morals. The Appellate Body
therefore did not consider that the term "to protect", when used in
relation to "public morals" under Article XX(a), required the panel
to identify the existence of a risk to EU public moral concerns regarding seal
welfare. For these reasons, the Appellate Body also rejected Canada's argument
that, for the purposes of an analysis under Article XX(a), a panel is
required to determine the exact content of the public moral standard at issue. The
Appellate Body noted that Canada did not challenge the panel's reliance on
statements by the panel in US – Gambling,
including that "the term 'public morals' denotes 'standards of right
and wrong conduct maintained by or on behalf of a community or
nation'", and that Members should be given some scope to define and apply
for themselves the concept of public morals according to their own systems and
scales of values. The Appellate Body further noted that Canada did not directly
challenge the panel's finding that public moral concerns exist in relation to
seal welfare in the European Union.
The Appellate Body noted that, by arguing
that the European Union must recognize the same level of animal welfare risk in
seal hunts as it does in its slaughterhouses and terrestrial wildlife hunts,
Canada appeared to suggest that a responding Member must regulate similar
public moral concerns in similar ways for the purposes of satisfying the
requirement "to protect" public morals under Article XX(a). The
Appellate Body recalled that the panel in US – Gambling
underscored that Members have the right to determine the level of protection
that they consider appropriate, which suggests that Members may set different
levels of protection even when responding to similar interests of moral
concern. Even if Canada were correct that the European Union has the same moral
concerns regarding seal welfare and the welfare of other animals, the Appellate
Body did not consider that the European Union was required by
Article XX(a) to address such public moral concerns in the same way. For
these reasons, the Appellate Body found that the panel did not err in
concluding that the objective of the EU Seal Regime falls within the scope of
Article XX(a).
Canada and Norway both contended that the panel
erred in concluding that the EU Seal Regime is "necessary" to protect
public morals and by finding that the EU Seal Regime made a
"material" contribution to its objective, since the degree of
contribution of the EU Seal Regime did not rise to the level of being
"material". In addition, because the panel's analysis under Article
XX(a) relied on findings it made in the context of Article 2.2 of the TBT
Agreement, the Appellate Body also considered the arguments made by Canada and
Norway in that context to the extent they were relevant to Article XX(a) of the
GATT 1994.
The Appellate Body first noted the panel's reliance
on Brazil – Retreaded Tyres to state that "the contribution
made by the 'ban' to the identified objective must be shown to be at least
material given the extent of its trade‑restrictiveness". In that dispute,
the Appellate Body was confronted with the particular challenge of assessing
the contribution of a measure that formed part of a broader policy scheme, and
that was not yet having an immediately discernible impact on its objective.
Accordingly, the Appellate Body sought in that dispute to determine whether the
measure was "apt to make a material contribution" to its objective.
The Appellate Body explained that its approach in Brazil –
Retreaded Tyres was tailored to the peculiar features of the measure
at issue in that case and did not set out a generally applicable standard
requiring the use of a pre‑determined threshold of "material"
contribution in analysing the necessity of a measure under Article XX of the
GATT 1994. The Appellate Body considered that this was supported by the
notion of an overall necessity analysis, which involves a holistic process of
"weighing and balancing" a series of factors, including the
importance of the objective, the contribution of the measure to that objective,
and the trade-restrictiveness of the measure, following which a comparison with
less trade restrictive alternatives should in most cases be undertaken. In the
Appellate Body's view, whether a measure is "necessary" cannot be
determined by the level of contribution alone, but will depend on the manner in
which the other factors of the necessity analysis, including a consideration of
potential alternative measures, inform the analysis. For these reasons, the
Appellate Body rejected Canada's and Norway's argument that the panel was
required to apply a standard of "materiality" as a generally
applicable pre-determined threshold in its contribution analysis, and
considered that the panel erred to the extent that it relied on such a standard
in its analysis. However, because it considered that the panel went on to
examine the contribution of both the prohibitive and permissive aspects of the
EU Seal Regime, the Appellate Body proceeded to address Canada's and
Norway's appeals of the panel's conclusions under Article XX(a) on the basis
of their contentions that the panel erred in the contribution analysis it
conducted in the context of Article 2.2 of the TBT Agreement to the extent
these arguments were relevant to the analysis under Article XX(a).
The Appellate Body then turned to address
Canada's and Norway's claims that the panel failed to articulate the
"degree" or "extent" of the contribution made by the
prohibitive and permissive components of the EU Seal Regime. The Appellate Body
observed that the panel opted for a qualitative analysis that focused mainly on
the design and expected operation of the measure, and the panel had only
limited information on how certain aspects of the measure would operate in
practice. Furthermore, the permissive aspects were still in a relatively
nascent stage of implementation at the time of the proceedings before the panel.
Moreover, although the parties submitted considerable evidence regarding the
EU market, the Appellate Body noted that, as acknowledged by the panel,
that information was incomplete and subject to a number of limitations. The
Appellate Body therefore did not consider that the panel's decision to adopt a
qualitative approach in assessing the contribution of the measure was improper.
With respect to the contribution made by the EU Seal Regime to the first
aspect of the objective – i.e. addressing public moral concerns relating to the
EU public's participation as consumers in the market for products derived
from inhumanely killed seals – the complainants argued that, by concluding that
the ban was "capable of making a contribution", the panel identified
a possible, instead of an actual, contribution. The Appellate Body noted that,
because the panel made clear that it was focusing on the design and expected
operation of the measure, the panel could be seen as projecting what the impact
of the prohibitive aspect of the measure would be. In the Appellate Body's
view, such an approach was similar to the analysis in Brazil –
Retreaded Tyres, where the panel concluded that the measure at issue
was "capable of making a contribution to the objective". With regard
to the second aspect of the objective – i.e. addressing public moral concerns
relating to the number of inhumanely killed seals – the Appellate Body considered
that the panel's articulation of the degree of contribution was influenced by
the limitations in the data about which the panel had signalled its prior
reservations. With respect to the complainants' contention that the panel
failed to identify how the positive and negative contributions of the different
elements of the measure resulted in a net overall contribution to the
identified objective, the Appellate Body noted that, although the panel's
conclusion that the EU Seal Regime is "capable of making and does
make some contribution" does not provide much information as to the
precise degree or extent of the contribution, it was not clear what
greater clarity or precision the panel could have achieved.
Next, the Appellate Body addressed the
complainants' distinct claims that various aspects of the panel's findings with
respect to the contribution of the EU Seal Regime to its objective were
unsubstantiated. The Appellate Body first assessed Canada's and Norway's
contention that the EU Seal Regime fails to contribute to the objective in
various respects because it leads to worse seal welfare outcomes, given: (i)
that the EU Seal Regime will have the effect of replacing imports from
commercial hunts with those from IC and MRM hunts; and (ii) that IC and MRM
hunts lead to higher rates of inhumanely killed seals as compared to commercial
hunts. In the Appellate Body's view, the record before the panel provided the panel
with reasonable grounds for not concluding that IC and MRM hunts lead
to poorer seal welfare outcomes than commercial hunts, or that the EU Seal
Regime resulted in the replacement of seal product imports from commercial
hunts with such products from IC and MRM hunts. Accordingly, the Appellate Body
rejected the claims of Canada and Norway as they relate to this aspect of the panel's
contribution analysis.
The Appellate Body then addressed the
complainants' claims in respect of the panel's finding that the EU Seal Regime
contributes to reducing EU and global demand for seal products and the
incidence of inhumanely killed seals. The Appellate Body noted that the European Union
had argued that the ban makes a partial contribution to addressing public
concerns regarding seal welfare "by reducing global demand for seal
products resulting from commercial hunts, with the consequence that less seals
are killed in an inhumane way". By focusing on whether the ban reduces
demand for seal products, the panel appeared to have accepted the proposition
that reducing such demand would lead to fewer inhumanely killed seals. The
Appellate Body did not consider it unreasonable for the panel to have assumed
that a decrease in demand, and hence a contraction of the seal product market,
would have the effect of reducing the number of seals killed, and thus the
number of inhumanely killed seals. With regard to the complainants' argument
that seal products derived from Greenlandic hunts could fully satisfy
EU demand, and that the ban could or does lead to an increase in the
number of seals killed inhumanely, the Appellate Body recalled that this
argument rested on a factual premise that was highly contested by the parties,
was not uniformly supported by the panel record, and, in any event, the panel
did not make a finding in this respect. In the light of this uncertainty,
the Appellate Body rejected Canada's and Norway's claims in this regard.
The Appellate Body next turned to the
remaining questions of whether the panel's finding that the EU Seal Regime
led to a reduction in demand for seal products was properly substantiated.
Canada and Norway contended that the evidence relied on by the panel suggesting
that the market uncertainty created by the EU Seal Regime led to a decline in
demand is unavailing because the prohibitive aspect of the EU Seal Regime
affects the supply, not the demand, for seal products. The Appellate Body noted
that the evidence cited by the panel did not refer to demand per se but rather
to observations about trade impacts experienced by the EU seal product
market as a whole. Such observations, in the Appellate Body's view, were
descriptive of a market dynamic that necessarily reflects both supply-side and
demand-side considerations. The Appellate Body therefore considered that the
references to market uncertainty and decreases in trade volume and market
prices were all elements of a market dynamic that is at least partly informed
by demand-side considerations, and that the panel therefore had a reasonable
basis to conclude that the evidence that it cited provided some support for the
view that the measure reduced EU demand for seal products. In respect of
the panel's conclusion that the EU Seal Regime contributes "to a certain
extent, to reducing a global demand", the Appellate Body considered that
the panel based its conclusions largely on its conclusions regarding the effect
of the EU Seal Regime on EU demand. Although it considered that
the basis for this finding was somewhat tenuous, the Appellate Body recalled
the difficulties faced by the panel in conducting any sort of quantitative
analysis on the basis of the panel record, which rendered the panel's analysis
necessarily qualitative in nature. For these reasons, the Appellate Body
rejected the claims of Canada and Norway with respect to the panel's assessment
of the EU Seal Regime's impact on EU and global demand for seal products.
The Appellate Body next addressed claims by
Norway alleging that the panel undervalued two additional aspects in assessing
the contribution of the EU Seal Regime. First, Norway argued that the panel
failed to take full account of the negative contribution made by the implicit
exceptions in its contribution analysis. The Appellate Body disagreed with
Norway's claim, highlighting that the panel explicitly discussed the impact of
inward processing on the EU market in the context of its contribution
analysis. Norway further argued that the panel wrongly concluded that
indigenous communities have not been able to benefit from the IC exception, a
factor that the panel considered to limit the negative impact of the
exceptions. The Appellate Body considered that the panel was not, as Norway
suggested, referring exclusively to the difficulties faced by Greenlandic Inuit
as the basis for its statement, and it therefore rejected Norway's claim.
The Appellate Body then turned to assess
Canada's and Norway's claims relating to the panel's finding that the
alternative measure was not reasonably available. The Appellate Body noted that
the alternative measure proposed in these disputes consisted of market access
for seal products that would be conditioned on compliance with animal welfare standards,
and certification and labelling requirements. Canada and Norway requested
the Appellate Body to reverse the panel's finding that the proposed alternative
measure is not reasonably available, arguing, principally, that the panel
failed to assess the alternative measure against the actual contribution of the
EU Seal Regime, but rather did so against a standard of complete
fulfilment of the objective. The Appellate Body took note of the panel's
explanation that it was undertaking an analytical exercise in which the
contours of the animal welfare standards required as part of the alternative
measure were not clearly defined. The Appellate Body further noted that, based
on the differing views on what would constitute adequate welfare standards, and
absent a clearly articulated standard from the complainants, the panel examined
a range of hypothetical versions of the alternative measure spanning a range of
different levels of stringency or leniency. In the Appellate Body's view,
the fact that the panel entertained, and compared, the possibility of stringent
versus lenient versions of a certification system, in order to consider how a
loosely defined alternative measure might contribute to the identified
objective, confirmed that the panel was undertaking considerable efforts to
understand how such variations of the alternative measure might operate.
Canada and Norway further contended that the panel
erred in considering the costs and logistical demands on hunters and marketers
of seal products if a strict certification scheme were to be adopted by the
European Union. According to the complainants, the Appellate Body report in Brazil – Retreaded Tyres
stands for the proposition that it is the burdens and costs imposed on the
responding WTO Member, not on the industry, that are relevant for a finding on
whether the alternative measure is reasonably available. The Appellate Body
explained, however, that its observations in Brazil –
Retreaded Tyres did not exclude a priori the possibility that an
alternative measure may be deemed not to be reasonably available due to
significant costs or difficulties faced by the affected industry, in particular
where such costs or difficulties could affect the ability or willingness
of the industry to comply with the requirements of that measure.
Ultimately, having reviewed the panel's
reasoning and findings in respect of the alternative measure, the Appellate
Body did not consider that the panel erred in concluding that the alternative
measure is not reasonably available. The panel considered that even the most
stringent certification system would be difficult to implement and enforce, and
would lead to an increase in the number of inhumanely killed seals. The panel
further considered that making the welfare standards or the certification and
labelling requirements more lenient would make the alternative measure more
reasonably available but would not meaningfully contribute to addressing EU
public moral concerns regarding seal welfare. The Appellate Body therefore
understood the panel to have concluded that, irrespective of the level of
stringency, a certification system would be beset by difficulties in addressing
EU public moral concerns regarding seal welfare.
Finally, the Appellate Body considered two
claims brought respectively by Canada and Norway under Article 11 of the
DSU relating to the reasonable availability of the alternative measure.
First, the Appellate Body responded to Canada's assertion that the panel
had no basis to conclude that the alternative measure could result in an
increase in the number of seals killed inhumanely. The Appellate Body
considered that the panel had relied on more information than alleged by
Canada. The Appellate Body noted that a panel does not fail to make an
objective assessment as required under Article 11 of the DSU by failing to
cite all of the arguments and evidence supporting a particular proposition, and
therefore rejected Canada's claim.
Second, the Appellate Body addressed Norway's
contention that the panel acted in violation of Article 11 of the DSU by
ignoring two further alternative measures it had proposed during the course of
the panel proceedings. The Appellate Body explained that the first alternative
to which Norway referred amounted to the removal of the EU Seal Regime. The
Appellate Body noted that this alternative rested on the factual premise that
it had previously examined and which the panel did not find to exist, namely,
that the EU Seal Regime could or does lead to worse seal welfare outcomes
than those existing prior to the adoption of the measure. Norway's second
alternative proposed the removal of three of the restrictive conditions of the
MRM exception – that is, the not‑for-profit, non-systematic, and sole
purpose conditions – to be replaced by certain animal welfare, certification,
and labelling requirements. The Appellate Body noted that Norway's second
alternative consisted in part of a set of requirements similar to what the panel
actually analysed in its Reports, and, therefore, any conclusions the panel
reached regarding the likely limitations of the certification system it
analysed equally applied to a version of that system that would apply only in
respect of seal products from MRM hunts. In sum, the Appellate Body dismissed
Norway's Article 11 claims as it considered that the additional alternatives to
which Norway referred were in fact implicitly addressed by the panel.
For the above reasons, having rejected the
claims on appeal by Canada and Norway as they related to Article XX(a), the
Appellate Body upheld the panel's finding that the EU Seal Regime is
provisionally deemed necessary within the meaning of Article XX(a) of the
GATT 1994. Since it upheld the panel's finding that the EU Seal Regime is
provisionally justified under Article XX(a), the Appellate Body was not called
upon to address the European Union's conditional other appeal with respect to
Article XX(b).
While Canada and Norway agreed with the panel's
ultimate conclusion that the EU Seal Regime does not meet the requirements of
the chapeau, they took issue with the panel's reasoning, and in particular its
reliance on findings under Article 2.1 of the TBT Agreement, in reaching this
conclusion. The European Union, in turn, requested the Appellate Body to
reverse the panel's conclusion under the chapeau with respect to the IC
exception, to complete the analysis, and to find instead that the
IC exception meets the requirements of Article XX(a), including the
chapeau.
The Appellate Body began its analysis by
setting out an interpretation of the chapeau of Article XX of the
GATT 1994. The Appellate Body noted that the chapeau imposes
additional disciplines on measures that have been found to violate an
obligation under the GATT 1994, but that have also been found to be
provisionally justified under one of the exceptions set forth in the
subparagraphs of Article XX. The Appellate Body recalled that the function
of the chapeau is to prevent the abuse or misuse of a Member's right to invoke
those exceptions. The Appellate Body noted that the examination of whether a
measure is applied in a manner that would constitute a means of "arbitrary
or unjustifiable discrimination between countries where the same conditions
prevail" necessitates an assessment of whether the "conditions"
prevailing in the countries between which the measure allegedly discriminates
are "the same". The Appellate Body considered that, in determining
which "conditions" prevailing in different countries are relevant in
the context of the chapeau, the subparagraphs of Article XX, and in particular
the subparagraph under which a measure has been provisionally justified,
provide pertinent context. The Appellate Body recalled that the analysis of
whether discrimination is arbitrary or unjustifiable within the meaning of the
chapeau "should focus on the cause of the discrimination, or the rationale
put forward to explain its existence". Drawing on previous jurisprudence,
the Appellate Body further noted that a key factor in the assessment of
arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination is the question of whether the
discrimination can be reconciled with, or is rationally related to, the policy
objective with respect to which the measure has been provisionally justified under
one of the subparagraphs of Article XX.
With regard to Canada's and Norway's claims,
the Appellate Body recognized that there are important parallels between
the analyses under Article 2.1 of the TBT Agreement and the chapeau of
Article XX. However, the Appellate Body also saw significant differences
with respect to the applicable legal standard, and the function and scope of
these provisions. The Appellate Body therefore found that the panel erred in
applying the same legal test under the chapeau of Article XX of the
GATT 1994 as it applied under Article 2.1 of the TBT Agreement, instead of
conducting an independent analysis of the consistency of the EU Seal Regime
with the specific terms and requirements of the chapeau. The Appellate Body
therefore reversed the panel's findings under the chapeau of Article XX, and consequently
found that it did not need to address the participants' appeals as far as they
related to those findings.
The Appellate Body then went on to complete
the analysis on the basis of factual findings by the panel and uncontested
facts on the panel record. The Appellate Body recalled that the
circumstances that bring about the discrimination within the meaning of the
chapeau may include, but are not limited to, the circumstances that led to the
finding of a violation of a substantive provision of the GATT 1994. The
Appellate Body stated that it would therefore examine whether the different
regulatory treatment that the EU Seal Regime accords to seal products derived
from IC hunts as compared to "commercial" hunts constitutes
"arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination", as well as whether the
measure has any discriminatory effects on different indigenous communities that
would amount to arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination.
Turning to the question of whether the "conditions"
prevailing in Canada and Norway, on the one hand, and Greenland, on the other
hand, are relevantly different, the Appellate Body considered that the European
Union had not shown this to be the case. In particular, the Appellate Body
noted that the European Union did not appear to contest that "the same
animal welfare conditions prevail in all countries where seals are hunted".
The Appellate Body also did not understand the European Union to have
argued that the differences in the identity of the hunter or in the purpose of
seal hunts that the panel found to exist between "commercial" and IC
hunts would render the conditions in Canada and Norway, on the one hand, and
Greenland, on the other hand, relevantly different. The Appellate Body
therefore proceeded on the basis that the conditions prevailing in these
countries are "the same" for the purposes of the chapeau.
The Appellate Body next turned to Canada's
and Norway's claim that the EU Seal Regime results in arbitrary or
unjustifiable discrimination because it discriminates on a basis that does not
have a "rational relationship" with the objective of the measure or
goes against that objective. The Appellate Body recalled that the objective of
the EU Seal Regime is to address EU public moral concerns regarding seal
welfare, and that in pursuit of this objective, the EU Seal Regime bans the
importation and placing on the market of seal products derived from
"commercial" hunts, while it allows the importation of seal products
derived from IC hunts that satisfy certain criteria relating to the identity of
the hunter, the purpose of the hunt, and the use of by-products from the hunt.
The Appellate Body noted the European Union's explanation that it exempts seal
products derived from hunts conducted by Inuit and other indigenous peoples
from the ban on the importation and placing on the market of seal products in
order to mitigate the adverse effects on those
communities resulting from the EU Seal Regime to the extent compatible with the
main objective of addressing the public moral concerns with regard to the
welfare of seals. Yet, the
Appellate Body considered that the European Union had failed to demonstrate how
the discrimination resulting from the EU Seal Regime can be reconciled with, or
is related to, the policy objective of addressing EU public moral concerns
regarding seal welfare. In this connection, the Appellate Body noted that the European
Union had not established why the need to protect the economic and social interests
of the Inuit and other indigenous peoples necessarily implies that the European
Union could not do anything further to ensure that the welfare of seals is
addressed in the context of IC hunts, given that IC hunts
can cause the very pain and suffering for seals that the EU public is
concerned about.
The Appellate Body noted that, while the relationship of the
discrimination to the objective of a measure is one of the most important
factors, it is not the sole factor that is relevant to the assessment of
arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination, and there could be additional
factors that may also be relevant to that overall assessment. The Appellate
Body therefore proceeded to examine whether the specific criteria of the IC
exception are designed and applied in a manner that would constitute arbitrary
or unjustifiable discrimination.
The Appellate Body identified ambiguities
with respect to two of these criteria, namely, the requirements that the
seal products are derived from "seal hunts which contribute to the
subsistence of the community" ("subsistence") and from
"seal hunts the products of which are at least partly used, consumed or
processed within the communities according to their traditions"
("partial use"). With respect to the "subsistence" criterion,
the Appellate Body recalled the panel's finding that the subsistence purpose of
IC hunts encompasses a commercial component "to the extent that
Inuit or indigenous communities also exchange some by-products of the hunted
seals for economic gain." With respect to the "partial use"
criterion, the Appellate Body considered that the ambiguity in the notion of
"partial use" arises when it is applied on an aggregate basis
together with the ambiguity arising from the subsistence criterion. The
Appellate Body was concerned that, where conformity with the "partial
use" criterion is not assessed with respect to individual seals but rather
with respect to individual hunters over an extended period of time
(e.g. through licensing conditions), or with respect to all hunters active
in a particular area or even all members of an Inuit community, a proportion of
seal products that, when considered individually, might not conform to the
"partial use" criterion (either because the hunter has commercialized
the entire seal or because the non‑commercialized parts of the seal have been
disposed of rather than used) could potentially qualify for the IC exception.
Given the ambiguities that could arise with respect to at least these two
elements of the IC exception requirements, the Appellate Body
considered that the "recognized bodies" applying these requirements
appeared to enjoy broad discretion, which could allow for instances of abuse of
the IC exception, even where the recognized body was acting in good faith. The
Appellate Body was concerned that, depending on how strictly the IC
requirements are applied, seal products derived from what should in fact be
properly characterized as "commercial" hunts could thus enter the
EU market under the IC exception in some instances. For the Appellate
Body, the European Union had not sufficiently explained how such instances
could be prevented in the application of the IC exception. The Appellate
Body noted that differently from the other exceptions under the EU Seal Regime,
the IC exception did not contain any anti‑circumvention clause which
would allow the denial of entry of seal products that, while formally compliant
with the exception appear to be outside the scope of the exception.
Finally, the Appellate Body turned to the question of whether the manner
in which the IC exception affects Inuit communities in different countries
amounts to "arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination". The Appellate
Body considered that, to the extent that the IC exception is designed or applied
so as to be de facto only available to
Greenland, the EU Seal Regime would treat seal products derived from
IC hunts in Greenland and Canada differently and, in this respect, result
in arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination between countries where the same conditions
prevail. While it was undisputed that the Inuit in Greenland are currently the
only beneficiaries of the IC exception, the European Union contested that this
outcome can be attributed to the EU Seal Regime, which would imply that there
is no "genuine relationship" between the current de facto
exclusivity of the IC exception and the design and application of the
exception, such that this outcome would not be "attributable" to the
EU Seal Regime.
The Appellate Body noted that the panel did not point to any aspect
of the IC exception itself that prevents indigenous communities in Canada from
taking advantage of it, and that the panel also did not explain how it
accounted for the failure of the Canadian authorities to apply for recognized
body status in reaching its conclusion. The Appellate Body further noted that,
according to Canada's own explanation, the reason why Inuit communities in
Canada did not have an incentive to take advantage of the IC exception was
related to the incidental effects of the ban on seal products derived from commercial hunts, rather than any aspect of the
"text" of the measure, as the panel was suggesting.
The Appellate Body was, however, not
persuaded that the European Union had made "comparable efforts"
to facilitate the access of the Canadian Inuit to the IC exception as it
did with respect to the Greenlandic Inuit. The Appellate Body observed, for
example, that the Danish customs authorities processed imports based on
certificates by the Greenlandic authorities prior to a Greenlandic entity
obtaining recognized body status within the meaning of the Implementing
Regulation. The Appellate Body acknowledged the European Union's argument that
it "engaged in 'multiple efforts' to assist the Inuit in Canada to benefit
from the IC exception", but also noted the European Union's
recognition that "the relevant Canadian Inuit authorities wrongly
interpret the EU Seal Regime as requiring the Inuit communities to
process their own sealskin products to fall under the IC exception".
The Appellate Body also observed that the European Union did not appear to have
pursued cooperative arrangements to facilitate the access of Canadian Inuit to
the IC exception. The Appellate Body recalled, in this regard, that a measure may result in arbitrary or unjustifiable
discrimination "when the application of the measure at issue does not
allow for any inquiry into the appropriateness of the regulatory program for
the conditions prevailing in those exporting countries", adding that
setting up a "recognized body" that fulfils all the requirements
of Article 6 of the Implementing Regulation may entail significant burdens
in some instances.
In sum, the Appellate Body identified several
features of the EU Seal Regime that indicated that the regime is applied in a
manner that constitutes a means of arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination
between countries where the same conditions prevail, in particular with respect
to the IC exception. First, the Appellate Body found that the European Union
had not shown that the manner in which the EU Seal Regime treats seal products
derived from IC hunts as compared to seal products derived from
"commercial" hunts can be reconciled with the objective of addressing
EU public moral concerns regarding seal welfare. Second, the Appellate Body
found considerable ambiguity in the "subsistence" and "partial
use" criteria of the IC exception. Given the ambiguity of these criteria
and the broad discretion that the recognized bodies consequently enjoy in
applying them, the Appellate Body considered that seal products derived from
what should in fact be properly characterized as "commercial" hunts
could potentially enter the EU market under the IC exception.
For these reasons, the Appellate Body found
that the European Union had not demonstrated that the EU Seal Regime, in
particular with respect to the IC exception, is designed and applied in a
manner that meets the requirements of the chapeau of Article XX of the
GATT 1994. Thus, the Appellate Body found that the European
Union had not justified the EU Seal Regime under Article XX.
This dispute concerned China's challenge to
measures taken by the United States regarding the application of countervailing
duties to imports from non‑market economy (NME) countries, and the United States'
failure to investigate and avoid double remedies[30] in certain countervailing
and anti‑dumping duty investigations. On 13 March 2012, the US Congress
enacted Public Law (PL) 112-99, which in Section 1 adds a new
paragraph (f) to Section 701 of the United States Tariff Act of 1930,
expressly providing for the application of countervailing duties to NME
countries. Section 1 of PL 112-99 further specifies that it applies to all
countervailing duty proceedings initiated by the United States authorities
on or after 20 November 2006, as well as to all pending court proceedings
relating to such countervailing duty proceedings.
Before the panel, China claimed that:
(i) Section 1 of PL 112-99, and the new Section 701(f) of
the US Tariff Act it establishes, are inconsistent with Articles X:1,
X:2, and X:3(b) of the GATT 1994; and (ii) the United States acted inconsistently
with Articles 10, 19, and 32 of the SCM Agreement by failing to
investigate and avoid double remedies in certain investigations and reviews
initiated between 20 November 2006 and 13 March 2012.
The panel found that Section 1 of PL
112-99 was not inconsistent with Article X:1, X:2, or X:3(b) of the
GATT 1994. The panel also found that, in 25 of the 26 sets of proceedings
included in China's claim, the United States acted inconsistently with
Article 19.3, and Articles 10 and 32.1 of the SCM Agreement
because it imposed concurrently anti-dumping and countervailing duties on the
same products, without investigating whether double remedies arose in each
case.
On appeal, China claimed that the panel erred
in its interpretation and application of Article X:2 of the GATT 1994,
insofar as the panel found that PL 112-99 is consistent with
Article X:2 because it does not effect an "advance in a rate of duty
or other charge on imports under an established and uniform practice"
or impose "a new or more burdensome requirement, restriction or prohibition
on imports" within the meaning of that provision. China also claimed that
the panel applied an incorrect standard of review and failed to make an
objective assessment of the matter before it, as required by Article 11 of
the DSU, in making factual findings with respect to the rates, requirements, or
restrictions applicable under US municipal law prior to the enforcement or
enactment of Section 1 of PL 112-99. In its other appeal, the United States challenged the panel's
findings that China's claims under Articles 10, 19.3, and 32.1 of the
SCM Agreement were within the panel's terms of reference. The panel's
findings under the SCM Agreement were not challenged on appeal.
In its other appeal, the United States challenged the panel's finding in its Preliminary Ruling of 7 May 2013 that the claims listed
in Part D of China's panel request were identified consistently with
Article 6.2 of the DSU. First, the United States argued that the panel
imposed a new and incorrect legal standard when the panel determined
whether China's panel request permitted "sufficiently clear inferences as
to the WTO obligations at issue in its Part D". Second, the
United States contended that the panel failed to examine China's panel
request on its face when the panel treated the findings in US –
Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China) (DS379), as
referenced in footnote 6 of the panel request, as
an integral part thereof. Third, the United States pointed out that
the panel's finding that China's panel request was limited to Article 19.3
of the SCM Agreement contradicted China's own indication of its intent
to bring claims under Article 19 as an "integrated whole".
Finally, the United States maintained that the panel sought to
"cure" China's panel request by allowing China, by its letter dated
25 March 2013, to limit its claims under Part D of its panel request to
Articles 10, 19, and 32 of the SCM Agreement, despite having earlier
identified several other general claims under that Agreement, the Anti‑Dumping
Agreement and the GATT 1994.
The Appellate Body examined the text and
narrative of China's panel request, which made a general reference to
Articles 10, 19, and 32 of the SCM Agreement without specifying the
particular paragraphs on which its claims were based. The Appellate Body
observed that both Articles 10 and 32 are consequential claims, in that a
violation of these provisions depends on whether there is a finding of
violation of Article 19. While Article 10 contains only one
paragraph, Article 32.1 appears to be the only paragraph in
Article 32 that imposes an obligation on the imposition of countervailing
duties.
As for Article 19 of the
SCM Agreement, the Appellate Body found that neither
Article 19.1 nor Article 19.2 was relevant to China's complaint.
Article 19.1 establishes when a countervailing duty may be imposed, and
Article 19.2 grants Members the discretion for such imposition. The Appellate
Body noted that this dispute concerned investigations and reviews already
initiated and countervailing duties already imposed. With respect to
Articles 19.3 and 19.4, the Appellate Body agreed with the panel
that Articles 19.3 and 19.4 are "the potentially relevant
obligations", as they impose substantive obligations on the permissible
amounts of countervailing duties. Since both Article 19.3 and
Article 19.4 address the quantitative limits on the imposition of
countervailing duties, they are "closely related" articles that share
an "interlinked nature". However, the Appellate Body underscored that
Article 19.3 pertains to the amount of the duty to be levied ("in the
appropriate amounts"), as well as to the manner in which it is imposed
("on a non‑discriminatory basis"), and Article 19.4
limits the maximum amount of the countervailing duty. Thus, the fact that these
obligations under Articles 19.3 and 19.4 may be interlinked does not
necessarily, in itself, provide a summary of the legal basis of the complaint
sufficient to present the problem clearly.
The Appellate Body then turned to the
narrative of the panel request, and noted that its explicit reference to
"double remedies" is supplemented by an elaboration of what this
concept means in the context of the present dispute, i.e. "the double
remedies that are likely to result when the USDOC [United States Department of
Commerce] applies countervailing duties in conjunction with anti‑dumping duties
determined in accordance with the US non-market economy methodology"
in respect of the investigations or reviews initiated between 20 November 2006
and 13 March 2012. According to the Appellate Body, the panel
request narrative sufficiently explained that, in these investigations and reviews,
the US authorities failed to investigate and avoid double remedies that
may have resulted therefrom, thus amounting to an alleged violation of
Article 19 of the SCM Agreement. The Appellate Body found that
the word "double" gives an indication that the problem with
"double remedies" is that they result in the levying of
countervailing duties exceeding the "appropriate amounts in each
case" in the sense of Article 19.3 of the SCM Agreement.
Therefore, the Appellate Body held that the narrative's reference to
"double remedies" assisted in presenting the problem clearly by
providing a connection between the measure at issue (the failure of the
US authorities to investigate and avoid double remedies) and the legal
claims (Articles 10, 19, and 32 of the SCM Agreement). In this
way, the term "double remedies" "plainly connects" and
assists in clarifying how the measure at issue is inconsistent with the
relevant legal provision in Article 19, i.e. Article 19.3.
The Appellate Body emphasized that,
ideally, the panel request in this dispute would have referred not only to the
specific measure at issue (the failure of the US authorities to
investigate and avoid double remedies), but also to the specific provision
concerned, namely, Article 19.3 of the SCM Agreement. However, the
Appellate Body clarified that simply specifying Article 19.3,
or adopting its exact language, without referring to "double
remedies", would not necessarily have presented the problem more clearly.
The Appellate Body noted that the obligations under Article 19.3
to impose countervailing duties "in the appropriate amounts"
and "on a non‑discriminatory basis" are broader in
scope than the specific concept of "double remedies". When a
Member imposes concurring countervailing and anti-dumping duties on the same
imports, strictly speaking, the amount of countervailing duty may still be
levied "in the appropriate amounts" or not in excess of the
amount of the subsidy found to exist. Neither does the concurrent
imposition necessarily mean that the anti-dumping duty exceeds the margin of
dumping found to exist. The problem arises when, as a result of the parallel
imposition of countervailing and anti‑dumping duties, the same subsidization is
offset twice in calculating the amount of subsidy and the dumping margin. Under
these circumstances, countervailing duties may not be levied "in the
appropriate amounts in each case", contrary to Article 19.3.
Further, the Appellate Body agreed with
the panel that using "sufficiently clear inferences" is merely a way
of explaining how "the WTO obligations at issue in a panel request, while
not explicitly identified by paragraph number, are nonetheless identifiable
from the panel request considered as a
whole." Inferential reasoning may be inevitable in ascertaining compliance
with Article 6.2, as in situations where a panel request makes a general
reference to a set of measures or WTO provisions containing multiple
obligations, and the specific measure and/or legal claim must be discerned from
the panel request as a whole, including its narrative and any annexes.
Turning to the panel's reliance on footnote 6
of the panel request, the Appellate Body emphasized that footnotes are
part of the text of a panel request, and may be relevant to the identification
of the measure at issue or to the presentation of the legal basis of the
complaint. In this dispute, however, the Appellate Body disagreed with the
manner in which the panel interpreted footnote 6 as excluding China's claim
under Article 19.4. The Appellate Body explained that footnote 6
refers to Appendices A and B to the panel request, which list the parallel
countervailing duty and anti‑dumping investigations and reviews initiated
between 20 November 2006 and 13 March 2012. Footnote 6 also
states that China excluded from this list of investigations and reviews
those that resulted in a negative injury determination, and those that were
already the subject of the dispute in US – Anti-Dumping and
Countervailing Duties (China) (DS379). According
to the Appellate Body, references to these Appendices and to DS379 merely
indicate which investigations and reviews were the subject of, and which were excluded
from, Part D of China's panel request. Nevertheless, the
Appellate Body noted that the panel's exclusion of Article 19.4
from its terms of reference was not challenged on appeal.
Finally, the Appellate Body did not
agree with the United States that China's abandonment of its claims under
Part C, as well as some of its claims under Part D, of the panel
request "cured" its alleged inconsistency with Article 6.2
of the DSU. The Appellate Body stated that even assuming that the initial
listing of the abandoned claims in China's panel request failed to fulfil the
requirements of Article 6.2 of the DSU, this did not affect the analysis
of whether the remaining claims under Articles 10, 19, and 32 of the
SCM Agreement were identified with sufficient clarity, which must be
addressed in its own right. The Appellate Body also did not agree that the
mere fact that the United States had to prepare for claims that were later
on dropped could be considered as affecting its due process rights in respect
of the remaining claims.
Based on the analysis of the panel request as
a whole, the Appellate Body considered that China's panel request, given
its references to Articles 10, 19, and 32 of the SCM Agreement, and
coupled with the identification of the specific measure at issue and a
reference to and explanation of "double remedies", provided "a
brief summary of the legal basis of the complaint sufficient to present the
problem clearly". Therefore, the Appellate Body upheld the panel's
finding that the claims under Articles 10, 19.3, and
32.1 of the SCM Agreement were within its terms of reference, and found
that China's panel request was not inconsistent with Article 6.2 of the
DSU.
Article X:2 of the GATT 1994 stipulates
that no measure of general application that (i) increases a rate of duty or
(ii) imposes a new or more burdensome requirement shall be enforced before
such measure has been officially published.[31] Whether the measure at
issue increases the duty or imposes a new or more burdensome requirement within
the meaning of Article X:2 requires a comparison between the new measure
of general application in municipal law and the prior published measure that it
replaced or modified. Thus Article X:2 requires the identification of a
"baseline" of comparison in municipal law applicable prior to the new
measure, which was the focus of China's appeal.
On appeal, China challenged the panel's
interpretation of Article X:2 of the GATT 1994 in respect of the
baseline of comparison to determine whether a measure effects an advance in a
rate of duty or imposes a new or more burdensome requirement. China also
challenged the panel's application of its interpretation of Article X:2 to
the measure at issue, Section 1 of PL 112-99. In particular, China challenged
the panel's findings that "China ha[d] not established that Section 1
is a provision 'effecting an advance in a rate of duty or other charge on
imports under an established and uniform practice'" and that "China
ha[d] not established that Section 1 is a provision 'imposing a new or
more burdensome requirement, restriction or prohibition on imports'".
The Appellate Body reversed the panel's
interpretation in respect of the relevant baseline of comparison under
Article X:2 of the GATT 1994 to determine whether a measure effects an
advance in a rate of duty or imposes a new or more burdensome requirement.
First, the Appellate Body considered
that the panel erred in finding that the phrase "under an established
and uniform practice" "serves to define the relevant prior rate … to
establish whether or not an advance in a rate [of duty] has been
effected", and that the relevant comparison contemplated by
Article X:2 of the GATT 1994 is "between the new rate effected by the
measure at issue and the rate that was previously applicable under an
established and uniform practice". The Appellate Body noted that,
within the context of Article X:2, the preposition "under" may
be interpreted as introducing the manner in which the measure of general
application should advance the rate of duty or other charge. Definitions of the
preposition "under", as "in the form of" and "in
the guise of", suggest that the phrase "under an established and
uniform practice" refers to certain characteristics of the application of
the measure, and not to the baseline of comparison. Relying on Article 33 of
the Vienna Convention, the Appellate Body further considered that the
definition of the preposition "under" as "in the
form of" and "in the guise of" was reconcilable with the
French and Spanish versions of the provisions which read "en vertu de" and "en virtud del".
The context found in Article X:1 of the GATT 1994, which requires
that measures be published promptly, further supports the view that the
identification of the baseline of comparison under Article X:2 should
start with the measure that Article X:1 requires to be published promptly.
The Appellate Body concluded that the ordinary meaning of the phrase
"under an established and uniform practice", its position in
Article X:2, its relevant context, and the function that Article X:2
performs relating to transparency and due process, suggest that this phrase
refers to the measure of general application, rather than serving as the
baseline of comparison.
Second, the Appellate Body considered
that the panel committed an error in finding that, in order to determine
whether a measure of general application imposes a new or more burdensome
requirement or restriction, a comparison should be made with a requirement or
restriction that results from an interpretation
of a measure adopted and publicly communicated by an administering
agency. The Appellate Body considered that a textual and
contextual analysis of Article X:2 of the GATT 1994 does not suggest
that the baseline of comparison for the second type of measure in this
provision, i.e. a measure "imposing a new or more burdensome requirement,
restriction or prohibition", should be the uniform or established practice
of the administering agency. Unlike in the case of measures "effecting an advance
in a rate of duty or other charge on imports", the reference to "a
uniform and established practice" is of no assistance because this phrase
precedes the reference to measures "imposing a new or more burdensome
requirement, restriction or prohibition on imports", and thus it has no
connection to it. Moreover, the Appellate Body remarked that, like
for measures "effecting an advance in a rate of duty or other charge on
imports", the context of Article X:1 of the GATT 1994 suggests
that the starting point of the analysis of municipal law should, normally, be
the published measure of general application, rather than an administrative
practice.
Having disagreed with the panel's
interpretation of Article X:2 of the GATT 1994 as requiring a
comparison with the practice of the administrative agency, the
Appellate Body found that, to determine whether a measure of general
application increases a rate of duty or imposes a new or more burdensome
requirement, the comparison should be conducted with the prior published
measure of general application. In this regard, the
Appellate Body clarified that Article X:2 requires panels and the
Appellate Body to ascertain the meaning of municipal law. The
Appellate Body recalled its ruling in US – Carbon Steel
that, in ascertaining the meaning of municipal law, a panel should undertake a
holistic assessment and consider the text of the law on its face and, when this
is not clear, it could rely on other legal instruments such as evidence of the
consistent application of such law, the pronouncements of domestic courts on
the meaning of such law, the opinions of legal experts and the writings of
recognized scholars. The Appellate Body also clarified that an examination
of whether these elements are legal characterizations depends on the
circumstances of each case. Although factual aspects may be involved in the
individuation of the text[32], an assessment of the
meaning of a legal text for determining whether it complies with the covered
agreements is a legal characterization. Similarly, whether or when a domestic
court ruling has been rendered, or what a writing by a recognized scholar
contains, may involve factual aspects. However, the examination of legal
interpretations given by domestic courts or administering agencies as to the
meaning of municipal law with respect to the challenged measure may be a legal
characterization. These assessments are subject to the circumstances of each
case, including the national legal system in which the municipal law operates.
In the present case, the Appellate Body
considered that the panel erred in identifying the USDOC's practice of applying
countervailing duties to imports from China as an NME country between 2006 and
2012 as the relevant baseline of comparison to determine whether Section 1
increased the rate of duty or imposed a new or more burdensome requirement.
Instead of proceeding from the agency practice and then addressing the
issue of whether that practice was lawful or not, the panel should have
focused on ascertaining the meaning of the prior published measure of general
application, that is, Section 701(a) of the US Tariff Act, in order
to determine whether Section 1 (through the new Section 701(f) of the
US Tariff Act) increased duties or imposed new or more burdensome
requirements as compared to Section 701(a). In ascertaining the meaning of
Section 701(a), the panel should have taken into account all other
relevant elements besides its text, including the practice of the USDOC, as
well as the relevant judicial decisions on the meaning of Section 701(a),
in order to determine the meaning of the US countervailing duty law
applicable to NME countries prior to Section 1 of PL 112‑99.
The Appellate Body thus reversed the panel's
interpretation and application of Article X:2 of the GATT 1994 to the
measure at issue as well as the panel's final conclusion under
Article X:2. The Appellate Body also declared moot and of no
legal effect the panel's findings that: (i) the USDOC's practice of
applying countervailing duties to China as an NME country between 2006
and 2012 was "presumptively lawful" under US law, as the
USDOC's interpretation of US countervailing duty law governs in the
absence of a binding judicial determination indicating otherwise; and (ii) it
was potentially relevant to address the issue of whether the USDOC's practice
prior to enactment of Section 1 of PL 112 99 was lawful under US law,
for purposes of an analysis under Article X:2. The Appellate Body
considered that an unlawful practice by an administering agency, which may be
overturned by a domestic court decision, could not create expectation among
traders over and above the published measure of general application with which
it failed to comply.
China argued that the panel failed to conduct
an objective assessment of the matter as required by Article 11 of the DSU
in concluding, in paragraphs 7.158-7.186 of the panel report, that the USDOC's
practice should be regarded as "presumptively lawful" and, thus,
requested the Appellate Body to reverse these findings.
The Appellate Body understood China's
claims under Article 11 as being linked to the panel's approach in the application of Article X:2 of the GATT 1994 to the
measure at issue. As the Appellate Body had reversed the panel's findings
regarding its interpretation and application of Article X:2, and had
declared moot and of no legal effect the panel's findings regarding the
lawfulness of the USDOC's practice in the context of the analysis under
Article X:2, it did not consider it necessary to examine further China's
claims under Article 11 of the DSU.
Having found that the panel erred in its
interpretation and application of Article X:2 of the GATT 1994, the
Appellate Body turned to consider whether it was in a position to complete
the analysis and to determine whether Section 1 of PL 112‑99 effects
"an advance in a rate of duty or other charge on imports" or imposes
"a new or more burdensome requirement [or] restriction" within the
meaning of Article X:2, as requested by China.
At the outset of its analysis, the
Appellate Body recalled that, in order to make such a determination, it is
necessary to conduct a comparison with the prior published measure of general
application that the new measure replaces or modifies. In order to establish
the relevant baseline of comparison, it is necessary to ascertain the meaning
of the relevant municipal law. Accordingly, the Appellate Body
examined the elements mentioned in US – Carbon Steel
as relevant in this dispute in order to conduct the comparison required by
Article X:2 between the measure at issue (i.e. Section 1 of PL
112-99) and the US countervailing duty law applicable prior to
Section 1. The Appellate Body noted that its examination of these
elements was a legal characterization issue, as it sought to ascertain the
meaning of municipal law for purposes determining whether Section 1 of PL
112-99 is consistent with Article X:2 of GATT 1994. However, to
the extent that this analysis involved examining factual elements, the
Appellate Body was mindful that it would need to rely on findings by the panel
or undisputed facts on the panel record in doing so.
The
Appellate Body noted that the published measure of general application prior
to Section 1 of PL 112-99 was Section 701(a) of the US Tariff
Act. The Appellate Body
highlighted that its examination would seek to determine whether the
US countervailing duty law was changed by Section 1, as argued by
China, and thereby effected an "advance" in a
rate of duty or imposed a "new or more burdensome" requirement within
the meaning of Article X:2. The United States in turn contended that
Section 1 merely clarified or confirmed what was already required under
prior municipal law.
The Appellate Body divided its analysis
in several parts. First, it examined the text of the measure at issue,
Section 1 of PL 112 99, as compared to the text of Section 701(a) of
the US Tariff Act. Next, it assessed other elements of
US countervailing duty law that are relevant to the present case,
including judicial decisions by US courts and the practice of the USDOC.
Based on a holistic examination, the Appellate Body assessed whether it
could reach a conclusion on whether Section 1 effected an advance in a
rate of duty or imposed a new or more burdensome requirement or restriction
within the meaning of Article X:2 of the GATT 1994, as compared to the
US countervailing duty law applicable prior to Section 1.
After examining the text of both
Section 1 of PL 112 99 and Section 701(a) of the US Tariff Act,
the Appellate Body concluded that the question of whether Section 1
created the USDOC's authority to apply countervailing duties to
NME countries could not be answered
by merely examining the text of relevant US laws alone. Although the title
and some aspects of the text of Section 1 suggest that
US countervailing duty law did not previously
apply to imports from NME countries, the text and scope of Section 701(a)
does not explicitly exclude NME countries from the scope of application of
US countervailing duty law. Rather, Section 701(a) applies to imports
from any "country" where the USDOC
determines the existence of a countervailable subsidy. Consequently, the
Appellate Body considered that further examination of other elements
related to the application of US countervailing duty law beyond the text
of Section 1 and the text of Section 701(a) was required.
The Appellate Body turned next to
examine a number of other elements of municipal law including relevant court
rulings and administrative practice, beginning with the decision of the United States Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) issued in
1986 in Georgetown Steel. The Appellate Body recalled the panel's finding that, in that
ruling, "the CAFC upheld USDOC's decision not to apply CVD measures to NME
countries". Although both participants accepted that the CAFC's decision
in Georgetown Steel was final, the
Appellate Body noted that they held divergent views as to the meaning of that
decision. On the one hand, China argued that the CAFC's decision supports the
view that the countervailing duty law was not applicable to imports from NME
countries prior to Section 1, and that Section 1 should be read as having changed that legal scenario. On the other hand, the United States argued
that the CAFC's decision suggest that the US countervailing duty law was
already applicable to imports from NME countries if it was possible to identify
a countervailable subsidy, and that Section 1 should be read as only having clarified
what previously applicable US countervailing duty law already required. The Appellate Body
noted that the panel did not make any findings addressing these divergent
readings, and stated that the panel should have further analysed the scope and meaning of the
holding of that CAFC decision. The Appellate Body considered that it was not in a position on appeal
to draw conclusive guidance from the Georgetown
Steel decision for
the purposes of determining whether Section 1 changed
or clarified the pre-existing
countervailing duty law applicable to NME countries.
Next, the Appellate Body examined the
practice of the USDOC to ascertain whether or not US countervailing duty
law applicable prior to Section 1 provided authority to the USDOC to
impose countervailing duties on imports from NME countries and required
such imposition whenever a countervailable subsidy could be identified.
The Appellate Body examined three
elements reflecting the USDOC's practice prior to 2006. First, the
Appellate Body examined the 1984 USDOC's countervailing duty
determinations with respect to carbon steel wire rod from Poland and Czechoslovakia,
but concluded that these negative countervailing duty determinations are not
clear regarding the applicability of the US countervailing duty law to
imports from NME countries. Next, the Appellate Body examined the
1998 countervailing duty regulations published by the USDOC. The
participants disagreed on the meaning of the following statement by the USDOC
found in the regulations: "it is important to note here our practice of not
applying the CVD law to [NMEs]. The CAFC upheld this practice in Georgetown Steel Corp. v. United States". The
Appellate Body noted that the reference to the Georgetown
Steel holding was ultimately not of assistance in ascertaining the USDOC's statutory mandate, because, as noted above, the ruling in Georgetown
Steel itself is amenable to different readings. Third, the
Appellate Body assessed the 2002 USDOC determination in Sulfanilic Acid from Hungary. The Appellate Body
indicated that the USDOC's determination in Sulfanilic Acid can
be read to suggest that the countervailing duty law was not applicable to
imports from NME countries. However, the Appellate Body also acknowledged
the United States' argument that this determination stands for the proposition
that the USDOC could not identify a subsidy because Hungary was an NME country
at the time of the investigation. Due to the lack of analysis by the panel and
undisputed facts on record, several aspects of the pre‑2006 practice of the
USDOC remained unclear, even following the Appellate Body's own analysis
of that practice.
The Appellate Body then turned
to examining the post-2006 practice of the USDOC. While it was clear that the USDOC's practice in applying
US countervailing duty law changed in 2006, the Appellate Body considered that the USDOC's practice over
the years did not ultimately permit it to ascertain whether or not the
US countervailing duty law precluded or required the application of
countervailing duties to imports from NME countries prior to Section 1.
Next, the Appellate Body turned to
examine a series of pronouncements of US courts regarding the application
of countervailing duties to imports from China after 2006.
With respect to the decision in GPX V rendered by the CAFC in 2011, the
Appellate Body observed that the panel's analysis with respect to the content of the GPX V
decision was limited, as it did not address in detail the reasoning of the CAFC
in reaching its main conclusion. The Appellate Body observed that, while
the participants agree on the non-finality of this decision, they disagree on
the relevance of the CAFC's conclusions in GPX V as to the meaning of Section 701(a). Given its
non-final status and the lack of findings by the panel on whether a
US court could rely on the GPX V
decision to establish what the US countervailing duty law was prior to
Section 1, the Appellate Body consider that this decision was of limited import
to determine whether Section 1 changed or clarified US countervailing
duty law in respect of imports from NME countries.
The Appellate Body then examined the
CAFC's decision in GPX VI. After
remarking the limited nature of the panel's findings regarding this decision,
and then conducting its own analysis, the Appellate Body considered
that the GPX VI decision was of limited
import for determining the state of the US countervailing duty law prior
to the enactment of Section 1, because the main feature of the holding in GPX VI related to Section 2 of PL 112-99.
In sum, the Appellate Body's examination
of the relevant elements of
US countervailing duty law revealed that the text of the relevant legal
instruments, the USDOC's practice and its consistency in interpreting and
applying US countervailing duty law with respect to imports from NME
countries, the relevant judicial pronouncements of US courts, and the
opinions of legal experts presented by the participants are amenable to
different readings. The Appellate Body emphasized
that its task had been made difficult because the panel, as a consequence of
its erroneous interpretation of the relevant baseline of comparison under
Article X:2 of the GATT 1994, and its consequential focus on the USDOC's
practice after 2006, did not adequately examine all relevant elements of
US countervailing duty law that would have been required to arrive at a
conclusion on the basis of the correct interpretation of Article X:2. For these reasons, the Appellate Body was unable to complete the
analysis.
These disputes concerned challenges brought by the United States
(DS431), the European Union (DS432), and Japan (DS433) (the complainants)
against China's use of export duties and export quotas (the measures at issue)
on various forms of rare earths, tungsten, and molybdenum. The complainants
also challenged aspects of China's administration and allocation of its export
quotas for rare earths and molybdenum.
Before the panel, the complainants alleged that: (i) in respect of
export duties, the measures reflected in several instruments implemented by
China are inconsistent with its obligations under Paragraph 11.3 of Part I
of China's Accession Protocol; (ii) in respect of export quotas, the measures
reflected in various instruments implemented by China are inconsistent with
Article XI:1 of the GATT 1994 and Paragraph 1.2 of Part I of China's
Accession Protocol which incorporates 162 and 165 of China's Accession Working
Party Report; and (iii) in respect of export quota
administration and allocation, the measures reflected in several instruments
are inconsistent with Paragraphs 1.2 and 5.1 of Part I of China's Accession
Protocol. For its part, China argued that: (i) the general exceptions of
Article XX of the GATT 1994 are available to China to defend a
potential violation of Paragraph 11.3 of China's Accession Protocol; (ii)
the export duties on rare earths, tungsten, and molybdenum are justified under
Article XX(b) of the GATT 1994; (iii) the 2012 export quotas on
rare earths, tungsten, and molybdenum are justified under Article XX(g) of
the GATT 1994; and (iv) the trading rights commitments in
Paragraph 5.1 of China's Accession Protocol and Paragraphs 83 and 84
of China's Accession Working Party Report do not prevent the use of prior
export performance and minimum registered capital requirements as criteria to
administer the rare earths and molybdenum export quotas.
The panel found that, with respect to export duties: (i) the export
duties applied by China are inconsistent with Paragraph 11.3 of China's
Accession Protocol; and (ii) China may not seek to justify the export duties at
issue pursuant to Article XX(b) of the GATT 1994, and even assuming arguendo that China could seek such justification, China has
not demonstrated that the export duties at issue are justified under
Article XX(b) or applied in a manner that satisfies the chapeau of Article
XX. The panel also found that, with respect to export quotas: (i) the
export quotas applied by China are inconsistent with Article XI:1 of the GATT
1994, and Paragraphs 162 and 165 of China's Accession Working Party Report as
incorporated into China's Accession Protocol by virtue of Paragraph 1.2 of that
Protocol; and (ii) China has not demonstrated that the export quotas at issue are
justified pursuant to Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994, or that the measures at
issue are applied in a manner that satisfies the chapeau of Article XX. In
addition, with respect to export quota administration and allocation, the panel
found that: (i) the restrictions on trading rights of enterprises applied
by China are inconsistent with Paragraphs 83(a), 83(b), 83(d), 84(a), and 84(b)
of China's Accession Working Party Report, and Paragraph 5.1 of China's
Accession Protocol; (ii) China is entitled to seek to justify the
restrictions on the trading rights of enterprises at issue pursuant to Article XX(g)
of the GATT 1994; and (iii) China has failed to make a prima facie
case that the violations of its trading rights commitments are justified
pursuant to Article XX(g). Moreover, with respect to DS432, the panel
found that the European Union had not established that the prior export
performance criterion in the 2012 Application Qualifications and Application
Procedures for Molybdenum Export Quota is inconsistent with the commitment in
Paragraph 84(b) of China's Accession Working Party Report.
On appeal, in DS431 the United States challenged as inconsistent with
Articles 11 and 12.4 of the DSU the panel's rejection of 10 exhibits. The United
States indicated, however, that the Appellate Body would need not
reach the issues raised in its appeal in either of two scenarios: (i) if China
were not to appeal the panel report; or (ii) if the Appellate Body were
not to modify or reverse the legal findings or conclusions of the panel
pursuant to an appeal by China.
For its part, China challenged in DS432 and DS433, and as other
appellant in DS431: (i) the panel's conclusion that the legal effect of the
second sentence of Paragraph 1.2 of China's Accession Protocol and Article
XII:1 of the Marrakesh Agreement is to make China's Accession Protocol, in
its entirety, an "integral part" of the Marrakesh Agreement, and not
that the individual provisions of the Protocol are also integral parts of the
Multilateral Trade Agreements annexed to the Marrakesh Agreement; and (ii) the panel's
finding that China's export quotas for rare earths and tungsten send
"perverse signals" to the domestic users and, consequently, do
not relate to conservation in the sense of
Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994.China further alleged that the panel
had committed a number of errors under Article 11 of the DSU.
In the
prior disputes in China – Raw Materials, the
Appellate Body found that Article XX of the GATT 1994 is not available to
justify a breach of China's export duty obligations under Paragraph 11.3
of its Accession Protocol. In its appeal in China – Rare Earths, China did
not ask the Appellate Body to reconsider its decision in China – Raw Materials. According to China, its appeal
was intended to obtain clarification of the systemic relationship between specific
provisions in China's Accession Protocol and other WTO agreements, and of the
rights of WTO Members to protect and conserve their exhaustible natural
resources.
China
appealed the panel's "erroneous assessment of the systemic
relationship" between, on the one hand, specific provisions in
China's Accession Protocol, and, on the other hand, the Marrakesh Agreement
and the Multilateral Trade Agreements annexed thereto. China contended
that the panel erred in its interpretation of Article XII:1 of the
Marrakesh Agreement[33] and
Paragraph 1.2, second sentence, of China's Accession Protocol in finding that the legal effect of the second sentence
of Paragraph 1.2 is to make China's Accession Protocol, in its entirety,
an "integral part" of the Marrakesh Agreement, and not that, in
addition, the individual provisions thereof are also integral parts of
Multilateral Trade Agreements annexed to the Marrakesh Agreement. China claimed that the panel should have
conducted a "holistic" interpretation of Article XII:1 of the
Marrakesh Agreement and the second sentence of Paragraph 1.2 of China's
Accession Protocol, which would have led it to the conclusion that each
provision of China's Accession Protocol is an integral part of the Marrakesh
Agreement or one of the Multilateral Trade Agreements to which the provision
"intrinsically relates".
Before addressing the substance of China's
appeal, the Appellate Body observed that the scope of China's appeal was very
narrow. Specifically, the panel
findings challenged by China were part of the panel's intermediate findings
leading to its conclusion that Article XX of the GATT 1994 is not available to
China as a defence to justify the export duties at issue in these disputes.
China's appeal did not involve any challenge to the panel's finding that the
export duties are inconsistent with Paragraph 11.3 of China's Accession
Protocol, or the panel's conclusion that Article XX of the GATT 1994 is
not available as a defence to justify these export duties. China also did not appeal
the panel's other intermediate findings leading to the latter conclusion. Moreover,
China did not appeal the panel's finding, reached on an arguendo
basis, that the export duties at issue are not justified by either subparagraph
(b) or the chapeau of Article XX of the GATT 1994. The Appellate Body
further explained that, in addressing China's claim, it would begin with an
initial assessment of Article XII:1 of the Marrakesh Agreement and the
second sentence of Paragraph 1.2 of China's Accession Protocol, before
proceeding to an integrated assessment of the relevant provisions and general
architecture of the relevant instruments as they bear on the issues raised on
appeal.
China submitted that, by virtue of Article XII:1 of the Marrakesh Agreement, specific
provisions of its Accession Protocol must intrinsically relate to either the Marrakesh
Agreement or one of the Multilateral Trade Agreements annexed thereto. According
to China, its position followed from the requirement in the second sentence of
Article XII:1 that "[s]uch accession shall apply to the [Marrakesh Agreement] and the Multilateral Trade Agreements
annexed thereto", read together with the important context provided by
Paragraph 1.2, second sentence, of China's Accession Protocol. In China's
view, a proper reading of Article XII:1, second sentence, confirms that China's
Accession Protocol serves to specify China's rights and obligations under the Marrakesh
Agreement and the Multilateral Trade Agreements annexed thereto. China argued
that, by rejecting this interpretation of Article XII:1, the panel failed to give
effective meaning to this key provision governing the WTO accession process by essentially
reducing the function of Article XII:1 to prescribing that newly acceding
Members need to accept the Marrakesh Agreement and the Multilateral Trade
Agreements annexed thereto as a single undertaking.
The Appellate Body noted that Article XII:1 of
the Marrakesh Agreement provides the general rule
for acceding to the WTO. Its first sentence stipulates that accession is to be
accomplished through "terms" to be agreed between the acceding Member
and the WTO, and does not spell out the content of, or impose limitations on,
such "terms". Moreover, the second sentence of Article XII:1 makes
clear that such accession applies to the entirety of the Marrakesh Agreement
and the Multilateral Trade Agreements annexed thereto, and not just some part
thereof. The Appellate Body emphasized that the term "[s]uch
accession" in the second sentence refers to the legal act
of acceding to the Marrakesh Agreement specified in the first sentence. Thus,
the second sentence does not mean, as China's argument seemed to suggest, that the legal instrument embodying the "terms" of
accession, or specific provisions thereof, must "apply" to, or
somehow be directly incorporated into, the Marrakesh Agreement or the
Multilateral Trade Agreements.
The Appellate Body considered that its
interpretation of Article XII:1 is confirmed by, and complements, Article
II:2 of the Marrakesh Agreement. Article II:2 provides that "[t]he agreements and associated legal
instruments included in Annexes 1, 2 and 3 (hereinafter referred to as
'Multilateral Trade Agreements') are integral parts of this Agreement, binding
on all Members." The reference to "integral parts" in Article
II:2 indicates that the Multilateral Trade Agreements annexed to the Marrakesh
Agreement are necessary components of a single package of WTO rights and
obligations. Article II:2 thus stipulates the requirement for existing WTO Members to abide by the obligations under all
of the agreements in this package. Article XII:1, which concerns
accession, extends the same requirement to acceding Members.
Therefore, the Appellate Body found that the panel
correctly stated that the second sentence of Article XII:1 requires acceding
Members not to "pick and choose" among the various agreements, and
rightly rejected China's arguments concerning the interpretation of
Article XII:1. The Appellate Body further stated that, beyond the
general rule governing accession set out
in its two sentences, Article XII:1 itself does not speak to the question of
the specific relationship
between individual provisions of an accession protocol and individual
provisions of the Marrakesh Agreement and the Multilateral Trade
Agreements. In particular, Article XII:1, alone, does not create a
substantive relationship, "intrinsic" or otherwise, between
provisions of China's Accession Protocol (such as Paragraph 11.3) and
provisions of the covered agreements (such as Article II or XI of the
GATT 1994). The Appellate Body therefore turned to examine the other
provision concerned by China's appeal – i.e. Paragraph 1.2 of China's
Accession Protocol – to see whether that provision provides further guidance on
this relationship.
China contended that the panel erred in its
interpretation of Paragraph 1.2, second sentence, of China's Accession
Protocol in finding that the legal effect
of this second sentence is to make China's Accession Protocol, in its entirety,
an "integral part" of the Marrakesh Agreement, and not that,
in addition, the individual provisions thereof are also integral parts of
Multilateral Trade Agreements annexed to the Marrakesh Agreement. In China's view, the panel erroneously
interpreted the term "the WTO Agreement" as referring to
the Marrakesh Agreement alone, excluding its annexes. For China, the term
"the WTO Agreement" in the second sentence of Paragraph 1.2 is
properly understood as the Marrakesh Agreement together with the Multilateral
Trade Agreements annexed thereto.
The second sentence of Paragraph 1.2 of China's
Accession Protocol provides that "[t]his Protocol, which shall include the commitments referred to in
paragraph 342 of the Working Party Report, shall be an integral part of
the WTO Agreement." The
Appellate Body first noted that Paragraph 1.2, second sentence, does not, itself, define
the term "the WTO Agreement". Turning to the immediate context of the
term "the WTO Agreement" found in the remaining words of the same sentence, the
Appellate Body found that the term
"integral part" is used frequently in the covered agreements in order
to integrate
one or more agreements (or legal instruments) into another agreement. For
example, Article II:2 of the Marrakesh Agreement makes the Multilateral Trade
Agreements "integral parts of" the Marrakesh Agreement.
Next, the Appellate Body examined the context
provided by various other provisions of China's Accession Protocol. The
Appellate Body found that the first sentence of Paragraph 1.2 may properly be
understood to cover the possibility that the Marrakesh Agreement
may have been rectified, amended, or modified during the period between 1995
and the date of ratification of the accession protocol by the acceding Member.
In the Appellate Body's view, this provision does not compel a conclusion, as
China argued, that "the WTO Agreement" must be read to include a reference
to the Multilateral Trade Agreements. Moreover, the Appellate Body found that Paragraphs 1.1 and 1.3 of China's Accession
Protocol, as well as the Decision of the Ministerial Conference of 10 November
2001 to which China's Accession Protocol is annexed, all
indicate that the term
"the WTO Agreement" refers to the Marrakesh Agreement alone,
excluding the Multilateral Trade Agreements annexed thereto. The Appellate Body
additionally noted that the first recital of the preamble of China's Accession
Protocol identifies the "WTO Agreement" as the abbreviation of
"the Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization".
However, the Appellate Body found that the
definition of the "WTO Agreement" contained in the preamble of
China's Accession Protocol does not necessarily preclude the annexed
Multilateral Trade Agreements from also falling within the scope of the
term "the WTO Agreement" in some of the instances where this term is
used in China's Accession Protocol. In particular, the Appellate Body
recalled that the term "the WTO Agreement" in Paragraph 5.1 of
China's Accession Protocol was interpreted by the Appellate Body in China – Publications and Audiovisual
Products as referring to "the WTO Agreement as a whole, including its Annexes".
In the Appellate Body's view, the fact that the term
"the WTO Agreement" in China's Accession Protocol may have both
narrow and broad connotations is consistent with the principle of the single
undertaking reflected in both Articles II:2 and XII:1 of the Marrakesh
Agreement. Pursuant to this principle, the Marrakesh Agreement is the
umbrella under which all of the annexed Multilateral Trade Agreements are
united in a single package of rights and obligations. Thus, whether the term "the WTO Agreement" in the second
sentence of Paragraph 1.2 is understood in the broad sense (as the Marrakesh
Agreement and the Multilateral Trade Agreements), or in the narrow sense (as the
Marrakesh Agreement alone), is not dispositive
of the key legal question raised in China's appeal, that is, the specific relationship between individual provisions of China's Accession
Protocol and individual provisions of the Marrakesh Agreement and the
Multilateral Trade Agreements.
The Appellate Body
found that the operative term of Paragraph 1.2 – i.e. "an integral
part", together
with Article XII:1 of the Marrakesh Agreement – serves the function of
integrating China's Accession Protocol into a single package or WTO rights and
obligations, just as Article II:2 of the Marrakesh Agreement serves the same
function with regard to the Multilateral Trade Agreements. As a result, the Marrakesh Agreement, the Multilateral
Trade Agreements, and China's Accession Protocol form one package of rights and
obligations that must be read in conjunction. The Appellate
Body found, however, that this understanding does not dispense with the need to
analyse, on a case-by-case basis, the specific relationship between an
individual provision in the Protocol and an individual provision of the
Marrakesh Agreement or one of the Multilateral Trade Agreements.
4.3.1.3 The relationship between China's Accession Protocol,
on the one hand, and the Marrakesh Agreement and the Multilateral Trade
Agreements annexed thereto, on the other hand
The Appellate Body found that, as has been
established in relevant jurisprudence, the mere fact that each of the
Multilateral Trade Agreements is an integral part of the Marrakesh Agreement
by virtue of Article II:2 of the Marrakesh Agreement does not, in and
of itself, answer the question as to how specific rights and obligations
contained in those Multilateral Trade Agreements relate to each other. In the Appellate Body's view, like the approach to ascertaining the
relationship among provisions of the Multilateral Trade Agreements, the
specific relationship between the provisions of China's Accession Protocol, on
the one hand, and the provisions of the Marrakesh Agreement and the
Multilateral Trade Agreements, on the other hand, must also be determined on a case‑by‑case basis
through a proper interpretation of all relevant provisions. Neither obligations
nor rights may be automatically transposed from one part of the WTO legal
framework into another. The Appellate Body considered that such an
approach is consistent with the one adopted in China – Publications and Audiovisual
Products, in which
the Appellate Body found that Article XX may be directly invoked to justify a
breach of Paragraph 5.1 of China's Accession Protocol. The Appellate
Body's finding was based on a thorough analysis of the text and context of
Paragraph 5.1, of the circumstances in that dispute, including the specific
measure subject to China's commitment under Paragraph 5.1, and of how this
commitment related to China's right to regulate trade.
The Appellate Body considered, therefore,
that the relevant jurisprudence indicates that the questions of whether a
particular protocol provision at issue has an objective link to specific
obligations under the Marrakesh Agreements and the Multilateral Trade
Agreements, and of whether the exceptions under those agreements may
be invoked to justify a breach of such a protocol provision, must be answered
through a thorough analysis of the relevant provisions on the basis of the
customary rules of treaty interpretation and the circumstances of the dispute.
The analysis must start with the text of the relevant provision in China's
Accession Protocol and take into account its context, including that
provided by the Protocol itself and the relevant provisions of the Accession
Working Party Report, and by the relevant provisions of the agreements in the
WTO legal framework. The analysis must also take into account the overall
architecture of the WTO system as a single package of rights and obligations
and any other relevant interpretative elements, and must be applied to the
circumstances of each dispute, including the measure at issue and the nature of
the alleged violation.
The Appellate Body noted that, under the above
approach, express textual references, or the lack thereof, to a covered
agreement (such as the GATT 1994), a provision thereof (such as Article XX
of the GATT 1994), or "the WTO Agreement" in general, are not dispositive in and of themselves. This was also
confirmed by the Appellate Body's analysis in China – Raw
Materials. In those disputes, the Appellate Body did not limit its
analysis to the text of Paragraph 11.3 alone, but additionally relied on
the context provided by Annex 6 of China's Accession Protocol, Article VIII
of the GATT 1994, and the relevant structure of the Accession Protocol,
including the specific exceptions to China's obligations to eliminate export duties.
On this basis, the Appellate Body concluded in those disputes that a
proper interpretation of Paragraph 11.3 of China's Accession Protocol does
not make available to China the exceptions under Article XX of the
GATT 1994.
The Appellate Body recalled that, according to China's
interpretation, Article XII:1 of the
Marrakesh Agreement and Paragraph 1.2 of China's Accession Protocol, read
together, indicate that a specific Protocol provision must be treated as
integral part of either the Marrakesh Agreement or one of the Multilateral
Trade Agreements to which the Protocol provision "intrinsically relates".
The Appellate Body noted that China did not provide a clear definition of the
"intrinsic relationship" test that it proposed. In any event, the
Appellate Body considered that its own interpretation of Article XII:1 of
the Marrakesh Agreement and Paragraph 1.2 of China's Accession Protocol does not support the view that an inquiry into
the relationship that an individual provision of China's Accession Protocol
has to provisions of the Marrakesh Agreement and the
Multilateral Trade Agreements must start from the premise that such
provision is "intrinsically related" to some other provision(s).
The Appellate Body reiterated that the specific relationship between an
individual provision of China's Accession Protocol and provisions of the
Marrakesh Agreement and the Multilateral Trade Agreements must be ascertained
through a thorough analysis of the relevant provisions, on the basis of the
customary rules of treaty interpretation and the circumstances of each dispute.
In conclusion, the Appellate Body declined to
accept China's interpretation of Paragraph 1.2 of China's Accession
Protocol and Article XII:1 of the Marrakesh Agreement. The Appellate Body found
that the panel did not err in concluding that the legal effect of the second
sentence of Paragraph 1.2 of China's Accession Protocol and
Article XII:1 of the Marrakesh Agreement is not that
the individual provisions of China's Accession Protocol are integral parts of
Multilateral Trade Agreements annexed to the Marrakesh Agreement. The
Appellate Body recalled that the panel also expressed the view that the term
"the WTO Agreement" in Paragraph 1.2 refers to the Marrakesh
Agreement. Recalling its finding that whether the term "the
WTO Agreement" in Paragraph 1.2 is understood in its narrow or
broad sense is not dispositive of the issue of the specific relationship
between individual provisions of China's Accession Protocol and individual
provisions of the Marrakesh Agreement and the Multilateral Trade Agreements,
the Appellate Body found it unnecessary to opine on the scope of the term
"the WTO Agreement" in the second sentence of Paragraph 1.2
of China's Accession Protocol.
China appealed two sets of intermediate
findings in the panel's analysis of whether China's export quotas on rare
earths, tungsten, and molybdenum are justified pursuant to Article XX(g)
of the GATT 1994. First, China contended that the panel erred in its
interpretation and application of Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994, and
acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU, in finding that China's
export quotas on rare earths and tungsten do not "relate to"
conservation within the meaning of Article XX(g). Second, China claimed
that the panel erred in its interpretation and application of
Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994, and acted inconsistently with
Article 11 of the DSU, in finding that China's export quotas on rare
earths, tungsten, and molybdenum are not "made effective in conjunction
with" restrictions on domestic production or consumption pursuant to
Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994.
China requested the Appellate Body to
reverse the panel's intermediate findings that China's export quotas on rare
earths and tungsten do not "relate to" conservation within the
meaning of Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994, and that China's
export quotas on rare earths, tungsten, and molybdenum are not "made
effective in conjunction with" domestic restrictions pursuant to Article XX(g)
of the GATT 1994. Furthermore, to the extent that the panel's errors
tainted the panel's conclusions that China's export quotas on rare earths,
tungsten, and molybdenum cannot be provisionally justified under
Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994, China also requested the Appellate Body
to reverse these conclusions of the panel.
China's appeal of the panel's findings under
Article XX(g) was limited in scope. With respect to the panel's analysis
of whether China's export quotas on rare earths and tungsten "relate
to" conservation, China's appeal was directed at only one aspect of the panel's
overall analysis, namely, the panel's findings in respect of the
"signalling function" of China's export quotas. Furthermore, China's
appeal in this regard concerned only the panel's findings regarding China's
export quotas on rare earths and tungsten, and did not involve any challenge to
the panel's findings regarding China's export quota on molybdenum. Similarly,
with respect to the panel's analysis of whether China's export quotas were
"made effective in conjunction with restrictions on domestic production or
consumption", China's appeal was also directed at limited parts of the panel's
overall analysis, namely, the panel's findings in respect of the "even‑handedness"
requirement of Article XX(g). China did not appeal
the panel's findings on "conservation" or "exhaustible natural
resources". Moreover, China did not appeal the panel's findings that
China's domestic extraction and production caps on rare earths, tungsten,
and molybdenum did not qualify as "restrictions on domestic
consumption or production" for the purposes of Article XX(g) of the
GATT 1994. Finally, China did not appeal the panel's findings that China
had not established that its export quotas on these three groups of products
meet the requirements of the chapeau of Article XX of the GATT 1994.
China requested
the Appellate Body to reverse the panel's interpretation of the term
"relating to" in Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994. According
to China, the panel erroneously interpreted this term as requiring the panel to
examine solely the design and structure of China's export quotas to the
exclusion of any evidence regarding the effects of those export quotas and
other elements of China's conservation scheme in the marketplace. China also
requested the Appellate Body to reverse the panel's findings that China's
export quotas on rare earths and tungsten do not "relate to"
conservation within the meaning of Article XX(g) by virtue of the signals
that they send, in particular to domestic consumers of these products. In
this regard, the panel expressed the view that, even if export quotas may
reduce foreign demand for the products in question, they are also liable
to stimulate domestic consumption by effectively reserving a supply of low‑price
raw materials for use by domestic industries. The panel referred to this
potential signal to domestic consumers as a "perverse signal".
Regarding
China's claim that the panel erred in its interpretation of the term
"relating to" in Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994, the
Appellate Body addressed the two issues that arose from this claim: (i) whether
the panel made the findings attributed to it by China, i.e. that the assessment
of whether a measure "relates to" conservation must be limited to an
examination of the design and structure of the measure at issue to the
exclusion of evidence regarding the effects of those export quotas in the
marketplace; and (ii) whether it was proper for the panel to place analytical
emphasis on the design and structure of the measure.
The Appellate
Body began by recalling that, for a measure to "relate to" conservation
in the sense of Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994, there must be "a
close and genuine relationship of ends and means" between that
measure and the conservation objective of the Member imposing the measure.
Hence, a GATT-inconsistent measure that is merely incidentally or inadvertently
aimed at a conservation objective would not satisfy the "relating to"
requirement of Article XX(g).
Furthermore, the Appellate Body noted that
the text of Article XX(g) does not prescribe a specific analytical
framework for assessing whether a measure satisfies the component requirements
of that provision. In past disputes, the Appellate Body has emphasized the
importance of scrutinizing the design and structure of the challenged measure
as part of a proper assessment of whether that measure satisfies the
requirements of Article XX(g). Assessing a measure based on its design and
structure is an objective methodology that also helps to determine whether or
not a measure does what it purports to do. This is so because the design and
structure of a measure do not vary, and are not contingent on the occurrence of
subsequent events. Thus, the Appellate Body considered that, by focusing
on the design and structure of the measure, particularly where a measure
is challenged "as such", a panel or the Appellate Body has the
benefit of an objective methodology for assessing whether a measure satisfies
the requirements of Article XX(g). At the same time, the
analysis of the design and structure of the measure cannot be undertaken in
isolation from the conditions of the market in which the measure operates.
Since the characteristics and structure of the market would normally influence
a Member's choice and design of a measure, such market features may also shed
light on whether a given measure, in its design and structure, satisfies the
requirements of Article XX(g). In addition, the Appellate Body
reiterated its statement in US – Gasoline
that, while there is no requirement to apply an "empirical effects"
test under Article XX(g), consideration of the predictable effects of a
measure may be relevant for the analysis under Article XX(g).
Having reviewed
the panel's interpretation of the term "relating to" in
Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994, the Appellate Body found that,
contrary to what China alleged, the panel did not consider itself obliged to
limit its analysis to an examination of the design and structure of the measures
at issue. The panel also did not consider itself precluded from examining
evidence of the effects of China's export quotas as well as of the
operation of the other elements of China's conservation scheme in the
marketplace. Instead, the panel considered that it should "focus" on
the design and structure of the export quotas in its assessment of whether
those measures relate to the conservation of exhaustible natural resources
within the meaning of Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994. The
Appellate Body found that the panel did not err in doing so.
Regarding China's claim that the panel erred
in its application of the "relating to" requirement of Article XX(g)
to China's export quotas on rare earths and tungsten, the Appellate Body noted
that China's appeal was limited to the panel's finding that China's export
quotas on rare earths and tungsten send a "perverse signal" to
domestic consumers to increase consumption. These panel findings were made
in addressing China's argument that its export quotas on rare earths and tungsten
relate to conservation because they send a conservation "signal" to
foreign consumers. China contended that the export quotas contributed to the
effectiveness of China's overall conservation policy by "signalling"
to foreign users the need to explore other sources of supply, including
substitutes and recycling. The complainants, on their part, argued that, while
an export quota may send a conservation-related signal to foreign users, by
also reducing domestic prices it simultaneously sends signals to domestic
consumers that they should increase their consumption of the product concerned.
According to the complainants, such "perverse signals"
contradicted China's claim that its export quotas relate to conservation,
particularly given that most rare earths and tungsten produced in China are
consumed in China.
The Appellate Body addressed two sets of
issues raised by China on appeal. First, China submitted that, because of the panel's
incorrect interpretation that "subparagraph (g) does not require
an evaluation of the actual effects of the concerned measures", the panel
did not move beyond an examination of the design and structure of China's
export quotas by examining whether: (i) the theoretical "perverse
signals" were present in the marketplace for rare earths and tungsten;
and (ii) there was in fact a risk that "perverse signals" sent
by export quotas to domestic users might offset the positive effect of
conservation signals to foreign users. Second, China contended that, even in
limiting the analysis to the elements of design and structure of the export
quotas, the panel erred because: (i) the panel's own factual findings
based on the design and structure were sufficient for it to conclude that
China's export quotas relate to conservation based on the finding that the
quotas can send effective conservation signals to foreign users; and (ii) even
if the panel were right that the general effect of export quotas is to send a
"perverse signal" to domestic users, the panel should have found –
purely as a matter of design and structure – that China's regime relates to
conservation because the existence of domestic production caps mitigates any
"perverse signals" sent to domestic consumers by the export quotas.
The Appellate Body found that the panel
did not err in its application of the "relating to" requirement in
Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994. In particular, the Appellate Body
disagreed with China's contention that the panel applied an incorrect legal
standard that limited its analysis to an examination of the design and
structure of China's export quotas only, and that this prevented the panel from
engaging with evidence of the broader operation of China's conservation regime.
The Appellate Body determined that the panel did not err in focusing on
the design and structure of China's export quotas in its assessment of whether
those measures relate to the conservation of exhaustible natural resources
within the meaning of Article XX(g). The Appellate Body also
determined that the panel did not find that export quotas can send effective
conservation signals to foreign users. Additionally, the Appellate Body
was not persuaded by China's argument that the panel should have found –
purely as a matter of design and structure – that China's regime
relates to conservation because the existence of domestic production caps
mitigates any "perverse signals" sent to domestic consumers by the
export quotas.
China requested the Appellate Body to reverse
the panel's finding that China's export quotas on various forms of rare earths,
tungsten, and molybdenum are not "made effective in conjunction with"
domestic restrictions. China further requested that, "[t]o the extent the Panel's
errors in connection with the analysis of the 'made effective in conjunction
with' requirement taint the Panel's conclusions … that China's export
quotas on rare earths, tungsten, and molybdenum cannot be provisionally
justified under Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994", the Appellate Body
also reverse this conclusion.
China alleged, first, that the panel erred in
its interpretation in considering the "even-handedness requirement"
to be a separate requirement that had to be fulfilled in addition to the
conditions expressly set out in Article XX(g). The Appellate Body stated
that it did not see "even-handedness" as imposing a separate
requirement that must be fulfilled in addition to the condition that a measure
be "made effective in conjunction with restrictions on domestic production
or consumption". Instead, for the Appellate Body, the terms of
Article XX(g) themselves (in particular, the clause "made effective
in conjunction with restrictions on domestic production or consumption")
reflect the notion of "even-handedness" in the imposition of
restrictions. The Appellate Body noted several different statements of the
panel articulating its understanding of the "even-handedness
requirement". The Appellate Body found certain of these statements to be
in keeping with the Appellate Body's interpretation in previous cases. However, the Appellate Body
also found that certain other statements of the panel raised concerns.
Accordingly, the Appellate Body found that the panel erred to the extent that
it found that "even‑handedness" is a separate requirement that
must be fulfilled in addition to the condition that a measure be
"made effective in conjunction with" restrictions on domestic
production or consumption.
Second, China asserted that the panel erred
in its interpretation in finding that Article XX(g) requires that the burden of
conservation-related measures be evenly distributed, for example in the
case of export restrictions, between domestic and foreign consumers or
producers. The Appellate Body again noted several different statements of
the panel articulating its understanding of the balance that
"even-handedness" requires. The Appellate Body found certain of these
statements to be in keeping with the Appellate Body's interpretation in
previous cases, however, the Appellate Body also found that certain other
statements of the panel raised concerns. Accordingly, the Appellate Body
concluded that the panel erred to the extent that it found that the burden of
conservation must be evenly distributed, for example, between foreign
consumers, on the one hand, and domestic producers or consumers, on the
other hand. The Appellate Body clarified that Article XX(g) does not
require a Member seeking to justify its measure to establish that its
regulatory regime achieves an even distribution of the burden of conservation.
At the same time, the Appellate Body observed that it would be difficult to
conceive of a measure that would impose a significantly more onerous burden on
foreign consumers or producers that could still be shown to satisfy all the
requirements of Article XX(g). In this connection, the Appellate Body
emphasized that the clause "made effective in conjunction with
restrictions on domestic production or consumption" requires that, when
GATT-inconsistent measures are in place, effective restrictions must also be imposed
on domestic production or consumption. The Appellate Body further stated
that such restrictions must be "real" rather than existing merely
"on the books", particularly in circumstances where domestic
consumption accounts for a major part of the exhaustible natural
resources to be conserved. Moreover, such restrictions on domestic
production or consumption must reinforce and complement the restriction on
international trade.
The Appellate Body further concluded that
neither of the two above errors in the panel's analysis relating to the second
clause of Article XX(g) tainted the remaining elements of the panel's
interpretation of the second clause of subparagraph (g), and observed that, in
any event, China's appeal did not concern those other elements.
Third, China alleged that the panel erred in
its interpretation of Article XX(g) in finding that it must limit its analysis
under the second clause of Article XX(g) to an examination of the general
design and structure of China's export quotas, to the exclusion of evidence
regarding the effects of these quotas in the marketplace. The
Appellate Body, based on a review of the panel's analysis, observed that
the panel had in fact not considered itself precluded from reviewing evidence
in the context of the analysis under subparagraph (g). Accordingly, the
Appellate Body held that the panel did not err in focusing on the design
and structure of the measures at issue in its analysis under the second clause
of subparagraph (g).
Fourth, China submitted that the panel erred
in its application of Article XX(g) by applying an "additional"
requirement of "even-handedness" that required an even distribution
of the conservation burden imposed by the export quotas on foreign consumers,
on the one hand, and domestic consumers and producers, on the other hand;
and by focusing on the structure and design of the export quotas, to the
exclusion of evidence of their effects in the marketplace. The Appellate Body
noted that the panel's application of Article XX(g) to China's export quotas
did not contain an inquiry into whether the relative conservation burdens
imposed by China on domestic and foreign producers or consumers were evenly
distributed and concluded that it was therefore consistent with the Appellate
Body's interpretation of the clause "made effective in conjunction with
restrictions on domestic production or consumption". The Appellate Body
recalled that Article XX(g) requires an effective restriction on domestic
production or consumption that operates together with, and so as to reinforce
and complement, the restriction imposed on international trade, but that it
does not require an inquiry into whether the relative conservation burdens
imposed by China on foreign consumers as opposed to domestic producers or
consumers are evenly distributed between them.
China also alleged multiple failures by the panel to comply with its
duties under Article 11 of the DSU. Due to these alleged
failures, China requested the Appellate Body to reverse the panel's
findings that the rare earth and
tungsten export quotas send "perverse signals" to domestic
consumers and, consequently, do not "relate to" conservation within
the meaning of Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994. China further requested that the Appellate Body
reverse the panel's findings that China's export quotas on rare earths, tungsten, and
molybdenum are not "made effective in conjunction with" domestic
restrictions.
The Appellate Body observed that, in making
its claims under Article 11 of the DSU, China made arguments identical or
virtually identical to those it made in elaborating several other claims that
the panel erred in its application of Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994. The
Appellate Body considered that the latter set of claims and arguments by
China all implicated the panel's assessment of the facts and evidence,
rather than its characterization of the consistency or inconsistency of certain
facts with the requirements of Article XX(g). Therefore, the
Appellate Body addressed all of these allegations under Article 11 of
the DSU only.
Regarding the panel's analysis in respect of
the "relating to" requirement of Article XX(g), China submitted
that the panel acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU in two main
ways. First, China identified a number of panel findings that, according to
China, lacked a sufficient evidentiary basis, and alleged that the panel failed
to "reconcile its findings" with contrary evidence. Second, China
argued that the panel's reasoning was "incoherent" insofar as the panel
considered that the relevant question was whether the "perverse
signals" sent by China's export quotas were offset by restrictions on
domestic production, but then declined to examine evidence relevant to
precisely that issue. The Appellate Body rejected all of the allegations
made by China, and found that China had not demonstrated that the panel breached
its duty under Article 11 of the DSU to conduct an objective
assessment of the facts.
With regard to the panel's analysis under the
second clause of Article XX(g), China asserted that, through its failure to
engage properly with evidence relating to the operation of China's domestic
restrictions, its incoherent reasoning, and its use of a "double standard"
in applying its "even‑handedness" test, the panel failed to make an
objective assessment of the matter, including an objective assessment of
the facts, under Article 11 of the DSU. With respect to one of China's claims
under Article 11, the Appellate Body found that the claim did not meet the
requirement of being clearly articulated and substantiated with specific
arguments and rejected the claim on that basis. The Appellate Body assessed the
substance of the remaining claims and, for each of them, found that China
had not demonstrated that the panel failed to conduct an objective assessment
of the facts of the case, or otherwise acted inconsistently with
Article 11 of the DSU.
On the basis of the above analysis, and
taking account of the unappealed aspects of the panel's Article XX(g)
analysis, the Appellate Body upheld the panel's conclusion that "China has
not demonstrated that the export quotas that China applies to various forms of
rare earths, tungsten, and molybdenum are justified pursuant to subparagraph
(g) of Article XX of the GATT 1994".
The United States requested the Appellate Body to find that the panel
erred in rejecting 10 panel exhibits
submitted by the complainants at a late stage of the panel proceedings. The United States maintained that, in
deciding to reject this evidence, the panel erred in reasoning that it would
not have been consistent with the prompt settlement of disputes to instead
allow China more time to respond to the evidence. The United States contended
that, in so reasoning, the panel erroneously applied Article 3.3 of the DSU,
because a limited extension of time would not have undermined the value of "prompt
settlement" in the context of the overall length of a panel
proceeding. The United States further submitted that, in suggesting that
the United States should have submitted the evidence earlier, the panel
acted inconsistently with Article 12.4 of the DSU and failed to provide
sufficient time to the United States to prepare its submissions. Finally, the
United States contended that the panel also acted inconsistently with
Article 11 of the DSU in finding that the evidence could and should have been
submitted at an earlier date, and in finding that the evidence did not rebut
arguments made by China at the second meeting of the panel.
The United States submitted, however,
that the Appellate Body would not need to address its appeal if China were
not to appeal the panel report or if the Appellate Body were not to modify
or reverse the panel's intermediate or ultimate findings and conclusions
after reviewing an appeal by China. The Appellate Body noted that the first of
the two conditions on which the appeal was premised was met because China filed
another appeal in DS431 on 13 April 2014.
With respect to the second condition, the
Appellate Body recalled that it had not reversed or modified any of the
ultimate findings and conclusions made by the panel. The Appellate Body
noted that, in considering the panel's interpretation of the phrase "made
effective in conjunction with" in Article XX(g) of the GATT 1994, it had
identified certain erroneous statements made by the panel. The Appellate
Body recalled its finding that, notwithstanding such erroneous statements, the panel
did not commit reversible legal error in its analysis and findings with respect
to the "made effective in conjunction with" requirement under Article
XX(g). Moreover, several other elements of the panel's analysis under that
provision were in any event not appealed. Therefore, the Appellate Body
considered that it had not identified any legal findings or conclusions of the panel
that needed to be reversed or modified.
In these circumstances, the Appellate Body
considered that one of the conditions on which the United States' appeal was
premised was not met. Accordingly, the Appellate Body did not rule on the
United States' claims that the panel acted inconsistently with Articles 11 and
12.4 of the DSU in excluding the 10 panel exhibits.
This dispute concerned India's challenge to
the United States' imposition of countervailing duties (CVDs) on certain
hot-rolled carbon steel flat products from India. The investigation
at issue was initiated on 12 December 2000 and resulted in a final
order on 8 January 2002, which was revised by a number of
subsequent determinations. At issue in this dispute were several
provisions of US law relating to CVD investigations – as set out in the
United States Code or the United States Code of Federal Regulations –
as well as determinations and orders published by the United States Department
of Commerce (USDOC) or the United States International Trade Commission (USITC)
in the original investigation; administrative reviews in 2002, 2004, 2006,
2007, and 2008; and sunset reviews in 2007 and 2013. The CVD order at issue in this dispute addressed
various government programmes consisting of, inter alia,
sales of input products, licensing schemes for mineral extraction, and
financing arrangements.
Before the panel, India claimed that certain
provisions contained in the USC and the CFR are "as such"
inconsistent with Articles 12.7, 14(d), 15.1-15.5, 19.3 and 19.4 of the
SCM Agreement. India also claimed that the United States' imposition of
countervailing duties on hot-rolled carbon steel flat products from India was
inconsistent with various substantive and procedural requirements contained
in Articles 1.1(a)(1), 1.1(b), 2.1(a)-(c), 2.4, 11.1-11.2, 11.9, 12.5,
12.7, 13.1, 14(d), 15.1-15.5, 19.3-19.4, 21.1-21.2, 22.1-22.2 and 22.5 of the
SCM Agreement. Finally, India raised consequential claims relating to
Articles 10, 19.3, 19.4, 32.1 and 32.5 of the SCM Agreement,
Article VI of the GATT 1994 and Article XVI:4 of the
WTO Agreement.
The panel upheld India's "as such"
claims, under Articles 15.1-15.5 of the SCM Agreement, against the
United States' provision governing the cumulation of the effects of subsidized
imports with the effects of non-subsidized imports in original countervailing
investigations. The panel also upheld a number of the procedural and
substantive "as applied" claims raised by India under
Articles 1.1(a)(1)(iii), 2.1(c), 12.5, 12.7, 14(d), 15.1-15.5, and 22.5 of
the SCM Agreement.
On appeal, India challenged most issues
on which the panel did not rule in its favour. India appealed the panel's
finding upholding the USDOC's determination that the National
Mineral Development Corporation (NMDC) is a "public body". India also appealed the panel's
findings regarding the existence of a financial contribution. India further appealed several of the panel's findings and
conclusions in respect of India's "as such" and "as applied"
claims against the USDOC's benchmarking mechanism for determining benefit.
Moreover, India appealed the panel's findings in connection with de facto specificity, USDOC's use of "facts
available", the examination of new subsidy allegations in administrative
reviews, and "cross-cumulation". In respect of each of these issues listed above, India also claimed that
the panel acted inconsistently with its duty to make an objective assessment
within the meaning of Article 11 of the DSU.
In its other appeal, the United States requested the Appellate Body to
clarify that "an entity that is controlled by the government, such that
the government may use the entity's resources as its own", is also a
public body. In addition, the United States challenged the panel's finding that Section 1677(7)(G) of the US Statute is
inconsistent with Articles 15.1-15.5 of the SCM Agreement, and claimed
that the panel acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU in its
examination on this matter.
India appealed the panel's findings regarding the USDOC's determination
that the NMDC is a public body, arguing that the panel erred in its
interpretation and application of Article 1.1(a)(1) of the SCM
Agreement. For its part, the United States argued that the panel interpreted
and applied Article 1.1(a)(1) of the SCM Agreement in a manner
consistent with the interpretation given by the Appellate Body in US – Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China),
but requested, in its other appeal, that the Appellate Body clarify that
"an entity that is controlled by the government, such that the government
may use the entity's resources as its own", is a public body
within the meaning of the SCM Agreement, "irrespective of whether the
entity also possesses 'governmental authority' or exercises this authority in
the performance of governmental functions".
Regarding the meaning of the term "public body", the Appellate
Body recalled its finding, in
US – Anti‑Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China), that a public body is "an entity that possesses, exercises or is
vested with governmental authority" and that in determining whether an
entity is a public body, it may be relevant to consider "whether the
functions or conduct are of a kind that are ordinarily classified as governmental
in the legal order of the relevant Member" as well as the
classification and functions of entities within WTO Members generally.
The Appellate Body further recalled that "just as no two
governments are exactly alike, the precise contours and characteristics of a
public body are bound to differ from entity to entity, State to State, and case
to case." The Appellate Body noted that there are different ways in which
a government could be understood to vest an authority with governmental
authority and therefore different types of evidence may be relevant. Evidence
that "an entity is, in fact, exercising governmental functions may serve
as evidence that the relevant entity possesses or has been vested with
governmental authority." The Appellate Body added that "evidence that
a government exercises meaningful control over an entity and its conduct may
serve, in certain circumstances, as evidence that the relevant entity possesses
governmental authority and exercises such authority in the performance of
governmental functions." An investigating authority must
therefore "evaluate and give due consideration to all relevant
characteristics of the entity and, in reaching its ultimate determination as to
how that entity should be characterized, avoid focusing exclusively or unduly
on any single characteristic without affording due consideration to others that
may be relevant". In particular, mere ownership or control over an entity
by a government, without more, is not sufficient to establish that the entity
is a public body.
Turning to the participants' arguments on appeal, the Appellate Body
rejected, as a preliminary matter, India's contention that the United States'
request for the Appellate Body to clarify the meaning of Article 1.1(a)(1) of
the SCM Agreement should be dismissed on the basis that the United States was
not challenging "issues of law covered in the Panel report and legal
interpretations developed by the Panel", and that the principles to be
applied in determining whether an entity is a public body have been settled in
the adopted report of the Appellate Body in US
– Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China). The Appellate Body explained that
it is required, under Article 17.12 of the DSU, to address each of the legal
issues raised in the appellate proceedings and that the United States had
appealed a "legal interpretation" developed by the panel in the
sense of Article 17.6 of the DSU.
Regarding the legal standard to be applied in determining whether an
entity is a public body, the Appellate Body rejected India's contention
that in order to be a public body, an entity must have the power to regulate,
control, or supervise individuals, or otherwise restrain conduct of others. The
Appellate Body also rejected the proposition that an entity must have the power
to "entrust" or "direct" a private body to carry out
functions identified in Article 1.1(a)(1)(i)‑(iii) in order to be a
public body, and clarified that it had not made such a finding to this effect
in
US – Anti‑Dumping and Countervailing
Duties (China). The Appellate Body also noted that the terminology
advocated by the United States – "a public body may also include an entity
controlled by the government … such that the government may use the entity's
resources as its own" – is difficult to reconcile with that used
by the Appellate Body in US – Anti‑Dumping
and Countervailing Duties (China). The Appellate Body recalled that
a government's exercise of "meaningful control" over an entity
and its conduct, including control such that the government can use the
entity's resources as its own, may certainly be relevant evidence for purposes
of determining whether a particular entity constitutes a public body.
Similarly, government ownership of an entity, while not a decisive criterion,
may serve, in conjunction with other elements, as evidence.
The Appellate Body recalled that the term "public body" in
Article 1.1(a)(1) means "an entity that possesses, exercises or is
vested with governmental authority"; and that the question of whether the
conduct of an entity is that of a public body must be determined on its own
merits, with due regard to the core characteristics and functions of
the relevant entity, its relationship with the government, and the legal and
economic environment prevailing in the relevant country. The Appellate
Body explained that evidence regarding the scope and content of government
policies relating to the sector in which the investigated entity operates may
inform the question of whether the conduct of an entity is that of a
public body. The absence of an express statutory delegation of governmental
authority does not necessarily preclude a determination that a particular
entity is a public body. Instead, there are different ways in which a
government could be understood to vest an entity with "governmental
authority", and therefore different types of evidence may be relevant. In
order to characterize a particular entity as a public body, it may be relevant
to consider whether its functions or conduct are of a kind that are ordinarily
classified as governmental in the legal order of the relevant Member, and the
classification and functions of entities within WTO Members generally.
Turning to whether the panel erred in its analysis of the USDOC's
determination that the NMDC is a public body, the Appellate Body found
that, in grappling with the case-by-case nature of public body
determinations, the panel correctly articulated the appropriate standard when
it observed that "evidence that a government exercises
meaningful control over an entity and its conduct may
serve, in certain circumstances, as evidence that the relevant entity possesses
governmental authority and exercises such authority in the performance of governmental
functions." However, the Appellate Body found that the panel erred in
its substantive interpretation of Article 1.1(a)(1) of the SCM Agreement by
construing the term "public body" and in its understanding of
"meaningful control" by a government. The Appellate Body explained
that the term "public body" in Article 1.1(a)(1) means "an
entity that possesses, exercises or is vested with governmental
authority". The substantive legal question
to be answered is therefore whether one or more of these characteristics exist
in a particular case. This substantive standard
should not be confused with the evidentiary standard
required to establish that an entity is a public body within the meaning of the
SCM Agreement. The Appellate Body considered that, while the panel reviewed
some indicia of control by the Government of India (GOI) (such as shareholding
and the GOI's involvement in the selection of directors), it did not address
the question of whether there was evidence that the NMDC was performing
governmental functions on behalf of the GOI. Moreover, the panel failed to
evaluate whether the USDOC had properly considered the relationship between the
NMDC and the GOI within the Indian legal order, or the extent to which the GOI
in fact "exercised" meaningful control over the NMDC as an entity and
over its conduct. The Appellate Body explained
that while the GOI's ownership interest in the NMDC, the GOI's power to appoint
and nominate directors, and the reference on the NMDC's website indicating that
the NMDC is under "administrative control" of the GOI, insofar as
they were discussed by the USDOC in its determinations, were certainly relevant
to the question at issue, such evidence of "formal indicia of
control" did not, without further evidence and analysis, provide a
sufficient basis for a finding that the NMDC is a public body. For these reasons,
the Appellate Body found that the panel erred in its application of
Article 1.1(a)(1) of the SCM Agreement in its analysis of the USDOC's
determination that the NMDC is a public body, and consequently reversed the panel's
finding rejecting India's claim. Having done so, the Appellate Body did not
consider it necessary to rule on India's claims that the panel acted
inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU.
Turning to the question of whether it could complete the legal analysis
of whether the USDOC's determination that the NMDC is a public body is
inconsistent with Article 1.1(a)(1) of the SCM Agreement, the Appellate Body
found that the USDOC did not evaluate the relationship between the NMDC and the
GOI within the Indian legal order, and the extent to which the GOI in fact
"exercised" meaningful control over the NMDC and over its conduct in order to conclude properly that the NMDC is a
public body. Instead, the USDOC examined evidence more appropriately seen as
evidence of "formal indicia of control" such as the GOI's ownership
interest in the NMDC and the GOI's power to appoint or nominate directors. The
Appellate Body recalled that these factors are certainly relevant but do not
provide a sufficient basis for a determination that an entity is a public body
that possesses, exercises, or is vested with governmental authority. The
Appellate Body further noted that the USDOC did not refer in its determinations
to evidence contained on the USDOC's administrative record that was referred to
by the United States in the panel proceedings as well as on appeal. The USDOC also
did not discuss in its determinations evidence on record regarding the NMDC's
status as a Miniratna or Navratna
company that could have been relevant to the question of whether the USDOC's determinations
contain a sufficient and adequate evaluation of the degree of control exercised
by the GOI over the conduct of the
NMDC and the degree of autonomy enjoyed by the NMDC. For these reasons, the
Appellate Body concluded that the USDOC did not provide a reasoned and adequate
explanation of the basis for its finding that the NMDC is a public
body within the meaning of Article 1.1(a)(1). Thus, the Appellate Body
found that the USDOC's determination that the NMDC is a public body is
inconsistent with Article 1.1(a)(1).
India appealed the panel's rejection of
India's claim that the USDOC's determination that the GOI's provision of goods
through the grant of mining rights for iron ore and coal is inconsistent with
Article 1.1(a)(1)(iii) of the SCM Agreement. The participants disputed
whether such a grant established a "reasonably proximate
relationship", as set out by the Appellate Body in
US – Softwood Lumber IV,
between the governmental action of providing a good or service, and the
use or enjoyment of that good or service by a beneficiary. India argued that the extraction process undertaken by Indian steel
producers, due to its complexity and uncertainty, was a significant
intervening act that undermined any reasonably proximate relationship between
the GOI's grant of mining rights and the final goods consisting of extracted
iron ore and coal.
The panel relied on several features of the mining rights in concluding that
there is a reasonably proximate relationship between the GOI's grant of mining
rights and the final goods consisting of extracted iron ore and coal. In
particular, the Appellate Body noted the distinction drawn by the panel between
the mining rights at issue in this case, which involve the right to extract
minerals from known sites, as opposed to exploration rights, which involve the
right to explore or prospect, and, if anything is found, extract it. The
Appellate Body further noted that the USDOC's determinations concern the grant
of mining rights, and not reconnaissance permits or prospecting licences, and
that the mining rights at issue involved the payment of royalties that were
tied to the amount of extracted material. The Appellate Body rejected India's
contention that the panel's approach would permit other governmental acts, such
as the granting of a business licence, to constitute a provision of goods,
since, but for the governmental action, the mining company would not have been
able to access the mineral. Unlike the general governmental acts to which India
referred, the Appellate Body considered that the governmental act of granting
these mining rights has a reasonably proximate relationship with the output in
the sense that it is provided expressly to enable the beneficiary to extract for
its use or enjoyment what was previously a government‑controlled mineral,
in this case, iron ore or coal. The Appellate Body therefore upheld the panel's
finding rejecting India's claim that the USDOC's determination that the GOI
provided goods through the grant of mining rights for iron ore and coal is
inconsistent with Article 1.1(a)(1)(iii) of the SCM Agreement. The
Appellate Body also rejected a claim under Article 11 of the DSU relating
to the panel's disagreement with India as to the significance of certain
evidence considered by the panel.
India appealed the panel's rejection of
India's claim that the USDOC's determination that the Steel Development Fund
(SDF) Managing Committee provided direct transfers of funds is inconsistent
with Article 1.1(a)(1)(i) of the SCM Agreement. India argued that
Article 1.1(a)(1)(i) covers only transfers of funds that are
"direct", which means that the action and its consequence must be
immediately linked without involving any intermediary or intervening agency.
India further contended that a "transfer" of funds within the
meaning of Article 1.1(a)(1)(i) refers only to situations in which the
funds are drawn from government resources or result in a charge on the public
account.
The Appellate Body examined Article 1.1(a)(1)(i), which provides for the existence of a financial contribution where "a government
practice involves a direct transfer of funds". The Appellate Body stated that the meaning of the term
"direct" in relation to a "transfer of funds" suggests the
immediacy of the conveyance of funds, which in turn points to the existence of
a close nexus concerning, for instance, the parties to, and/or the actions
relating to, the transfer of the funds. At the same time, the
Appellate Body observed that any such immediacy is mitigated by the language
consisting of a "government practice" that "involves" the
direct transfer of funds. For the Appellate Body, these latter terms suggest a
more attenuated role for a government or public body for purposes of
Article 1.1(a)(1)(i) than what would otherwise have been understood
through an examination of the phrase "direct transfer of funds"
in isolation. The Appellate Body therefore concluded that
Article 1.1(a)(1)(i) does not rigidly prescribe the scope of its coverage,
but rather reflects a balance of different considerations to be taken into account
when assessing whether a particular transfer of funds constitutes a
financial contribution.
In the light of these
considerations, the Appellate Body did not consider that the fact that a government
effects a transfer through an intermediary necessarily negates a finding of
financial contribution under Article 1.1(a)(1)(i). Instead, an assessment of the role and involvement of any intermediaries in the relationship between the
government and the recipient would be important in assessing whether a
government practice involves a direct transfer of funds. The Appellate Body
further considered that, if there is a
government practice that involves a transfer of financial resources exhibiting
sufficient indicia of directness, the transfer need not emanate from government
title or possession over the resources.
The Appellate Body pointed to
the panel's conclusion that, notwithstanding the
role of an intermediary administrator, the Joint Plant Committee (JPC), in the disbursement and collection of funds, the SDF Managing
Committee made all decisions regarding the issuance of loans, the terms on
which they were approved, and any waiver conditions. This meant that no major
decision regarding SDF loans could be made, and no loans could be extended, by
the JPC alone. The Appellate Body stated that the panel therefore had a
credible basis to conclude that, notwithstanding the JPC's role as an
intermediary administrator of the SDF, the role of the SDF Managing
Committee in making critical decisions regarding the issuance and terms of the
SDF loans supports a finding that the actions of the SDF Managing Committee
involve a direct transfer of funds within the meaning of Article 1.1(a)(1)(i).
The Appellate Body also pointed to the panel's view that, regardless of the source of the resources used to fund the
SDF loans, those funds were nevertheless held in an account and could only be
issued as loans on terms and conditions as decided by the SDF Managing
Committee. The Appellate Body therefore upheld
the panel's finding rejecting India's claim that the USDOC's determination that
the SDF Managing Committee provided direct transfers of funds is inconsistent
with Article 1.1(a)(1)(i) of the SCM Agreement.
India appealed various of the panel's
findings rejecting its claims that Section 351.511(a)(2)(i)-(iv) of the US
Regulations is "as such" inconsistent with Article 14(d) of the
SCM Agreement. Section 351.511(a)(2)(i)–(iv) sets forth the
US benchmarking mechanism for calculating the benefit arising from
the provision of goods or services by a government. Pursuant to
Section 351.511(a)(2)(i)-(iii), the United States follows a three-tiered
benchmark approach in determining the adequacy of remuneration for the
provision of goods or services by the government. Under Tier I, the USDOC
uses as a benchmark an "in‑country" price, that is, a market-determined
price resulting from actual transactions in the country in question.
If the Tier I price is unavailable, the USDOC considers the
world market price (Tier II), provided that it is reasonable to conclude
that such price would be available to purchasers in the country in question. If
the Tier II price is also unavailable, the USDOC assesses whether the government
price is consistent with market principles (Tier III). Pursuant to
Section 351.511(a)(2)(iv), when Tier I or Tier II benchmarks are
used, the USDOC must ensure that these prices reflect the price that a firm has
actually paid or would pay if it imported the product.
Before the panel, India argued that the US
benchmarking mechanism is inconsistent with Article 14(d) of the SCM
Agreement because it does not require an assessment of the adequacy of
remuneration for government-provided goods from the perspective of the
government provider, prior to assessing whether a benefit has been conferred on
a recipient. On appeal, India claimed that the panel erred in finding that
Article 14(d) does not require an assessment from the perspective of the
government provider prior to an assessment of benefit. India argued that the terms
"adequacy of remuneration" and "benefit" describe distinct
concepts that require separate analyses. The Appellate Body considered that the
term "unless", as used in Article 14(d), expressly links the concepts
of "benefit" and "remuneration" such that a showing that
"remuneration" is "less than adequate" is consonant with a finding
of "benefit". Thus, the Appellate Body considered that
separate analyses of "benefit" and "remuneration" are not
required under Article 14(d).
The Appellate Body also considered that a
proper interpretation of Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement suggests that
the assessment of the adequacy of remuneration must be conducted from the
perspective of the recipient. The title of Article 14 – "Calculation
of the Amount of a Subsidy in Terms of the Benefit to the Recipient" – suggests
that the adequacy of the "remuneration" paid in exchange for goods or
services is, under Article 14(d), to be examined from the perspective of the
recipient, rather than the government provider. In addition, the text of the
second sentence of Article 14(d) prescribes how the adequacy of remuneration is
to be determined, namely, in relation to prevailing market conditions in the
country of provision. Recalling its finding in Canada –
Aircraft that a benefit arises under each
of the subparagraphs of Article 14 if the recipient has received a "financial
contribution" on terms more favourable than those that are available to
the recipient in the market, the Appellate Body agreed with the panel that
"[o]nce it is established that the price paid to the government provider
is less than the price that would be required by the market", the
government price in question is inadequate, and a benefit is thereby
conferred. For these reasons, the Appellate Body upheld the panel's finding
rejecting India's claim that the US benchmarking mechanism is inconsistent
with Article 14(d). The Appellate Body also rejected India's claim
under Article 11 of the DSU, as it was premised on India's interpretation of Article
14(d), which the panel had correctly rejected.
Before turning to India's remaining claims,
the Appellate Body set forth an interpretation of Article 14(d) of the SCM
Agreement as it relates to the identification of an appropriate benchmark for
calculating benefit. The Appellate Body observed that the second sentence of Article 14(d) prescribes that the adequacy of
remuneration for a government-provided good or service "shall be
determined in relation to prevailing market conditions for the good or service
in question in the country of provision or purchase". For the Appellate
Body, this means that prevailing market conditions in the country of provision
is the standard for assessing the adequacy of remuneration.
The Appellate Body interpreted the terms
"prevailing market conditions" in Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement as
describing generally accepted characteristics of an area of economic activity
in which the forces of supply and demand interact to determine market prices.
Highlighting the market orientation of the inquiry, the Appellate Body considered
that, because the assessment must be made in relation to prevailing
market conditions in the country of
provision, any benchmark must consist of market‑determined
prices for the same or similar goods that relate or refer to, or are connected
with, the prevailing market conditions for the good in question
in the country of provision. Proper benchmark prices would normally
emanate from the market for the good in question in the country of provision
because, to the extent that such in‑country prices are market determined, they
would necessarily have the requisite connection with the prevailing market
conditions in the country of provision. In the Appellate Body's view, such
in-country prices could emanate from a variety of potential sources, including private
or government-related entities. Investigating authorities bear the
responsibility to conduct the necessary analysis in order to determine, on the
basis of information supplied by petitioners and respondents, whether proposed
benchmark prices are market determined. The Appellate Body highlighted that,
in arriving at a proper benchmark, an investigating authority must
adequately explain the basis for its conclusions in its published report.
The Appellate Body recognized that some types
of prices may, from an evidentiary standpoint, be more easily found to
constitute market‑determined prices in the country of provision. This does not
suggest, however, that there is, in the abstract, a hierarchy between different
types of in‑country prices that can be relied upon in arriving at a proper
benchmark. The Appellate Body emphasized that whether a price may be relied
upon for benchmarking purposes under Article 14(d) of the
SCM Agreement is not a function of its source but, rather, whether it is a
market-determined price reflective of prevailing market conditions in the
country of provision. Accordingly, while the prices at which the same or
similar goods are sold by private suppliers in the country of provision may
serve as a starting point of analysis, this does not mean that, having found
such prices, the analysis must necessarily end there. For example, prices of
government-related entities other than the entity providing the financial
contribution at issue also need to be considered, where present on the record,
to assess whether they are market determined and can therefore form part of a
proper benchmark. Thus, Article 14(d) establishes no legal presumption
that in‑country prices from any particular source can be discarded in a
benchmark analysis. Rather, Article 14(d) requires an analysis of the
market in the country of provision to determine whether particular in‑country
prices can be relied upon in arriving at a proper benchmark.
On appeal, India claimed that the panel found
that government prices can be presumptively rejected in the determination of a
benchmark, and thus erred in its interpretation of Article 14(d) of the SCM
Agreement. The Appellate Body recalled that whether a price may be relied on
for benchmarking purposes is not a function of its source but, rather, whether
it is market determined. Private prices and government-related prices can both
reflect prevailing market conditions in the country of provision. Government-related
prices on record other than the financial contribution at issue need to be
considered in determining a proper benchmark, provided that such prices
relate or refer to, or are connected with, the prevailing market conditions in
the country of provision. A determination of a benefit benchmark cannot, at the
outset, exclude consideration of any potential in‑country prices,
including government-related prices other than the financial contribution at
issue. The Appellate Body considered that the panel erred in finding that
investigating authorities should not be required to treat government prices as
being representative of "prevailing market conditions", to the extent
that it may suggest that Article 14(d) does not require investigating
authorities to consider any in-country government‑related prices in determining
a benchmark for assessing benefit under Article 14(d).
Turning to the measure at issue, the
Appellate Body noted that Tier I of the US benchmarking mechanism prescribes
that the USDOC will normally measure the adequacy of remuneration by comparing
the government price to a "market-determined price" that results from
"actual transactions" in the country in question. Such a price
"could include" a price based on actual transactions between private
parties, actual imports, or, in certain circumstances, actual sales from
competitively run government auctions. In the Appellate Body's view, the fact
that Tier I prices "could include" an illustrative list of
sample transactions suggests that other types of transactions, including
government-related prices other than government auction prices, may constitute
a Tier I benchmark. Thus, the Appellate Body considered that to the extent
that Section 351.511(a)(2)(i) does not exclude that government-related
prices other than the financial contribution at issue can be used as Tier I
benchmarks, the premise of India's claim that government-related prices are
necessarily excluded as benchmarks under the US benchmarking mechanism had
not been established. Accordingly, although the Appellate Body expressed
concerns about the panel's interpretation of Article 14(d) of the SCM
Agreement, it ultimately upheld, albeit for different reasons, the panel's
finding rejecting India's claim.
On appeal, India took issue with the two panel's
findings relating to the use of world market prices under Tier II of the
US benchmarking mechanism. The Appellate Body first considered India's claim
that the panel erred in finding that Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement permits
the use of out-of-country benchmarks in situations in which the government is
not a predominant provider of the good in question. The Appellate Body was not
persuaded by India's assertion that, in
US – Softwood Lumber IV and US – Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China),
the Appellate Body had established that the only situation in which
out-of-country prices may be used to determine a benefit benchmark is where in‑country
prices are distorted by government predominance in the market. While the
Appellate Body has clarified that recourse to out-of-country prices is
exceptional, the Appellate Body has not, in previous disputes, addressed the
issue of whether there are other circumstances in which Article 14(d) permits
the use of out-of-country prices in determining benchmarks. The Appellate Body
considered that the rationale underpinning its findings in US –
Softwood Lumber IV is that Article 14(d) does not prohibit
the use of alternative benchmarks in situations where in‑country prices cannot
properly be used as a basis for determining a benchmark. Thus, the Appellate
Body considered that recourse to alternative benchmarks is permitted to
determine a benchmark where in-country prices are distorted as a result of
governmental intervention in the market. There may be other circumstances where
an investigating authority would not be required to use in‑country prices to
determine a benefit benchmark, e.g. where information pertaining to in‑country
prices cannot be verified so as to determine whether they are market
determined. Thus, the Appellate Body considered that the panel did not err in
finding that Article 14(d) permits the use of out-of-country benchmarks in
situations other than where the government is a predominant provider of the
good in question.
The Appellate Body then turned to India's
appeal concerning the panel's rejection of India's claim that the use of
"world market prices" as Tier II benchmarks in Section
351.511(a)(2)(ii) is inconsistent "as such" with Article 14(d) of the
SCM Agreement because it does not require adjustments to reflect
prevailing market conditions in the country of provision. The Appellate Body
first rejected India's claim under Article 11 of the DSU, stating that it did
not consider that a panel acts inconsistently with this provision merely
because it seeks to determine the meaning of a municipal law by reference to
the legislative framework within which that municipal law is situated. The
Appellate Body then stated that it could see nothing on the face of the
overarching legislation or the implementing regulation to conclude that the
USDOC is not mandated to make adjustments to Tier II benchmarks where
necessary. Thus, upholding the panel's findings, the Appellate Body did not
consider that the panel erred under Article 14(d) in rejecting India's claim.
The Appellate Body then examined India's
appeal of the panel's rejection of India's claim that the use of "as
delivered" prices, provided for in Section 351.511(a)(2)(iv), is
inconsistent with Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement. The Appellate Body
first addressed India's assertion that the panel erred in its interpretation of
Article 14(d). India submitted that the
panel's rejection of its claim was partly based on the panel's erroneous
statement that government prices are not an indicator of prevailing market
conditions. The Appellate Body disagreed with this statement to the extent that
it may be read as suggesting that Article 14(d) establishes a legal
presumption that government prices cannot reflect prevailing market conditions
in the country of provision, but did not consider that it
formed the central basis upon which the panel rejected India's claim. Rather,
the panel dismissed India's claim on the basis of its understanding of what
India had argued, namely, that the mandatory use of "as delivered"
benchmarks is inconsistent with Article 14(d) because such benchmarks will
not relate to prevailing market conditions in the country of provision in cases
where the "government price in question" does not include delivery
charges. In this regard, the Appellate Body recalled that the panel considered
that the terms "prevailing market conditions" and "conditions of
sale", in the second sentence of Article 14(d), do not relate to the
specific contractual terms on which the government provides goods but, rather,
"relate to the general conditions of the relevant market, in the context
of which market operators engage in sales transactions". The Appellate
Body observed that India had not challenged this finding of the panel on
appeal. The Appellate Body further addressed India's claim under Article 11 of
the DSU that the panel failed to apply its own interpretation of
Article 14(d) to its assessment of India's claim. Having found that the question of whether the sale of a
good in the country of provision generally on an ex works basis constitutes a "prevailing market
condition" within the meaning of Article 14(d) was not before the panel,
the Appellate Body rejected India's claim in this regard.
The Appellate Body found it significant that
the term "transportation" is explicitly listed among the
"prevailing market conditions" illustratively identified in the
second sentence of Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement. This confirmed that the
costs associated with the transportation of the good in question is a factor
that must be accounted for in determining the adequacy of remuneration in
relation to prevailing market conditions in the country of provision. The use
of ex works prices for the purpose of
a benefit comparison under Article 14(d) would not capture the full cost to the
recipient of receiving the government-provided good in question, and would
therefore fail to assess whether the financial contribution at issue makes the
recipient better off than it would otherwise have
been absent that contribution. Thus,
the Appellate Body did not agree with India's assertion that, had the panel
evaluated the question of whether the sale of a good in the market generally on
an ex works basis constitutes a
"prevailing market condition", this would have "materially
affected" the panel's decision to reject India's claim.
The Appellate Body considered that India's
concern with Section 351.511(a)(2)(iv) was that, in cases where the USDOC
uses as a benchmark an actual import price under Tier I of the
US benchmarking mechanism, or a world market price under Tier II of that
mechanism, the assessment of benefit will always reflect a comparison
between a government price adjusted to reflect local delivery charges, and a
benchmark price adjusted to reflect international delivery charges. Thus, to
the Appellate Body, India's argument suggested that, on its face, the
US benchmarking mechanism precludes adjustments to Tier I or Tier II
benchmarks to reflect anything other than the international cost of delivery of
the good in question. The Appellate
Body noted that, in selecting Tier I prices, the USDOC is required to
consider "product similarity; quantities sold, imported, or auctioned; and other factors affecting comparability". Similarly,
in selecting Tier II prices, the USDOC is required to make "due
allowance for factors affecting comparability".
According to the Appellate Body, the extent to which international delivery
charges are generally applicable, or "prevailing", in the country of
provision is a factor affecting comparability of the financial contribution at
issue with a benchmark. Thus, contrary to what India asserted, the Appellate
Body did not consider that the US benchmarking mechanism, on its face,
precludes adjustments to Tier I or Tier II benchmarks to reflect delivery
charges that approximate the generally applicable delivery charges in the
country of provision – e.g. local delivery charges.
Next, the Appellate Body considered India's
claim concerning the panel's rejection of India's argument that the use of
"as delivered" out-of-country prices as benchmarks nullifies
the comparative advantage of the country of provision in terms of providing
the goods locally. The panel
considered that, "[t]o the extent that
a delivered price benchmark relates to the prevailing market
conditions in the country of provision, it will reflect any comparative
advantage that such country might have." The Appellate Body
recalled its guidance in
US – Softwood Lumber IV that,
although the countervailing of comparative advantages between countries would
not be in accordance with the very purpose of levying countervailing duties,
any comparative advantage would be reflected in the prevailing market
conditions in the country of provision. Thus, it would be taken into account in
the adjustments made to any method used for the determination of the adequacy
of remuneration if it is to relate or refer to, or be connected with,
prevailing market conditions in the market of provision. The Appellate Body
concluded that the panel had not erred in its interpretation and application of
Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement in rejecting India's claim. Thus, the
Appellate Body upheld, albeit for different reasons, the panel's finding
rejecting India's claim that Section 351.511(a)(2)(iv) is inconsistent
"as such" with Article 14(d).
The Appellate Body considered India's claims
concerning the USDOC's determination that the NMDC provided iron ore for less
than adequate remuneration. The Appellate Body first considered India's claim
that the panel acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU by making
findings on the ex post rationales put forward by
the United States to justify the USDOC's failure to consider certain domestic
pricing information in determining a Tier I benchmark. The Appellate Body
considered that the panel's findings were alternative
findings, and that a panel does not act inconsistently with its duty under
Article 11 merely because it makes alternative
findings that might become relevant if the Appellate Body reverses other
findings made by that panel. Thus, the Appellate Body rejected India's claim
under Article 11 of the DSU, declined to review the panel's
alternative findings, and declared these alternative findings moot and of no
legal effect.
The Appellate Body then examined India's
claims concerning the USDOC's exclusion of the NMDC's export prices from the
determination of a Tier II benchmark for assessing whether the NMDC provided
iron ore for less than adequate remuneration. The Appellate Body observed that
the panel had rejected India's claim on the basis that Article 14(d) of
the SCM Agreement does not require an investigating authority to rely on a
government's domestic prices when determining market benchmarks because a
government may set prices on the basis of public policy considerations rather
than market principles. The Appellate Body considered that the fact that a
government provider may set its export prices in pursuit of public policy
objectives, rather than market-based profit maximization, does not permit a per se conclusion that Article 14(d) does not require the
consideration of any export prices of government providers for the purpose of
determining an alternative benchmark. As the basis for the panel's rejection of
India's claim was in error, the Appellate Body reversed the panel's finding
rejecting India's claim that the USDOC should have used the NMDC's export
prices to determine a Tier II benchmark in the 2006, 2007, and 2008
administrative reviews. Upon examining the USDOC's determination, the Appellate
Body considered that the USDOC did not provide a reasoned and adequate explanation
as to why the benchmark data that it relied on, namely, world market prices
from Australia and Brazil, are more appropriate than the benchmark data that it
had relied upon in previous reviews but subsequently excluded, namely, the
NMDC's export prices at issue. The Appellate Body completed the legal analysis
and found that the USDOC's exclusion of these prices is inconsistent with
Article 14(d).
Finally, the Appellate Body considered
India's claim concerning the USDOC's use of "as delivered"
prices from Australia and Brazil as benchmarks for assessing whether the NMDC
provided iron ore for less than adequate remuneration. Turning first to India's
claim under Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement, the Appellate Body
considered whether, as India argued, the panel erred in finding that the
"as delivered" prices from Australia and Brazil – that the USDOC used
as benchmarks – reflect prevailing market conditions in India. With regard to
the "as delivered" Brazilian price, the Appellate Body recalled that
the panel considered that, because this price was based on a transaction made
by an Indian steel producer established in India, it necessarily relates to the
prevailing market conditions in India. The Appellate Body saw merit in India's
argument that an isolated import transaction for a good may not necessarily
reflect the prevailing market conditions for that good in the country of
provision. In the Appellate Body's view, the fact that an importer has paid a
price, inclusive of international delivery charges, for a particular good may,
as an evidentiary matter, provide some indication as to the generally
applicable delivery charges for that good in the country of provision. However,
the Appellate Body did not consider that it can be inferred, without more, that
a single, isolated import transaction for a particular good reflects or relates
to prevailing market conditions for that good in the country of provision.
Turning to the "as delivered"
prices from Australia and Brazil more generally, the Appellate Body
recalled that the panel referred to evidence on the record and observed that,
in the course of the countervailing duty investigation, NMDC officials had
explained that the NMDC sets its domestic prices in the light of competition
from Australia and Brazil, and therefore in the light of how much an Indian
steel producer would be willing to pay to import iron ore from mines in those
countries. For the panel, because the "as delivered" prices at issue
indicate what an Indian steel producer would be "willing to pay" to
import iron ore from Australia and Brazil, such prices necessarily relate to
the prevailing market conditions in India. The Appellate Body expressed several
concerns with the panel's reliance on the statement referred to above as a
basis for rejecting India's claims. First, the Appellate Body noted that the
USDOC's determination did not contain a reference to the statement relied on by
the panel, or an explanation of how that statement supports the conclusion that
"as delivered" prices from Australia and Brazil relate to prevailing
market conditions in India. The Appellate Body thus expressed concern that the panel
did not base its assessment of India's claims under Article 14(d) on reasoning
provided by the USDOC in its written determination. Second, the Appellate Body
considered that, although the panel relied on a statement by NMDC officials
that, in setting the price for iron ore in the domestic market, the "NMDC
reviews the negotiated international price when determining how much the
purchaser would be willing to pay to import", it was not disputed that the
reference to the "negotiated international price"
is not a reference to a price inclusive of international
delivery charges, but rather a reference to prices in a report which do not
reflect the cost of international delivery. Thus, the statement relied on by
the panel did not, in the Appellate Body's view, necessarily permit an
inference that the NMDC's domestic prices were set based on international
prices inclusive of international delivery charges. Third, the Appellate Body
expressed concern that the statement relied on by the panel focuses solely on
the NMDC. The Appellate Body considered that, without further explanation
and substantiation, evidence focusing on one provider of the good in
question in the country of provision may not be sufficient to establish
the prevailing market conditions for that good. The Appellate Body
therefore reversed the panel's findings rejecting India's claim that the
USDOC's use of "as delivered" prices from Australia and Brazil in
assessing whether the NMDC provided iron ore for less than adequate
remuneration is inconsistent with Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement.
Upon examining the USDOC's determination, the
Appellate Body considered that the USDOC had not provided a reasoned and
adequate explanation for concluding that world market prices from Australia and
Brazil, adjusted to reflect the cost of international delivery to India, relate
to the "prevailing market conditions" for iron ore in India. The Appellate
Body reiterated that an analysis of prevailing market conditions in the country
of provision requires an analysis of the market generally in order to draw a
conclusion about the conditions prevailing in that market. The Appellate
Body therefore completed the legal analysis and found that the USDOC's use of "as delivered"
prices from Australia and Brazil in assessing whether the NMDC provided iron
ore for less than adequate remuneration is inconsistent with Article 14(d) of
the SCM Agreement.
India appealed the panel's rejection of
India's claim that the USDOC's use of a methodology to construct a government
price for iron ore and coal is inconsistent with Articles 1.1(b) and 14(d)
of the SCM Agreement. In respect of grants of mining rights for iron ore
and coal, the USDOC determined benefit by constructing government prices, and
then comparing those prices with Tier I and Tier II benchmarks. The USDOC
constructed the government prices by calculating royalties paid to the GOI for
mining rights, and then adding per unit operational mining costs associated
with the extraction of iron ore and coal. India argues that the panel erred
under Article 14(d) by endorsing the USDOC's constructed price methodology.
India's claim was premised on its view that, because the financial contribution
at issue consists only of the GOI's grants of mining rights – i.e. what the GOI
actually provided to the recipients, and what the GOI was actually paid for –
the analysis must necessarily be limited to any benefit arising from the grant
of the mining rights, and not the final extracted material in the form of iron
ore and coal.
The Appellate Body recalled
its conclusion that, in connection with the panel's financial contribution
analysis in respect of a grant of mining rights,
it was proper to consider that the provided good consists of the extracted
minerals. Accordingly, the Appellate Body considered that it is permissible for
an investigating authority in a benefit calculation to construct a price on the
basis of any fees and royalties paid for the mining rights plus the cost plus
profit of the extraction process. The Appellate Body noted that this is
what the USDOC did when it calculated the royalties for the mining rights and then added
operational mining costs associated with the extraction of the iron ore and
coal, and that, in this case, India has not challenged the manner in which the
USDOC actually constructed the government prices for iron ore and coal. The
Appellate Body therefore concluded that, in the circumstances of this case, the
panel did not err in finding that the USDOC did not act inconsistently with
Article 14(d) in constructing government prices for iron ore and coal. The
Appellate Body also rejected India's claim that the panel
committed legal error under Article 11 of the DSU in refusing to assess India's claim regarding a good faith
interpretation of Article 14(d). The
Appellate Body considered that India presented arguments relating to a distinct
legal claim that the United States had breached the international law principle
of good faith in performing its treaty obligations, and that the panel was
therefore warranted in rejecting this claim as not falling within its terms of
reference. The Appellate Body therefore upheld the panel's finding rejecting
India's claim that the USDOC's construction of government prices for iron ore
and coal is inconsistent with Articles 1.1(b) and 14(d) of the
SCM Agreement.
India appealed the panel's rejection of
India's claim that the USDOC's determination that Steel Development Fund (SDF) loans
confer a benefit is inconsistent with Articles 1.1(b) and 14(b) of the SCM
Agreement. India argued that, under a proper understanding of the term "comparable
commercial loan" in Article 14(b), the benchmark to be chosen
must have a similar structure as the loan under challenge. According to India,
because the steel producers that benefit from the loans also first contribute
the funds to the SDF loan programme, the USDOC
was required to use benchmark loans that have a similar entry fee.
The Appellate Body stated that a proper
assessment under Article 14(b) examines what the total cost of the investigated
loan is to the loan recipient, and whether there is a difference between that
cost and the total cost of a comparable commercial loan. The Appellate Body
considered that the distinction the panel drew between costs associated with
the interest or repayment terms of a loan, and other costs arising
from entry or administrative charges, does not seem to reflect accurately the
cost of the relevant loans from the perspective of the recipient. Moreover,
failing to take into account a cost that potentially alters a commercial
actor's valuation of a loan simply because it does not relate to interest or repayment terms appears unduly artificial and
contrary to the requirements of Article 14(b). The Appellate Body
therefore considered that the panel improperly excluded consideration of a
borrower's costs in assessing the cost of a loan programme to the recipient for
purposes of a benchmark analysis, and that the panel therefore erred in finding
that Article 14(b) does not require the USDOC to take into account the
costs incurred by SDF loan recipients in obtaining SDF loans. The Appellate
Body therefore reversed the panel's finding rejecting India's claim as it
relates to the USDOC's determination that loans provided under the SDF
conferred a benefit, within the meaning of Article 1.1(b) and 14(b) of the SCM
Agreement.
The Appellate Body then turned to consider
whether it could complete the legal analysis. The Appellate Body noted the panel's
reliance on a GOI statement that, once collected, the steel levies are remitted
to the SDF. The Appellate Body noted, however, that this statement does not
provide any indication as to the source of the funds, and therefore did not
appear to support the conclusion that the steel levies necessarily consist of
consumer funds. The panel also did not refer to the USDOC's own reasoning as it
pertains to the question of whether participating steel companies incur entry
costs in the funding and allocation of SDF loans and the Appellate Body noted
conflicting statements in the USDOC's underlying determinations relating to the
USDOC's selection of a benchmark loan. In the light of disagreement between the
parties, and conflicting indications in the USDOC and panel records, regarding
the question of whether, and to what extent, entry costs for steel companies
affected the terms on which the SDF Managing Committee issues SDF loans, the Appellate
Body did not consider that it had a basis upon which to complete the legal
analysis of whether the prime lending rates on which the USDOC relied
constitute a "comparable commercial loan" within the meaning of
Article 14(b) of the SCM Agreement.
India appealed, under Articles 1.2 and 2.1 of
the SCM Agreement, aspects of the panel's analysis in respect of the USDOC's
determination that the sale of iron ore by the NMDC is de facto
specific within the meaning of Article 2.1(c). The factor on which the USDOC
based its de facto specificity finding concerns
the "use of a subsidy programme by a limited number of certain
enterprises", and India presented three challenges to the panel's analysis concerning this factor under Article 2.1(c).
First, India submitted that the panel erred in interpreting this factor because
it failed to recognize that the "limited number" of users of the
subsidy must form a subset of enterprises within a broader group of
"certain enterprises". The Appellate Body interpreted the first
factor of Article 2.1(c) and concluded that the term "limited
number" is meant to convey a finite and limited quantity of "certain
enterprises". According to the Appellate Body, this suggests that a
limited quantity of enterprises or industries qualifying as "certain
enterprises" must be found to have used the subsidy programme, without
requiring that the limited quantity represents a subset of some larger grouping
of "certain enterprises". Such a reading is also compatible with a contextual
understanding of the term "certain enterprises" and its relationship
to the term "limited number"; the latter serves to determine whether
the known and particularized enterprises or industries can be quantitatively
assessed as limited in number. The Appellate Body therefore upheld the panel's
finding that there was no obligation on the USDOC to establish that only a
"limited number" within the set of "certain enterprises"
actually used the subsidy programme.
Second, India argued that the panel erred in
finding that Article 2.1(c) of the SCM Agreement did not require an
examination of whether the subsidy programme discriminates between
"certain enterprises" and other, "similarly situated"
enterprises. The Appellate Body did not see a textual basis in Article 2.1(c),
and specifically in the terms "certain" and "limited
number", for a requirement to identify which enterprises or
industries are "similarly situated" prior to then having to assess
whether only a subset of those "similarly situated" have de facto access to, or are otherwise eligible
for, the subsidy. The Appellate Body moreover considered that India had not
explained why trade distortions potentially resulting from the selective
distribution of subsidies would be more likely to result where the set of
subsidy recipients constitutes a subset of similarly situated enterprises. In
addition, that a de facto analysis of a subsidy
granted to a single industry would not, in India's view, indicate the
existence of specificity is difficult to square with the aim of
determining whether a subsidy is specific to "certain enterprises".
The Appellate Body also rejected India's reliance on language from the
Appellate Body report in US – Large Civil Aircraft (2nd complaint),
considering that this analysis was particular to the third factor (i.e.
the granting of disproportionately large amounts of subsidy to certain
enterprises) in Article 2.1(c), which necessarily involves a relational concept
not present in the first factor (i.e. the use of a subsidy programme
by a limited number of certain enterprises). The Appellate Body therefore
upheld the panel's finding rejecting India's argument that specificity must be
established on the basis of discrimination in favour of "certain
enterprises" against a broader category of other, similarly situated
entities.
Third, India argued that the panel erred in
finding that the provision of goods by a government can be de facto
specific, merely based on the inherent limitations of the goods provided. In
India's view, the panel's interpretation creates redundancy in the
SCM Agreement by permitting the authority to find specificity as a matter
of course. The Appellate Body considered that it may be the case that, in
respect of a provision of goods, there is a greater likelihood of a finding
of specificity in instances where the input good is used by only a
circumscribed group of entities and/or industries. At the same time, this does
not mean that every provision of goods with
limitations inherent in the characteristics of the goods will necessarily lead
to a finding of specificity. The Appellate Body noted, however, that the
analyses under Articles 1.1(a)(1)(iii) and 2.1(c) focus on different
legal questions, neither of which is itself capable of rendering a determination
of a specific subsidy. The Appellate Body upheld the panel's finding rejecting
India's argument that, if the inherent characteristics of the subsidized good
limit the possible use of the subsidy to a certain industry, the subsidy will
not be specific unless the subsidy is further limited to a subset of this
industry.
India requested the Appellate Body to reverse the panel's rejection of a number of
India claims regarding the consistency of Section 1677e(b) of the
US Statute and Section 351.308(a)-(c) of the US Regulations,
"as such" and "as applied", with Article 12.7 of the
SCM Agreement. India claimed on appeal that the panel erred in its
interpretation and application of Article 12.7, and that the panel failed in
its duty under Article 11 of the DSU to make an objective assessment of the
matter before it, in respect of a number of its claims.
First, the Appellate Body considered India's claim that the panel erred
in its interpretation of Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement. India
argued that the panel's statement that investigating authorities are not
required under Article 12.7 to engage in a comparative evaluation
of all available evidence with a view to selecting the best
information reflected an incorrect interpretation. Rather, India argued that
Article 12.7 includes what it termed an
"obligation of conduct" to engage in a comparative
evaluation of all of the available evidence, prior to making a
determination on the "facts available". The Appellate Body reaffirmed
its finding in Mexico
– Anti‑Dumping Measures on Rice that, pursuant to
Article 12.7, an investigating authority must use those "facts
available" that reasonably replace the information that an interested
party failed to provide, with a view to arriving at an accurate determination.
The Appellate Body found that, under this legal standard, an investigating
authority is called upon to engage in a process of evaluation of available
evidence, the extent and nature of which depends on the particular
circumstances of a given case. Where there are several "facts
available" from which to choose, the Appellate Body considered that it
would follow naturally that this process of reasoning and evaluation would
involve a degree of comparison. The Appellate Body disagreed with India's
argument that Article 12.7 necessarily entails a comparative evaluation in all
cases, since the extent and nature of the evaluation required depends on the
circumstances of a given case, e.g. on whether one or several sets of
information are otherwise available to replace the missing information. Turning
to the specific statement of the panel appealed by India, the Appellate
Body observed that it is somewhat ambiguous and open to different readings.
To the extent it can be read to exclude, in all instances, a comparative
evaluation of all available evidence from the legal standard for
Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement, the Appellate Body modified the panel's
finding and found that Article 12.7 requires a process of evaluation of available
evidence, the extent and nature of which depends on the particular
circumstances of a given case.
Second, the Appellate Body considered India's claim that the panel
failed in its duty under Article 11 of the DSU to make an objective
assessment of the meaning of Section 1677e(b) of the
US Statute and Section 351.308(a)-(c) of the US Regulations by
disregarding material evidence. The Appellate Body considered that, where a
party seeks to support its argument on the meaning and operation of a domestic
measure with evidence beyond its text, a panel should undertake a holistic
assessment of all relevant elements, starting with the text of the law and
including, but not limited to, relevant practices of administering
agencies and domestic court rulings. While a review of such evidence
may ultimately reveal that it is not particularly relevant, that it lacks
probative value, or that it is not of a nature or significance to establish a prima facie case, the Appellate Body considered that this
can only be determined after its probative value has been reviewed and
assessed. The Appellate Body noted that India submitted evidence on the meaning
of the challenged laws in the form of judicial decisions, the US Statement
of Administrative Action, and quantitative and qualitative information on
their application, and that the United States submitted evidence on
their legislative history, as well as evidence of examples of their
application. Since the panel's assessment of these US laws did not address this
evidence, and was limited to reproducing excerpts of text of the laws together
with some cursory observations, the Appellate Body found that the panel failed
to comply with its duty under Article 11 of the DSU. Consequently,
the Appellate Body reversed the panel's finding that India failed to
establish a prima facie case that Section 1677e(b)
of the US Statute and Section 351.308(a)-(c) of the US
Regulations are inconsistent "as such" with Article 12.7 of the
SCM Agreement.
The Appellate Body then considered whether it
could complete the legal analysis. In this regard, the Appellate Body recalled
that India made two alternative claims of inconsistency, first that the very
grant of an authorization in the laws to draw an inference that is adverse to
the interests of non-cooperating parties is inconsistent with Article 12.7; and
second that, although the laws are "innocuous" on their face, the
evidence beyond their text establishes that they are applied mandatorily and
are hence inconsistent with Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement. Turning to the
first of these claims, the Appellate Body recalled that, under its interpretation
of Article 12.7, and particularly in the light of the context provided by
Articles 12.4 and 12.11 of the SCM Agreement and Annex II to the
Anti-Dumping Agreement, the permissibility of using an inference derived from
the procedural circumstances in which information is missing depends on whether
such use comports with the legal standard for Article 12.7. The Appellate Body
added that the use of inferences in order to select adverse facts that punish
non‑cooperation would lead to an inaccurate determination and thus not
accord with Article 12.7. Turning to the challenged laws, the Appellate
Body considered that, in the light of their discretionary framing, the use of an adverse inference is capable in
this case of being limited to those instances where it accords with the legal
standard for Article 12.7. The Appellate Body then evaluated India's claim that
the laws represent a system created to punish non‑cooperation by drawing adverse inferences
in every case of non‑cooperation. Contrary to India's claim, the Appellate
Body's review of this evidence did not establish conclusively that the laws
require the USDOC to act inconsistently with of Article 12.7 reflexively in all
cases of non-cooperation. Thus, the Appellate Body found that India did not
establish that Section 1677e(b) of the US Statute and Section
351.308(a)-(c) of the US Regulations are "as such" inconsistent
with Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement.
The Appellate Body then considered India's claims regarding the panel's
"as applied" findings under Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement.
Beginning with India's appeal that the panel applied an "unnecessary burden of proof" regarding India's claim on the
use of a "rule" to select the highest non-de minimis
subsidy rates, the Appellate Body observed that the
panel did not appear to have analysed and discussed the existence or scope of
this "rule", or whether India sufficiently identified the particular
instances of its alleged application. The Appellate Body viewed this as
problematic, since the existence and scope of the "rule", and whether
it was in fact applied in the instances claimed by India, appeared to
constitute threshold matters. Notwithstanding those concerns, the Appellate
Body noted that India's claim on appeal did not call for an assessment of
whether India discharged its burden of proof, but rather, whether the panel
erred in the burden of proof that it set. In this regard, the Appellate Body
noted that India brought a claim before the panel in relation to a number of
instances of application of the measure, and requested it to find that each
specific application resulted in a breach of Article 12.7. The Appellate Body
found that the burden of proof set by the panel, namely, requiring India to
explain how each specific application of the measure breached the legal
standard for Article 12.7, was not in error. Rather, the Appellate Body
considered that India could not have made a prima facie
case for its specific "as applied" claims without demonstrating that
each impugned application was inconsistent with Article 12.7. Thus, the
Appellate Body upheld the panel's finding that India failed to establish a prima facie case of inconsistency
with Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement. The Appellate Body also
rejected India's claim that the panel failed to comply with its duty under Article 11
of the DSU to make an objective assessment of the matter before it in
rejecting India's "as applied" claim against the 2013 sunset review.
India appealed the panel's finding rejecting
India's claims that the examination by the USDOC of new subsidy
allegations in administrative reviews is inconsistent with Articles 11.1,
13.1, 21.1, 21.2, 22.1, and 22.2 of the SCM Agreement. India argued that
the panel erred in interpreting the relationship between Articles 11 and
21 of the SCM Agreement by concluding that the requirements of
Article 11 do not apply to administrative reviews conducted pursuant to
Article 21 of the SCM Agreement. India also alleged that the panel
breached its duties under Articles 11 and 12.7 of the DSU to conduct
an objective assessment of the matter before it and to provide a "basic
rationale" for its findings. Consequently, India requested the
Appellate Body to reverse the panel's finding rejecting India's claims
under Articles 11.1, 13.1, 22.1, and 22.2 of the SCM Agreement, and
further requested the Appellate Body to complete the legal analysis in
respect of these claims.
India's position on appeal differed somewhat
from its position before the panel. Before the panel, India contended that
Article 21 of the SCM Agreement does not allow an investigating authority
to examine new subsidy allegations in an administrative review. However, India
did not appeal the panel's finding that an investigating authority may examine
new subsidy allegations in the conduct of an administrative review pursuant to
Article 21 of the SCM Agreement. India also did not challenge the
precise considerations that the USDOC took into account in deciding to examine
each of the new subsidy allegations at issue. Rather, India's position on
appeal was that, where any Article 21 review is conducted and involves the
examination of new subsidy allegations, such examination must comply with
the requirements set out in Articles 11, 13, and 22 of the
SCM Agreement.
The Appellate Body determined that
Articles 21.1 and 21.2 of the SCM Agreement permit investigating
authorities to examine new subsidy allegations in the conduct of an administrative
review. Such examination, while subject, mutatis mutandis,
to the public notice requirements set out in Article 22 of the
SCM Agreement, would not be subject to the obligations set out in
Articles 11 and 13 of the SCM Agreement. The Appellate Body
added that Article 21 of the SCM Agreement requires an investigating
authority to establish that there is a sufficiently close nexus between the
subsidies that are the subject of the original investigation and the new
subsidy allegations that the investigating authority proposes to examine as
part of its administrative review. However, India's appeal did not call upon
the Appellate Body to determine which of these factors were applicable or
ought to have been taken into account in this case. The Appellate Body
therefore upheld the panel's finding rejecting India's claims that the USDOC's
examination of new subsidy allegations in administrative reviews is
inconsistent with Articles 11.1, 13.1, 21.1, and 21.2 of the
SCM Agreement, but reversed the panel's finding rejecting India's claims
that the USDOC's examination of new subsidy allegations in administrative
reviews is inconsistent with Articles 22.1 and 22.2 of the
SCM Agreement.
The Appellate Body then assessed whether
it was in a position to complete the legal analysis in respect of India's
claims under Articles 22.1 and 22.2 of the SCM Agreement. The Appellate Body
observed that the panel, having determined that Article 22 does not apply
to administrative reviews, did not further examine India's claims under
Article 22. Moreover, the Appellate Body did not find, on the panel
record, sufficient arguments and evidence specific to the eight new subsidy
allegations to which India's claims related that would have assisted the
Appellate Body in addressing this issue. For these reasons, the
Appellate Body was unable to complete the legal analysis in respect of
India's claim under Articles 22.1 and 22.2 of the SCM Agreement.
The Appellate Body also rejected India's claims that the panel acted
inconsistently with Articles 11 and 12.7 of the DSU.
With regard to Article 15 of the SCM
Agreement, the United States alleged that the panel erred in finding that
Articles 15.3 and 15.1, 15.2, 15.4, and 15.5 do not authorize investigating
authorities to assess cumulatively the effects of imports that are not subject
to countervailing duty investigations ("non-subsidized imports") with
the effects of imports that are subject to such investigations
("subsidized imports"). The Appellate Body found that the text of
Article 15.3 is clear in stipulating that only subsidized imports may be
subject to a cumulative assessment of the effects of imports under
Article 15.3. Furthermore, the fact that several provisions of Article 15,
as well as other provisions throughout Part V of the SCM Agreement refer
to "subsidized imports", rather than to "imports" in
general, suggests that the injury analysis must be limited to consideration
of "subsidized imports".
The Appellate Body further considered Article
3.1 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement as relevant context, noting that it contains
a similar requirement concerning injury determinations in anti‑dumping
investigations. The Appellate Body recalled that with respect to this provision
it had previously held that investigating authorities must ensure they consider
only imports that are dumped, and exclude imports that are not dumped. The
Appellate Body held that the same rationale applies in the context of Article
15.1 of the SCM Agreement. Accordingly, the Appellate Body found that
the panel did not err in finding that Articles 15.3 and 15.1, 15.2, 15.4,
and 15.5 do not authorize investigating authorities to assess cumulatively the
effects of non‑subsidized, dumped imports with the effects of subsidized
imports.
In addition, the Appellate Body found no
support in the SCM Agreement for the United States' argument that Article
15 of the SCM Agreement must allow an investigating authority to take
account of the effects that all unfairly traded imports (i.e. dumped as well as
subsidized imports) are having on the domestic industry. Moreover, the
Appellate Body found that the panel did not err in rejecting the
United States' argument that Article 15.3 is silent on the issue of
whether cross‑cumulation of the effects of dumped and subsidized imports is
permissible. The Appellate Body agreed with the panel that Article 15 is not
silent on the question of cross-cumulation and concurred with the panel
that imports being subject to simultaneous countervailing duty investigations
is a necessary pre‑condition for a cumulative assessment to be undertaken
consistently with Article 15.3 of the SCM Agreement.
The United States further alleged that the panel
failed to comply with its obligation under Article 11 of the DSU to make
an objective assessment of the matter before it, because it failed to provide
reasoning as to the meaning of the domestic law at issue and in particular why
Section 1677(7)(G) requires, in certain situations, that the USITC assess
cumulatively the effects of subsidized imports with the effects of dumped,
non-subsidized imports. The Appellate Body noted the limited nature of the
parties' submissions before the panel as to the meaning of
Section 1677(7)(G) and whether it requires the USITC to assess
cumulatively the effects of subsidized imports with the effects of
non-subsidized, but dumped imports. Nevertheless, the Appellate Body found
that the panel was required to analyse whether and to what extent
Section 16777(7)(G) requires the USITC to assess cumulatively the effects
of subsidized imports with the effects of dumped, non-subsidized imports. The
Appellate Body found that the panel had failed to articulate clearly the scope
of its finding of inconsistency, and thus failed to comply with its duty under
Article 11 of the DSU to conduct an objective assessment of the matter before
it. Consequently, the Appellate Body reversed the panel's finding that
Section 1677(7)(G) is inconsistent "as such" with Articles
15.3 and 15.1, 15.2, 15.4, and 15.5 of the SCM Agreement.
Having reversed the panel's finding that
Section 1677(7)(G) is inconsistent "as such" with Articles 15.3
and 15.1, 15.2, 15.4, and 15.5 of the SCM Agreement, the Appellate Body, in
seeking to complete the legal analysis, turned to consider whether Section
1677(7)(G) indeed requires the USITC to cumulate the effects of subsidized
imports with the effects of non-subsidized, but dumped imports. Section
1677(7)(G) contemplates three scenarios. With regard to two scenarios under
Section 1677(7)(G)(i and ii), the Appellate Body concluded that it was unclear
whether these provisions require such cross-cumulation, namely, where petitions
to initiate countervailing duty investigations or anti-dumping duty
investigations were filed on the same day, and where countervailing duty investigations
or antidumping duty investigations were initiated by the investigating
authority investigation on the same day. However, with regard to the third
scenario under Section 1677(7)(g)(iii), the Appellate Body found that it
does require the USITC to cumulate the effects of subsidized imports with the
effects of non-subsidized, but dumped imports. More specifically,
Section 1677(7)(g)(iii) requires the investigating authority to
cumulatively assess the volume and effect of subject merchandise from all
countries with respect to which petitions to initiate countervailing duty
investigations or anti-dumping duty
investigations were filed and
countervailing duty investigations or antidumping
duty investigations were initiated by the investigating authority on the same
day. Thus, the Appellate Body concluded that Section 1677(7)(G)(iii) of
the US Statute is inconsistent "as such" with Article 15.3 and with
Articles 15.1, 15.2, 15.4, and 15.5 of the SCM Agreement.
This dispute concerned countervailing
duties imposed by the United States following 17 countervailing duty
investigations initiated by the US Department of Commerce (USDOC) between 2007
and 2012.[34]
Before the panel, China challenged several
aspects of the investigations leading to the imposition of these duties,
including the United States' application of an alleged "rebuttable
presumption" to determine whether Chinese state-owned enterprises
(SOEs) can be characterized as "public bodies" within the
meaning of the SCM Agreement. Specifically, China claimed that: (i) the USDOC's
findings of financial contribution are inconsistent with Article 1.1(a)(1) of
the SCM Agreement because the USDOC incorrectly determined, or did not
have a sufficient basis to determine, that certain SOEs are "public
bodies"; (ii) the USDOC's "rebuttable presumption" is, as such,
inconsistent with Article 1.1(a)(1) of the SCM Agreement; (iii) the USDOC's
initiation of four investigations is inconsistent with Articles 11.2 and
11.3 of the SCM Agreement due to insufficient evidence that SOEs constitute
"public bodies"; (iv) the USDOC's determinations that a benefit was
conferred because SOEs provided inputs for less than adequate remuneration were
inconsistent with Articles 14(d) and 1.1(b) of the SCM Agreement; (v) the
USDOC's findings of specificity are inconsistent with Articles 2.1 and 2.4 of
the SCM Agreement; (vi) the USDOC's initiation of investigations is inconsistent
with Articles 11.2 and 11.3 of the SCM Agreement due to insufficient
evidence of specificity; (vii) the USDOC's use of adverse "facts
available" is inconsistent with Article 12.7 of the SCM
Agreement; (viii) the USDOC's findings of regional specificity are
inconsistent with Articles 2.2 and 2.4 of the SCM Agreement; (ix) The
USDOC's initiation of investigations is inconsistent with Articles 11.2 and
11.3 of the SCM Agreement in two investigations; (x) the USDOC's determination
that export restraints provided a "financial contribution" is
inconsistent with Article 1.1(a) of the SCM Agreement in two investigations;
and (xi) in each instance where the panel made a finding of inconsistency under
the SCM Agreement, the United States had also acted inconsistently with
Articles 10 and 32.1 of the SCM Agreement and Article VI:3 of the
GATT 1994.
The panel found that: (i) in 12 countervailing duty investigations, the
United States acted inconsistently with Article 1.1(a)(1) of the SCM
Agreement when the USDOC found that SOEs were public bodies; (ii) the USDOC's
policy to presume that a majority government-owned entity is a public body is
inconsistent "as such" with Article 1.1(a)(1) of the SCM Agreement;
(iii) in four investigations, China failed to establish that the USDOC
acted inconsistently with the United States' obligations under Article 11
of the SCM Agreement by initiating the investigations without sufficient
evidence of a financial contribution; (iv) in 12 investigations, China failed
to establish that the USDOC acted inconsistently with the United States'
obligations under Articles 14(d) or 1.1(b) of the SCM Agreement by
rejecting in-country private prices in China; (v) in 12 investigations,
the United States acted inconsistently with the last sentence of Article 2.1(c)
of the SCM Agreement, but China failed to establish that the USDOC acted
inconsistently with the United States' obligations under Article 2.1(c) by
failing: (a) to apply the first of the "other factors" in the
provision at issue; (b) to apply a "subsidy program"; or (c) to identify
a "granting authority"; (vi) in 14 investigations, China failed
to establish that the USDOC acted inconsistently with the United States'
obligations under Article 11 of the SCM Agreement by initiating the
investigations without sufficient evidence of specificity; (vii) in 13 investigations,
China had not established that the USDOC acted inconsistently with the
United States' obligations under Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement
by not relying on facts available; (viii) in six investigations,
the USDOC acted inconsistently with Article 2.2 of the SCM Agreement by
failing to establish regional specificity; (ix) in two investigations, the
USDOC acted inconsistently with the United States' obligations under Article
11.3 of the SCM Agreement by initiating investigations in respect of certain
export restraints; and (x) consequently, the United States acted
inconsistently with Articles 10 and 32.1 of the SCM Agreement.
On appeal, China challenged the panel's findings that China failed to
establish that the USDOC acted inconsistently with the United States'
obligations under Articles 14(d) and 1.1(b) of the SCM Agreement.
In particular, China alleged that the panel: (i) erred in its interpretation
of Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement in finding that China's claims
rested on an erroneous interpretation of that provision; (ii) acted
inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU in finding that China failed to
establish the factual premise for its claims in four investigations;
and (iii) erred in its application of Articles 14(d) and 1.1(b)
of the SCM Agreement in finding that China failed to establish that the USDOC's
benefit determinations are inconsistent with these provisions. With respect to
the panel's findings on the USDOC's determinations of de facto
specificity under Article 2.1(c) of the SCM Agreement in respect of 12
investigations, China maintained that the panel erred in: (i) finding that
the USDOC did not act inconsistently with the United States' obligations
under Article 2.1 of the SCM Agreement by analysing specificity exclusively
under Article 2.1(c); (ii) rejecting China's claims that the USDOC acted
inconsistently with the United States' obligations under Article 2.1(c) of the
SCM Agreement by failing to identify a "subsidy programme"; and (iii)
rejecting China's claims that the USDOC acted inconsistently with the United
States' obligations under Article 2.1 of the SCM Agreement by failing to
identify a granting authority. As regards the panel's findings under Article
12.7 of the SCM agreement on the instances of use of adverse "facts available" by the USDOC, China claimed that the panel acted inconsistently with
Article 11 of the DSU by failing to make an objective assessment of the matter
before it.
In its other appeal, the United States argued that the panel erred in
finding that China's panel request, as it relates to its claims under Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement, is not inconsistent with Article
6.2 of the DSU.
China's panel request alleged that, with
respect to all of the countervailing duty investigations identified therein in
which the USDOC issued preliminary or final determinations, the United States
acted inconsistently with "Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement,
because the USDOC resorted to facts available, and used facts available,
including so-called 'adverse' facts available, in manners that were
inconsistent with that provision". China's panel request also stated that
it was bringing "as applied" claims "in respect of each instance
in which the USDOC used facts available, including 'adverse' facts
available, to support its findings of financial contribution, specificity,
and benefit". The United States argued on appeal that China's panel
request failed to provide "a brief summary of the legal basis of the
complaint sufficient to present the problem clearly", as required
under Article 6.2 of the DSU, for failing to "plainly connect"
the "facts available" obligation in Article 12.7 of the
SCM Agreement to the 22 investigations in the panel request.
The Appellate Body noted that the two
requirements under Article 6.2 of the DSU to "identify the specific
measures at issue" and to "provide a brief summary of the legal basis
of the complaint sufficient to present the problem clearly" are central to
the establishment of a panel's jurisdiction, and fulfils a due process
objective by putting the respondent and the third parties on notice of the case
against them. Article 6.2 requires that the legal basis of the complaint
(the claim) be set out in the panel request in a manner that is sufficient to
present the problem clearly. A "claim" is an allegation that the
respondent party has violated, or nullified or impaired the benefits arising
from, an identified provision of a particular agreement. While a panel request
must set out the claim(s), there is no requirement under Article 6.2 that
a panel request must provide arguments in support thereof. While arguments are
put forth to prove a claim, a "brief summary" of the claim aims to
explain succinctly how or why a measure at issue is considered to be violating a
WTO obligation.
The Appellate Body noted that, under
Article 6.2 of the DSU, it is the measures at issue that are to be
"plainly connected" to the provision at issue, which in this case
refers to Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement, and not to the
"instances" of the use of facts available by the USDOC. The language
of China's panel request was clear that China was challenging all
"instances" of the use of facts available by the USDOC. China's panel
request also specified that China's claims under Article 12.7 concerned
those instances in which the USDOC used facts available "in support of its
findings of financial contribution, specificity and benefit" in the
context of the specific measures at issue. The Appellate Body disagreed with
the United States that the inadequacy of the identification of instances in
China's panel request was evidenced by the inconsistency between China's
assertions at the initial stages of the dispute (i.e. all instances of the use
of facts available would be challenged), and the instances identified in the
later stages (i.e. "only 48 instances of the use of 'adverse' facts
available were being challenged"). The Appellate Body noted that a
complainant's prerogative to narrow or abandon its claims is different from an
assessment of the consistency of a panel request with the requirements under
Article 6.2, which must be assessed in the light of the language used in
the panel request at the time it was filed.
The Appellate Body also rejected the United
States' argument that Article 12.7 contained multiple, distinct
obligations that made it necessary for China to specify which of the various
obligations under Article 12.7 the United States was alleged to have
breached. The fact that, under Article 12.7, an investigating
authority can resort to facts available in different scenarios involving
non-cooperation specified in that provision does not mean that
Article 12.7 contains multiple, distinct obligations. Instead, Article 12.7
imposes the obligation on an investigating authority to use those facts
available that reasonably replace the missing information, with a view to
arriving at an accurate determination.
China's panel request indicated that China
took issue with the "manners" in which the USDOC "resorted to
facts available, and used facts available, including so-called 'adverse' facts
available". For the Appellate Body, this language shows that the challenge
concerned the consistency of each instance in which the USDOC used facts
available with the "manners" in which an investigating authority can
act inconsistently with Article 12.7. Thus, the "problem", for
the purpose of Article 6.2, was the "manners" in which the USDOC
"resorted to" and "used facts available". The Appellate
Body agreed with the panel that providing further details would amount to
setting out arguments, which do not need to be included in a panel request. For
these reasons, the Appellate Body upheld the panel's finding that China's panel
request was consistent with Article 6.2.
China argued on appeal that the panel erred
in finding that China failed to establish that the USDOC acted inconsistently
with Article 14(d) and Article 1.1(b) of the SCM Agreement
by rejecting private prices in China as benchmarks in its benefit analyses.
China argued that the legal standard for determining what constitutes
"government" – in particular, a "public body" – for
purposes of the financial contribution inquiry under Article 1.1(a)(1)(iii)
of the SCM Agreement should also apply when determining what constitutes
"government" for purposes of the selection of a benefit benchmark
under Article 14(d). According to China, the panel erred in its
interpretation of Article 14(d), and acted inconsistently with
Article 11 of the DSU in concluding that China failed to establish that the
USDOC treated SOEs as public bodies and as part of the government in the
collective sense. Accordingly, China requested the Appellate Body to reverse
the panel's ultimate finding that China failed to establish that the USDOC
acted inconsistently with Article 14(d) and Article 1.1(b) of the
SCM Agreement in respect of the benefit analysis in four investigations,
namely, the Oil Country Tubular Goods (OCTG), Solar Panels, Pressure Pipe, and
Line Pipe investigations.
According to
the United States, the panel properly concluded that there was nothing in the
text of Article 14(d) or in WTO jurisprudence requiring the same analysis
with respect to the financial contribution and benefit elements of a subsidy,
as these are distinct aspects of a countervailing duty investigation that play
different roles. The United States argued that China's approach would prevent
investigating authorities from properly analysing the ways in which a
government can interfere in a given marketplace and distort prices, and would
result in a benefit calculation that would not capture how much better off the recipient is
through a financial contribution.
The Appellate
Body agreed with China that there is a single legal standard that defines the
term "government" under the SCM Agreement. The term
"government" under Article 1.1(a)(1) of the SCM Agreement,
encompasses both the government in the "narrow sense" and "any
public body within the territory of a Member". However, the fact that the
SCM Agreement establishes a single definition does not mean that, under
Article 14(d), a proper analysis for selecting a benefit benchmark is
dependent on an examination of whether any relevant entities in the market fall
within the definition of "government", including on the basis of a finding
that an SOE is a public body. The existence of a single standard for
defining "government" does not answer the question of whether the
prices of goods provided by private or government-related entities in the country
of provision are market determined for purposes of selecting a benefit
benchmark.
The Appellate
Body recalled that the second sentence of Article 14(d) prescribes that
the adequacy of remuneration for government-provided goods or services
"shall be determined in relation to prevailing market conditions for
the good or service in question in the country of provision or purchase".
In US – Carbon Steel (India), the Appellate
Body found that "prevailing market conditions" in the context of
Article 14(d) "consist of generally accepted characteristics of an
area of economic activity in which the forces of supply and demand interact to
determine market prices". The inquiry under Article 14(d) has a
market orientation because it requires that the assessment of the adequacy of
remuneration for a government‑provided good must be made in relation to prevailing
market conditions in the country of provision. Thus, any benchmark for
conducting such an assessment must consist of market‑determined prices for the
same or similar goods that relate or refer to, or are connected with, the
prevailing market conditions for the good in the country of provision. Proper
benchmark prices for purposes of the benefit determination would normally
emanate from the market for the goods in the country of provision. To the
extent that such in‑country prices are market determined, they would
necessarily have the requisite connection with the prevailing market conditions
in the country of provision that is prescribed by the second sentence of
Article 14(d). According to the Appellate Body, such in-country prices
could emanate from a variety of sources, including private or
government-related entities.
The Appellate
Body further noted its finding in US – Carbon Steel (India)
that investigating authorities bear the responsibility of conducting the
necessary analysis in order to determine whether the proposed benchmark prices
are market determined such that they can be used to assess whether remuneration
is less than adequate. This responsibility encompasses a requirement to conduct
a sufficiently diligent investigation into, and solicitation of, relevant
facts, and to base a determination on positive evidence on the record. The
chapeau of Article 14 requires investigating authorities to explain
adequately, consistent with the guidelines set out in the provision, the
application of the methodology to calculate the amount of benefit that is
conferred by a government-provided financial contribution. According to the
Appellate Body, what an investigating authority must do in conducting the
necessary analysis for the purpose of arriving at a proper benefit benchmark
will, however, vary depending upon the circumstances of the case, the characteristics
of the market being examined, and the nature, quantity, and quality of the
information supplied by petitioners and respondents, including such additional
information that an investigating authority seeks to ensure that it may base
its determination on positive evidence on the record. In all cases, in arriving
at a proper benchmark, an investigating authority must explain the basis for
its conclusions in its determinations.
The Appellate
Body noted that, depending on the circumstances, some types of prices may,
from an evidentiary standpoint, be more easily found to constitute market‑determined
prices in the country of provision. In US – Carbon Steel (India),
the Appellate Body observed that "the primary benchmark, and
therefore the starting point of the analysis in determining a benchmark for the
purposes of Article 14(d)…, is the price at which the same or similar
goods are sold by private suppliers in arm's length transactions in the country
of provision". This is because private prices in the market of provision
will generally represent an appropriate measure of the "adequacy of
remuneration" for the provision of goods. However, there is no hierarchy,
in the abstract, between in‑country prices from different sources that can be
relied upon in arriving at a proper benchmark because the issue of whether a
price may be relied upon for benefit benchmarking purposes under
Article 14(d) is not a function of its source, but whether the price is a
market-determined price reflective of prevailing market conditions in the
country of provision.
The Appellate
Body pointed out that, while in-country private prices may serve as the starting
point of the analysis under Article 14(d), this does not mean that, having
identified such prices, the analysis must necessarily end there. Prices of
goods provided by government-related entities, other than the entity providing
the financial contribution at issue, must also be examined to determine whether
they are market determined that can form part of a proper benchmark. The reason
why the prices of goods provided by government-related entities for which there
has not been a "public body" determination need to be examined in
selecting a benefit benchmark under Article 14(d) is because there is no
legal presumption under this provision that in‑country prices from any
particular source can or should be discarded in a benchmark analysis. Rather,
Article 14(d) requires an analysis of the market in the country of provision
to determine whether particular in-country prices can be relied upon in
arriving at a proper benchmark. Although prices found to exist in the market
for the good in question in the country of provision should normally be taken
into account in identifying a proper benchmark, there may be circumstances in
which the use of such in-country prices would not be appropriate. In US – Carbon Steel (India), the Appellate Body
observed that it would not be appropriate to rely on such prices when they are
not market determined, as "a government, in its role as a provider of a
good, may distort in‑country private prices for that good by setting an
artificially low price with which the prices of private providers in the
market align". In such circumstances, those prices cannot be said to be
market determined. The Appellate Body emphasized that the ability of a
government provider to have such an influence on in-country private prices
presupposes that it has sufficient market power to do so.
The Appellate
Body noted that, in conducting the necessary analysis to determine whether in‑country
prices are distorted, an investigating authority may be called upon to examine
various aspects of the relevant market. Although a government's predominant
role as a supplier in the market makes it likely that prices will be distorted,
the distortion of in‑country prices must be established on the basis of the
particular facts underlying each countervailing duty investigation. In US – Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China), the
Appellate Body indicated that an investigating authority may reject in‑country
prices if there is price distortion, and, thus, the analysis is not
limited to determining whether the government is a predominant supplier. The Appellate
Body cautioned against equating the concept of government predominance with the
concept of price distortion, and highlighted that the link between the two
concepts is an evidentiary one. Also, in conducting the necessary analysis to
determine whether in-country prices are distorted or market determined, an
investigating authority may be called upon to examine "the structure
of the relevant market, including the type of entities operating in that
market, their respective market share, as well as any entry barriers. It
could also require assessing the behaviour of the entities operating in that
market in order to determine whether the government itself, or acting through
government-related entities, exerts market power so as to distort in‑country
prices." Such an analysis may lead an investigating authority to conclude
that in‑country prices cannot be relied upon in determining a benchmark for the
purposes of Article 14(d), and that an alternative benchmark should be
employed. The Appellate Body, however, underscored the importance of making
appropriate adjustments to ensure that alternative benchmarks reflect
prevailing market conditions in the country of provision.
Thus, while the
Appellate Body agreed with China that there is a single definition of the term
"government" for purposes of the SCM Agreement, it did not
consider that the panel erred by rejecting China's claim partly on the basis
that "a government can distort prices in other ways than through its role as
a provider of the financial contribution." China's argument that there is
a single standard for defining the term "government" did not answer
the question of whether a proposed in-country price is a market-determined
price for the same or similar goods in the country of provision and, thus,
whether it may serve as a benchmark for determining benefit.
Furthermore, while
the Appellate Body agreed with China that, in US –
Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China), the focus of the
analysis was not on the same interpretative issue as raised by China in this
dispute, the Appellate Body considered that its report in
US – Anti‑Dumping
and Countervailing Duties (China) clarified several issues relevant
for addressing China's claims in this case. In that dispute, the Appellate Body
explained that price distortion must be established on a case-by-case basis and
that an investigating authority cannot base a finding of price distortion
merely on the finding that the government is a predominant supplier, and cannot
refuse to consider evidence relating to factors other than market share.
The Appellate
Body considered that the panel correctly relied on the Appellate Body's
findings in US – Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China)
in rejecting China's argument that "SOE presence in the market could
support a distortion finding only if the SOEs at issue were properly found to
be public bodies within the meaning of Article 1.1(a)(1)."
In the
Appellate Body's view, China's argument was premised on the understanding that
it is sufficient for purposes of establishing a prima facie
case of inconsistency under Article 14(d) with respect to each of the
USDOC's benefit determinations at issue to show that: (i) the USDOC's
price distortion findings were predicated on its equation of SOEs with
government; and (ii) the USDOC's equation of SOEs with government was not
made in accordance with the legal standard articulated in US –
Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China). The Appellate Body
rejected China's argument that the decision to have recourse to an alternative
benchmark was inconsistent with Article 14(d) if it is established that
the SOEs were equated with government without meeting the legal standard in US – Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties (China). The
Appellate Body stated that, instead of hinging on whether a government-owned
entity has been properly found to constitute a public body, a finding of
inconsistency with Article 14(d) in the selection of a benefit benchmark
depends on whether or not the investigating authority at issue conducted the
necessary market analysis to evaluate whether the proposed benchmark prices are
market determined such that they can be used to assess whether the remuneration
is less than adequate.
While the Appellate
Body acknowledged that investigating authorities may have to examine the structure
of the relevant market, including the nature of the entities operating in that
market, their respective market shares, and any entry barriers, it
nevertheless emphasized that evidence relating to government ownership of SOEs
and their respective market shares does not in itself provide a sufficient
basis for concluding that in-country prices are distorted. Investigating
authorities may be required to assess "the behaviour of the entities
operating in that market in order to determine whether the government itself,
or acting through government-related entities, exerts market power so as to
distort in‑country prices". Thus, investigating authorities may be called
upon to examine the conditions of competition in the relevant market in order
to assess whether the government is influencing the pricing conduct of any
government-related or private entities. The Appellate Body recalled that the
specific type of analysis that an investigating authority must conduct for the
purpose of arriving at a proper benchmark will vary depending upon the
circumstances of the case, the characteristics of the market being examined,
and the nature, quantity, and quality of the information supplied by petitioners
and respondents, including additional information that an investigating
authority may seek in order to base its determination on positive evidence on
the record. In all cases, the Appellate Body stressed that, in arriving at a
proper benchmark, an investigating authority must provide a reasoned and
adequate explanation of the basis for its conclusions in its determination. Once
an investigating authority has properly established and explained that in‑country
prices are distorted, it is warranted to have recourse to an alternative
benchmark for the benefit analysis under Article 14(d).
Thus, while
there is a single definition of "government" for purposes of the SCM Agreement,
it does not follow that, in determining the appropriate benefit benchmark
under Article 14(d), investigating authorities are required to limit their
analysis to an examination of the role played in the market by
government-related entities that have been properly found to be government in
the narrow sense, or public bodies. Because the issue of whether a price may be
relied upon for benchmarking purposes under Article 14(d) is not a
function of its source, but whether it is a market-determined
price reflective of prevailing market conditions in the country of provision,
the selection of a benchmark for the purposes of Article 14(d)
cannot, at the outset, exclude consideration of in‑country prices
from any particular source, including government‑related prices other than the
financial contribution at issue.
China argued
that the panel acted inconsistently with Article 11 of the DSU in finding
that China failed to establish the "factual premise" of its claims,
i.e. that the USDOC actually treated SOEs as public bodies and thus as part of
the government in the collective sense in the context of the benefit analysis
in the four countervailing duty investigations.
The Appellate
Body understood China's claim under Article 11 to be premised on its
interpretation of Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement. Having rejected
China's arguments concerning the panel's findings regarding the legal predicate
of China's claim, the Appellate Body saw no need to make additional findings
with respect to China's claim regarding the factual predicate of its claims
under Article 11 of the DSU in order to provide a positive solution to
this dispute.
The panel rejected
China's argument that "SOE presence in the market could support a
distortion finding only if the SOEs at issue were properly found to be public
bodies within the meaning of Article 1.1(a)(1)". China argued
that the panel erred in its application of Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement
to the USDOC's determinations at issue by applying the reasoning in
US – Anti-Dumping
and Countervailing Duties (China) as regards the USDOC's benefit
findings. The Appellate Body considered this to be in line with its
findings in that case, to the extent that the panel understood these findings
as indicating that the selection of a benchmark for the purposes of
Article 14(d) cannot, at the outset, exclude consideration of in‑country
prices from any particular source, and that a proper finding that recourse to
an alternative benchmark is justified requires an investigating authority to carry
out the necessary market analysis in order to determine whether the proposed
benchmark prices are market determined or distorted by government intervention.
Nonetheless,
the Appellate Body did not consider that the panel properly applied the
standard required by Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement to the
challenged determinations. The panel failed to conduct a case‑by‑case analysis
of whether the USDOC had properly examined whether the relevant in-country
prices are market determined or distorted by government intervention in each of
the investigations at issue. Rather, the panel simply assumed that because the
Appellate Body had faced a similar situation in US – Anti‑Dumping
and Countervailing Duties (China), China failed to establish that
the USDOC acted inconsistently with the United States' obligations under
Article 14(d). In the light of the correct interpretation of
Article 14(d), the Appellate Body did not consider the panel's analysis
and reasoning sufficient to conclude that the USDOC properly rejected in‑country
prices in China as benchmarks for purposes of the benefit analysis.
The Appellate
Body therefore reversed the panel's finding upholding the USDOC's rejection of
private prices as potential benchmarks in the investigations under challenge on
the grounds that such prices were distorted. The Appellate Body also reversed
the panel's conclusion that China had not established that the USDOC acted
inconsistently with the obligations of the United States under
Article 14(d) or Article 1.1(b) of the SCM Agreement by
rejecting in-country private prices in China as benchmarks for the relevant
challenged investigations. Consequently, as requested by China, the Appellate
Body reversed the panel's ultimate finding that China failed to establish that
the USDOC acted inconsistently with the obligations of the United States under
Article 14(d) or Article 1.1(b) of the SCM Agreement by
rejecting in-country prices in China in respect of the OCTG, Solar panels,
Pressure Pipe, and Line Pipe countervailing duty investigations.
The Appellate
Body examined China's request for it to complete the legal analysis and find
that the USDOC determinations that SOEs provided inputs for less than adequate
remuneration in four investigations were inconsistent
"as applied" with Articles 14(d) and 1.1(b) of the
SCM Agreement.
Regarding the
legal standard to be applied under Articles 14(d) and 1.1(b), the Appellate
Body recalled that the chapeau of Article 14 requires investigating
authorities to explain adequately, consistent with the guidelines under
Article 14, the application of the methodology for calculating the amount
of benefit conferred by a government-provided financial contribution. In
arriving at a proper benchmark, an investigating authority must explain the
basis for its conclusions in its determination. Further, Article 14(d) of
the SCM Agreement "establishes no legal presumption that in‑country
prices from any particular source can be discarded in a benchmark
analysis." Thus, prices of government-related entities other than the
entity providing the financial contribution at issue must also "be
examined to assess whether they are market determined and can therefore form
part of a proper benchmark." The Appellate Body also recalled that, in
conducting the necessary analysis to determine whether proposed in-country
prices can be relied upon in arriving at a proper benchmark, an investigating
authority may be called upon to examine various aspects of the relevant market
and that "what an investigating authority must do in conducting the necessary
analysis for the purpose of arriving at a proper benchmark will vary depending
on, inter alia, the circumstances of
the case and the characteristics of the market being examined.
The Appellate Body found that the USDOC did not consider whether the prices of Government of China
(GOC) owned or controlled firms as such were market determined. The USDOC
accepted without any examination that those government-related prices were
automatically distorted by governmental intervention. Thus, the Appellate Body
found that the USDOC's analysis and
explanation for rejecting in-country prices in China in its benchmark analysis
was inconsistent with the United States' obligations under Articles 14(d) and
1.1(b) of the SCM Agreement.
The Appellate Body observed that the essence of the USDOC's findings
was that 37 out of a total of 47 producers of polysilicon in China were the
entities through which the GOC influenced and distorted the domestic
market. While the role of these 37 producers in the relevant market could, in
principle, suggest that the presence of these government-related entities could
be "significant" or "predominant", "an investigating
authority cannot, based simply on a finding that the government is the
predominant supplier of the relevant goods, refuse to consider evidence
relating to factors other than government market share." The USDOC neither
explained whether and how the 37 producers possessed and exerted market power distorting
other in-country prices, nor explained whether the prices of the
government-related entities were market determined. Thus, the Appellate Body
found that the USDOC's analysis and explanation for rejecting in-country prices
in its benchmark analysis in the Solar Panels countervailing duty investigation
was inconsistent with the United States' obligations under Articles 14(d)
and 1.1(b) of the SCM Agreement.
The Appellate Body noted that the USDOC's decision to have recourse to
an alternative benchmark was based on the market share of government‑owned/‑controlled
firms in domestic production. The USDOC concluded that "prices stemming
from private transactions within China cannot give rise to a price that is
sufficiently free from the effects of the GOC's actions, and therefore cannot
be considered to meet the statutory and regulatory requirement for the use of
market-determined prices to measure the adequacy of remuneration." However, Article 14(d)
of the SCM Agreement establishes no legal presumption that in‑country
prices from any particular source can be discarded in a benchmark analysis.
Moreover, the USDOC did not explain in its determination whether and how the
mentioned market shares held by SOEs actually resulted in the government's
possession and exercise of market power such that price distortion occurred in
a way that private suppliers aligned their prices with those of the
government-provided goods. Thus, the Appellate Body found that the USDOC's
analysis and explanation for rejecting in-country prices in China in its
benchmark analysis in the Pressure Pipe countervailing duty investigation was
inconsistent with the United States' obligations under Articles 14(d)
and 1.1(b) of the SCM Agreement.
The Appellate Body noted that, through the application of
"adverse" facts available, the USDOC assumed that government-owned
producers manufactured all hot-rolled
steel produced in China during the period of investigation. The USDOC's
distortion finding appeared to have been predicated on its determination that
entities "owned or controlled" by the government can be treated as
"GOC authorities", and that prices of goods provided by such entities
can be discarded in a benchmark analysis solely on the basis of government
ownership or control. Yet, the relevant inquiry for finding a proper benchmark under
Article 14(d) of the SCM Agreement is whether or not certain
in-country prices are distorted, rather than whether such prices originate from
a particular source (e.g. government-owned entities). In addition, a finding of government ownership and control of certain entities alone
cannot serve as the sole basis for establishing price distortion, and
government-related prices cannot be discarded in a benchmark analysis without
an examination of whether or not they are market-determined. The Appellate Body
thus found that the USDOC's analysis and explanation for rejecting "prices
stemming from private transactions" in China in its benchmark
analysis in this investigation was inconsistent with the United States'
obligations under Articles 14(d) and 1.1(b) of the
SCM Agreement.
China argued
that the panel erred in its interpretation and application of Article 2.1
when it found that the USDOC did not act inconsistently with the United States'
obligations under Article 2.1 by analysing specificity exclusively
under Article 2.1(c) of the SCM Agreement. China also asserted that
the panel erred in its interpretation and application of the term "subsidy
programme" in Article 2.1(c) by finding that the consistent
provision by the SOEs of inputs for less than adequate remuneration provided an
objective basis for the USDOC to identify sufficiently a subsidy programme
under Article 2.1(c). Lastly, China argued that the panel erred in its
application of Article 2.1 when it found that "the relevant
jurisdiction was at the very least implicitly understood to be China" in
the challenged investigations, and that China had therefore failed to establish
that the USDOC acted inconsistently with Article 2.1 by not identifying the
relevant granting authority.
China contended
that the USDOC's consideration of the "other factors" under
Article 2.1(c) of the SCM Agreement in the absence of an
"appearance of non-specificity" was contrary to its first sentence,
which conditions any examination of such other factors upon an "appearance
of non‑specificity" resulting from the application of
subparagraphs (a) and (b) of Article 2.1.
In the
Appellate Body's view, China's appeal raised the question of whether it may be
permissible in certain circumstances for an investigating authority to proceed
directly to a specificity analysis under Article 2.1(c), or whether an
application of the principles in subparagraphs (a) and (b) is always
required before an analysis can be conducted under subparagraph (c).
The Appellate
Body reviewed the analytical framework and structure of the specificity
analysis under Article 2.1 in the light of relevant Appellate Body
jurisprudence. In US – Large Civil Aircraft (2nd complaint),
the Appellate Body held that "the structure of Article 2.1 suggests
that the specificity analysis will ordinarily proceed in a sequential order by
which subparagraph (c) is examined following an assessment under
subparagraphs (a) and (b)" of whether there are "explicit
limitations as to which enterprises or industries have access to the
subsidy". There is a logical progression in the type of evidence that
should be examined under each subparagraph of Article 2.1 and the specificity
analysis should thus "ordinarily" proceed in a certain sequence.
However, the Appellate Body did not exclude the possibility that an
investigating authority in certain circumstances could properly conduct the
specificity analysis without examining the subparagraphs of Article 2.1 in
a strict sequential order.
The Appellate
Body found that, based on the language of the first sentence of
Article 2.1(c), the application of the principles in
subparagraphs (a) and (b) is necessarily a condition to be met in order to
consider "other factors" under subparagraph (c). This is confirmed
by the reference to an appearance of specificity in Article 2.1, suggesting
that examining the factors in subparagraph (c) does not presuppose a
formal finding or determination under subparagraphs (a) and (b). The word
"if" in the first sentence of Article 2.1(c) relates to the
phrase "there are reasons to believe that the subsidy may in fact be
specific", meaning that the analysis under Article 2.1(c) may proceed
"if" or "where" there are "reasons to believe that the
subsidy may in fact be specific." Thus, in certain situations,
investigating authorities are not required to examine specificity with respect
to the subsidy at issue under all three subparagraphs. Rather, depending on the
type of evidence present in a given case, an investigating authority may limit
its specificity analysis to de jure
elements under subparagraphs (a) and (b) or to de facto
elements under subparagraph (c). The Appellate Body cautioned, however,
against examining specificity on the basis of the application of a particular
subparagraph of Article 2.1, when the potential for application of other
subparagraphs is warranted in the light of the nature and content of measures
challenged in a particular case.
The Appellate
Body noted that China's interpretative position was based on the proposition
that the first sentence of Article 2.1(c) conditions an examination of de facto specificity upon an "appearance of
non‑specificity" from the application of subparagraphs (a) and (b).
Recalling that "there may be instances in which the evidence under
consideration unequivocally indicates specificity or non‑specificity by reason
of law, or by reason of fact, under one of the subparagraphs, and that in such
circumstances further consideration under the other subparagraphs of
Article 2.1 may be unnecessary", the Appellate Body disagreed with
China that the first sentence of Article 2.1(c) conditions the assessment
of de facto specificity on the basis
of the factors listed under that subparagraph upon an application of the
principles set out in subparagraphs (a) and (b). While there may be
circumstances where "unwritten measures" providing subsidies may be
analysed under the principles set forth in subparagraphs (a) and (b), an
analysis under these provisions focuses on explicit limitation of access to a
subsidy that would ordinarily be found in written instruments. By contrast, a de facto specificity analysis under
subparagraph (c) is most pertinent and useful in the context of subsidies
in respect of which eligibility or access limitations are not explicitly
provided for in a law or regulation.
The Appellate
Body recalled that the panel had indicated that the unwritten nature of the
subsidies in the underlying investigations had led the USDOC to examine whether
those subsidies are de facto specific
under Article 2.1(c). The panel had further observed that the USDOC's
findings were not based on an explicit limitation of access to the subsidy by
the granting authority or the legislation pursuant to which the granting
authority operates, nor on criteria or conditions that are spelled out in a
law, regulation, or other official document. Since China had not pointed to any
evidence that was before the USDOC of the kind that would ordinarily be
examined in determining de jure
specificity under subparagraphs (a) and (b), the panel did not err in its
assessment of China's claim. The Appellate Body therefore upheld the panel's
finding that the USDOC did not act inconsistently with Article 2.1 by
analysing specificity exclusively under Article 2.1(c).
China argued
that the panel erred in the interpretation and application of the term
"subsidy programme" in Article 2.1(c) of the
SCM Agreement, contending that any examination of the first of the
"other factors" under Article 2.1(c) must begin with the
identification of the relevant "subsidy programme" and that the USDOC
provided no evidentiary basis for the existence, scope, and content of these
alleged "programmes".
The Appellate
Body recalled that the starting point of an analysis of specificity is the
measure that has been determined to constitute a subsidy under Article 1.1
of the SCM Agreement, and that a determination that a given measure
constitutes a financial contribution therefore informs the scope and content of
the analysis required to establish de facto
specificity. The ordinary meaning of the word "programme" refers to "a
plan or scheme of any intended proceedings (whether in writing or not); an
outline or abstract of something to be done." Evidence regarding the
nature and scope of a subsidy programme may be found in a wide variety of
forms, such as in the form of a law, regulation or other official document or
act setting out criteria or conditions governing the eligibility for a subsidy.
Thus, the existence of a subsidy scheme or plan may also be evidenced by a
systematic series of actions pursuant to which financial contributions that
confer a benefit have been provided to certain enterprises. The Appellate Body
pointed out that this is so particularly in the context of Article 2.1(c)
where the inquiry focuses on whether there are reasons to believe that a subsidy
is, in fact, specific, even when there is no explicit limitation of access to
the subsidy set out, for example, in a law, regulation, or other official
document.
The Appellate
Body added that an examination of the existence of a plan or scheme regarding
the use of the subsidy may also require assessing the operation of such plan or
scheme over a period of time. Supporting this proposition is the last sentence
of Article 2.1(c), which establishes that, "[i]n applying this
subparagraph, account shall be taken of … the length of time during which the
subsidy programme has been in operation." The mere fact that financial
contributions have been provided to certain enterprises is not sufficient,
however, to demonstrate that these have been granted pursuant to a plan or
scheme for purposes of Article 2.1(c). To establish that the provision of
financial contributions emanates from a plan or scheme under
Article 2.1(c), an investigating authority must have adequate evidence of
the existence of a systematic
series of actions pursuant to which financial contributions that confer a
benefit are provided to certain enterprises.
The Appellate
Body agreed with the panel to the extent it suggested that, in the absence of
any written instrument or explicit pronouncement, evidence of a
"systematic activity or series of activities" may provide a
sufficient basis to establish the existence of an unwritten subsidy programme
in the context of assessing de facto
specificity under the first factor of Article 2.1(c) of the
SCM Agreement. The Appellate Body found it troubling, however, that the panel
did not provide any case-specific discussion or references to the USDOC's
determinations of de facto specificity at
issue prior to reaching its conclusion. The panel had thereby failed to apply
Article 2.1(c), as properly interpreted, to the USDOC's determinations at
issue. Accordingly, the Appellate Body reversed the panel's finding that China
had not established that the USDOC acted inconsistently with the United States'
obligations under Article 2.1 of the SCM Agreement by failing to
identify a subsidy programme in each of the specificity determinations at
issue.
Having reversed
the panel's finding, the Appellate Body examined China's request to complete
the legal analysis in respect of 15 specificity determinations in
12 countervailing duty investigations. The Appellate Body recalled that
the panel found that the USDOC had acted inconsistently with
Article 2.1(c) of the SCM Agreement by failing to take into account,
in each of the determinations of de facto specificity
challenged by China, "the extent of diversification of the economic
activities within the jurisdiction of the granting authority" and the
"length of time during which the subsidy programme has been in
operation". These findings by the panel were not challenged by the United States
on appeal, and they therefore stand.
In the light of
these findings, and having laid out the legal standard that applies under
Article 2.1(c) insofar as it relates to the first factor under
Article 2.1(c), the Appellate Body saw limited value, for purposes of
resolving the dispute between the parties, in completing the analysis with
respect to the issue of whether the USDOC sufficiently identified and
substantiated the existence of a "subsidy programme" in each of the
determinations at issue. Moreover, the Appellate Body considered that much of
the evidence regarding the existence of the alleged subsidy programmes in this
dispute had not been subject to the panel's scrutiny. As noted, the panel
did not refer to any of the challenged countervailing duty determinations on
the record in reaching its finding that the provision of inputs was
"systematic". The Appellate Body also did not consider the
participants to have addressed sufficiently, in their submissions, the issues
of whether the USDOC sufficiently identified and substantiated the existence of
a "subsidy programme" in each of the determinations at issue. In
these circumstances, the Appellate Body decided not to complete the legal
analysis with respect to this particular aspect of China's appeal.
China argued
that the panel erred in its application of Article 2.1 of the
SCM Agreement to China's claim concerning the USDOC's failure to identify
a "granting authority" in the specificity determinations at issue.
China asserted that, without identifying the granting authority
(or authorities), it is not possible to identify the jurisdiction (or
jurisdictions) within which to situate the specificity analysis. China argued
that, because the USDOC did not identify the granting authority (or
authorities), it acted inconsistently with Article 2.1 of the
SCM Agreement.
The Appellate
Body noted that the chapeau of Article 2.1 "frames the central
inquiry as a determination as to whether a subsidy is specific to 'certain
enterprises' within the jurisdiction of the granting authority". In
situations where the granting authority is the central government, the scope of
the jurisdiction is usually the entire territory of the relevant Member. By
contrast, where the granting authority is a regional or local government, the
scope of the jurisdiction is usually limited to the territory of that regional
or local government. Determining whether the jurisdiction at issue covers the
entire territory of the relevant WTO Member or whether it is limited to a
designated geographical region within that territory is, therefore, important because,
as indicated by the panel in EC and certain member
States – Large Civil Aircraft, "if the granting authority was a
regional government, a subsidy available to enterprises throughout the
territory over which that regional government had jurisdiction would not be
specific." Conversely, if the granting authority was the
central government, a subsidy available to the very same enterprises would
be specific.
The Appellate
Body observed that an investigating authority's determination under
Article 1.1 as to the existence of a subsidy will inform the
assessment of whether it is specific to certain enterprises "within the
jurisdiction of the granting authority". In determining whether a
financial contribution exists, investigating authorities must inquire into its nature
and determine whether it was provided by the "government", by
"any public body within the territory of a Member",
or by a "private body" entrusted or directed by the
government. The Appellate Body considered that such assessment will inform the
identification of the "jurisdiction of the granting authority".
While an
analysis of the "jurisdiction of the granting authority" could start
with an identification of the granting authority, the Appellate Body did not
see why China's suggested order of analysis would always be required. Rather,
identifying the "jurisdiction of the granting authority" involves a
holistic analysis of the relevant facts and evidence in each case. As the
notion of jurisdiction is linked to, and does not exist in isolation from, the
granting authority, a proper identification of "the jurisdiction of the
granting authority" requires an analysis of the "granting
authority" and its "jurisdiction" in a conjunctive manner. The
Appellate Body thus refused to read Article 2.1 in a manner that focuses
on the identity of the granting authority independently from its jurisdiction,
stressing that a holistic analysis of the jurisdiction of the granting
authority is what provides the framework within which specificity is to be
analysed. Provided that an investigating authority adequately substantiates its
finding as to whether the jurisdiction covers the entire territory of the
relevant WTO Member or is limited to a designated geographical region within
that territory, in conducting this holistic assessment it would normally
also identify the granting authority.
The Appellate
Body noted that, in assessing China's "as applied" claims with
respect to the investigations, the panel found that the relevant jurisdiction
was "at the very least implicitly understood to be China in the challenged
investigations" without any case‑specific discussion of the USDOC's
determinations or any other evidence on the record, despite the fact that
evidence had been presented to the panel. Thus, the Appellate Body found that
the panel had failed to apply Article 2.1(c), as properly interpreted, to
the USDOC's determinations at issue. Accordingly, the Appellate Body reversed
the panel's finding that China had not established that the USDOC acted
inconsistently with the United States' obligations under Article 2.1 by
failing to identify a granting authority and ergo the relevant jurisdiction, in
each of the specificity determinations at issue.
Having reversed
the panel's finding, the Appellate Body examined whether it was in a position
to complete the legal analysis in respect of 15 determinations of de facto specificity in 12 countervailing duties
investigations. The Appellate Body recalled the panel's finding that the USDOC
acted inconsistently with the obligations of the United States under
Article 2.1(c) by failing to take into account, in each of the
determinations of de facto specificity challenged
by China, "the extent of diversification of the economic activities
within the jurisdiction of the granting authority" and the "length of
time during which the subsidy programme has been in operation". In the
light of the panel's findings relating to both the USDOC's identification of
the jurisdiction of the granting authority and the nature and scope of the
relevant "subsidy programme", and, having laid out the legal
standard that applies under Article 2.1(c) insofar as it relates to the
first factor under Article 2.1(c), the Appellate Body saw limited value,
for purposes of resolving the dispute between the parties, in completing the
legal analysis with respect to the issue of whether the USDOC sufficiently
identified the jurisdiction of the granting authority in each of the
determinations.
China appealed
the panel's finding that China had not established that the USDOC acted
inconsistently with Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement by not relying
on facts on the record. China claimed that the panel acted inconsistently
with Article 11 of the DSU because it failed to examine, with respect to
each of the 42 instances of the use of adverse "facts available"
challenged by China, whether there was a reasoned and adequate explanation,
discernible from the USDOC's published determination, providing the factual
basis for the USDOC's conclusion. China requested the Appellate Body to reverse
the panel's finding under Article 12.7, and to complete the
legal analysis and find, instead, that the USDOC acted inconsistently with
Article 12.7 by not relying on the facts available on the record in each
of the 42 instances of the use of adverse "facts available" across
the 13 challenged countervailing duty investigations.
The Appellate
Body recalled the panel's interpretation of Article 12.7 and the standard
of review articulated by it, as well as its interpretation of Article 12.7
in Mexico – Anti-Dumping Measures on Rice and
US – Carbon Steel (India).
Article 12.7 permits the use of facts on the record solely for the purpose
of replacing information that may be missing, in order to arrive at an accurate
subsidization or injury determination. Since there must be a
"connection" between the "necessary" information which is
missing and the particular facts available on which a determination under
Article 12.7 is based, an investigating authority, when proceeding under
Article 12.7, must use those facts available that "reasonably
replace" the missing information to arrive at an accurate determination.
Moreover, as determinations made under Article 12.7 are to be made on the
basis of "the facts available", they cannot be based on non-factual
assumptions or speculation. Further, in reasoning and evaluating which facts
available can reasonably replace the missing information, "all
substantiated facts on the record must be taken into account" by an
investigating authority.
The Appellate
Body explained that, in order to assess reasonable replacements for the missing
"necessary" information, an investigating authority should engage in
a process of reasoning and evaluation. Where there are several facts
available to an investigating authority that it needs to choose from, the
process of reasoning and evaluation would involve a degree of comparison in
order to arrive at an accurate determination. The evaluation of the facts
available that is required, and the form it may take, depends on the particular
circumstances of a given case, including the nature, quality, and amount
of evidence on the record and the particular determinations to be made. Thus,
whereas the explanation and analysis provided in a published report must be
sufficient to allow a panel to assess how and why the facts available employed
by the investigating authority are reasonable replacements for the missing
information, the nature and extent of the explanation and analysis required
will necessarily vary from determination to determination.
The Appellate
Body addressed whether the panel was required to assess whether the USDOC's adverse
"facts available" determinations were "reasoned and adequate".
The Appellate Body agreed with China that, in the context of reviewing factual
findings made by investigating authorities, a panel is required to examine
whether an investigating authority's conclusions are reasoned and adequate. Based
on the Appellate Body reports in US – Softwood Lumber VI
(Article 21.5 – Canada) and US – Countervailing Duty Investigation
on DRAMS, however, the standard of review to be applied by a
panel in a case depends, in part, on the particular provision of the covered
agreement that is at issue – Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement in this
case – and the specific claim(s) of a complainant. In the present case, in
order to comply with Article 12.7, the USDOC was required to provide an
explanation sufficient to establish that it had engaged in a process of
reasoning and evaluation of the various facts before it in order to determine
which of the facts available could reasonably replace the missing
"necessary" information. Although China's challenge focused on
whether the USDOC's adverse "facts available" determinations were
based on the facts on the record, it did not follow that the panel was not
required to scrutinize the USDOC's analysis and explanation in support of its
facts available determinations. The Appellate Body recalled the panel's
statements that its task in the present case was "to consider whether the USDOC
provided sufficient explanation of the challenged adverse facts available
determinations to assess whether the USDOC based these determinations on
facts" (emphasis added by the Appellate Body). The Appellate Body thus
rejected the United States' argument that the panel was not required to
examine whether the USDOC provided a "reasoned and adequate"
explanation of its adverse "facts available" determinations in order
to evaluate China's claims under Article 12.7.
The Appellate
Body noted that Article 11 imposes a general duty on panels to, inter alia, scrutinize whether the reasoning of an
investigating authority is coherent and internally consistent and carry out an
in-depth examination of the explanations provided by an investigating
authority. In the context of Article 12.7, an in-depth
examination would entail, inter alia,
assessing whether an investigating authority's published report provided an
explanation that sufficiently disclosed its process of reasoning and evaluation
such that the panel could assess how the authority chose from the facts
available those that could reasonably replace the missing information.
The Appellate
Body considered that, with respect to China's first contention that the panel
failed to examine and address each of the 42 instances challenged by China,
instead of examining China's arguments and evidence in relation to the 42
instances, the panel limited its analysis to only some instances of the use of adverse
"facts available" by the USDOC. The panel's approach was directed
towards ascertaining whether China had successfully established that the USDOC
applied the same "legal standard" across the 42 challenged instances.
However, in the light of the arguments and evidence provided by the
parties, the Appellate Body stated that the panel was required to scrutinize
each instance of the use of adverse "facts available" challenged by
China in order to address properly China's "as applied" claims under
Article 12.7.
China's second
contention was that, as to the instances of the use of adverse "facts
available" that the panel did discuss, it failed to engage in an in-depth
examination, as required under Article 11. Instead, the panel simply
accepted the USDOC's references to the term "facts available", without inquiring
whether the USDOC actually applied the facts available. The Appellate Body
observed that the panel focused, in large part, on the words employed by the
USDOC in its determinations, rather than on whether the USDOC acted
inconsistently with Article 12.7. Instead of assessing whether the
USDOC had "provided sufficient explanation of the challenged adverse facts
available determinations to assess whether the USDOC based these determinations
on facts", the panel focused on the language and the formulations used by
the USDOC in its determinations, without critically examining the USDOC's
statements in order to assess whether the USDOC had complied with its
obligations under Article 12.7. The Appellate Body therefore concluded
that instead of conducting its own analysis, the panel simply relied on
language in the USDOC's determinations referring to the application of facts
available in order to reject China's claims.
Finally, China
contended that the panel acted inconsistently with Article 11 to the
extent that it relied on examples of record evidence supporting the USDOC's
determinations at issue provided by the USDOC on an ex post basis. The
Appellate Body noted that the relevant exhibit provided by the United States
contained references to facts on the record before the USDOC, as well as
excerpts from the USDOC's determinations and memoranda. The Appellate Body did
not consider it clear whether the panel, if at all, relied on the references to
the facts on the record provided by the United States, and concluded that
the panel's discussion of the United States' exhibit was a further
example of the cursory nature of the panel's analysis.
Therefore, the
Appellate Body found that the panel acted inconsistently with its obligations
under Article 11 of the DSU in assessing China's claims under
Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement. Thus, the Appellate Body
reversed the panel's finding that China had not established that the USDOC
acted inconsistently with the United States' obligations under
Article 12.7 of the SCM Agreement by not relying on facts available
on the record in the 42 instances challenged by China.
Having reversed
the panel's findings under Article 12.7, the Appellate Body considered
China's request to complete the legal analysis and to find, instead, that the
USDOC acted inconsistently with Article 12.7 in each of the 42 instances
challenged by China. The Appellate Body had, in some disputes, completed the
legal analysis with a view to facilitating the prompt and effective resolution
of the dispute. However, it could only complete the legal analysis if the
factual findings of the panel and the undisputed facts on the panel record
provide sufficient basis to do so. Several factors could prevent the
Appellate Body from completing the legal analysis, such as: the complexity of
the legal issues; the absence of full exploration of the issues before the panel,
and, consequently, considerations pertaining to the parties' due process
rights; the panel's failure to examine a particular claim at all; and where
completion is not required to resolve the dispute.
In this case,
the Appellate Body noted that, on appeal, China presented an
instance-by-instance discussion of why the USDOC acted inconsistently with
Article 12.7 in each of the 42 instances challenged by it. Before the panel,
however, China did not present detailed argumentation with respect to each of
these instances. Noting that China requested it to complete the legal analysis
with respect to all of the 42 instances across the 13 investigations, the
Appellate Body recalled that the evaluation of the facts available that is
required on the part of an investigating authority, and the form it may take,
depends on the particular circumstances of a given case, including the nature,
quality, and amount of the evidence on the record and the particular
determinations to be made. Moreover, the nature and extent of the explanation
that is required on the part of an investigating authority necessarily varies
from determination to determination.
The Appellate
Body noted that the 42 instances with respect to which China requested it to
complete the legal analysis included several instances wherein the USDOC relied
on adverse "facts available" in support of its public body, benefit,
specificity, and export restraints determinations. The Appellate Body recalled
the panel's findings of inconsistency, not challenged on appeal, with respect
to the public body, specificity and export restraints determinations by the
USDOC. Further, the Appellate Body recalled its finding that the USDOC acted
inconsistently with Articles 1.1(b) and 14(d) of the
SCM Agreement in making its benefit determinations in the context of the
OCTG, Line Pipe, Pressure Pipe, and Solar Panels investigations. Having laid
down the legal standard that applies under Article 12.7, the Appellate Body
saw limited value, for the purposes of resolving the dispute between
the parties, in completing the legal analysis with respect to the instances in
which the USDOC used adverse "facts available" in support of its
public body, benefit, specificity, and export restraints determinations. The
Appellate Body was also of the view that completing the legal analysis in the
present case would also raise due process concerns.
For these
reasons, the Appellate Body declined to complete the legal analysis with
respect to each of the 42 instances of the use of adverse "facts
available" challenged by China.
Table
5 lists the WTO Members that participated in appeals for which an Appellate
Body report was circulated in 2014. It distinguishes between Members that filed
a Notice of Appeal pursuant to Rule 20 of the Working Procedures (appellants) and Members that filed a Notice of Other
Appeal pursuant to Rule 23(1) (known as the "other appellants").
Rule 23(1) provides that "a party to the dispute other than the
original appellant may join in that appeal, or appeal on the basis of other
alleged errors in the issues of law covered in the Panel report and legal
interpretations developed by the Panel". Under the Working Procedures,
parties wishing to appeal a panel report pursuant to Rule 23(1) are
required to file a Notice of Other Appeal within 5 days of the filing of the
Notice of Appeal.
Table
5 also identifies those Members that participated in appeals as third
participants under paragraphs (1), (2), or (4) of Rule 24 of the Working Procedures.
Under Rule 24(1), a WTO Member that was a third party to the panel
proceedings may file a written submission as a third participant within 21
days of the filing of the Notice of Appeal. Pursuant to Rule 24(2), a Member
that was a third party to the panel proceedings and that does not file a
written submission with the Appellate Body may, within 21 days of the
filing of the Notice of Appeal, notify its intention to appear at the oral
hearing and indicate whether it intends to make a statement at the hearing.
Rule 24(4) provides that a Member that was a third party to the panel
proceedings and neither files a written submission in accordance with Rule
24(1), nor gives notice in accordance with Rule 24(2), may notify its intention
to appear at the oral hearing and request to make a statement.
Table 5: Participants
and third participants in appeals for which an Appellate Body report was
circulated in 2014
Case
|
Appellanta
|
Other
appellantb
|
Appellee(s)c
|
Third participants
|
Rule 24(1)
|
Rule 24(2)
|
Rule 24(4)
|
European Communities — Measures Prohibiting the Importation and
Marketing of Seal Products (DS400)
|
Canada
Norway
|
European Union
|
Canada
Norway
European Union
|
Iceland
Japan
Mexico
United States
|
|
Argentina
China
Ecuador
Colombia
Russia
|
European Communities — Measures Prohibiting the Importation and
Marketing of Seal Products (DS401)
|
Canada
Norway
|
European Union
|
Canada
Norway
European Union
|
Iceland
Japan
Mexico
United States
|
Namibia
|
Argentina
China
Ecuador
Colombia
Russia
|
United States — Countervailing and Anti-dumping Measures on Certain
Products from China
|
China
|
United States
|
China
United States
|
Australia
European Union
Japan
|
Canada
India
Turkey
Russia
Viet Nam
|
|
China — Measures Related to the
Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten and Molybdenum (DS431)
|
United States
|
China
|
United States
China
|
European Union
Japan
Argentina
Australia
Brazil
Canada
Colombia
Saudi Arabia
|
India
Indonesia
Korea
Norway
Peru
Russia
Chinese Taipei
|
Oman
Turkey
Viet Nam
|
China — Measures Related to the Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten
and Molybdenum (DS432)
|
China
|
|
European Union
|
United States
Japan
Argentina
Australia
Brazil
Canada
Colombia
Saudi Arabia
|
India
Indonesia
Korea
Norway
Peru
Russia
Chinese Taipei
|
Oman
Turkey
Viet Nam
|
China — Measures Related to the Exportation of Rare Earths, Tungsten
and Molybdenum (DS433)
|
China
|
|
Japan
|
United States
European Union
Argentina
Australia
Brazil
Canada
Colombia
Saudi Arabia
|
India
Indonesia
Korea
Norway
Peru
Russia
Chinese Taipei
|
Oman
Turkey
Viet Nam
|
United States — Countervailing Measures on Certain Hot-Rolled Carbon
Steel Flat Products from India (DS436)
|
India
|
United States
|
India
United States
|
Australia
Canada
China
European Union
Saudi Arabia
|
|
Turkey
|
United States — Countervailing Duty Measures on Certain Products from
China (DS437)
|
China
|
United States
|
China
United States
|
Brazil
Canada
European Union
Saudi Arabia
|
Australia
India
Japan
Korea
Norway
|
Turkey
Russia
Viet Nam
|
a Pursuant to Rule 20 of
the Working Procedures.
b Pursuant to Rule 23(1) of the Working Procedures.
c Pursuant to Rule 22 or 23(3) of the Working
Procedures.
A total of 24 WTO Members appeared at least
once as appellant, other appellant, appellee, or third participant in appeals
for which an Appellate Body report was circulated in 2014.
Chart 3 shows the ratio of developed country
Members to developing country Members in terms of appearances made as
appellant, other appellant, appellee, and third participant in appeals for
which an Appellate Body report was circulated from 1996 through 2014.
Chart 3: WTO
Member participation in appeals 1996–2014
Annex 9
provides a statistical summary and details on WTO Members' participation as
appellant, other appellant, appellee, and third participant in appeals for
which an Appellate Body report was circulated from 1996 through 2014.
No amendments were made to the Working
Procedures during 2014. The current version of the
Working Procedures is contained in document WT/AB/WP/6, which was circulated to
WTO Members on 16 August 2010.
The procedural issues that arose in appellate
proceedings in 2014 are the following: (i) public observation of the oral
hearing; (ii) allocation of appeal numbers; (iii) challenge to a notice
of appeal; (iv) consolidation of appellate proceedings; (v) extension
of time to file submissions; (vi) amendments to the official Working
Schedule; (vii) timeliness and adequacy of notifications; (viii) unsolicited
amicus curiae briefs; and (ix) extension
of the time period for circulation of reports; and (x) request for
separate reports These procedural issues are discussed below.
In EC – Seal Products, the Appellate Body received a joint
communication from Canada and Norway requesting that the oral hearing in
the appellate proceedings be opened to public observation. Both complainants
proposed that public observation be permitted via simultaneous closed-circuit
television broadcasting with the option for the transmission to be turned off
should a third participant wish to keep its oral statement confidential.
They further requested the adoption of additional procedures to ensure the
security and orderly conduct of the proceedings. The Appellate Body also
received a communication from the European Union joining Canada and Norway's
request for public observation of the hearing, and indicating that it had no
objections to the proposed additional security arrangements.
The Division
issued a Procedural Ruling authorizing the request of Canada, Norway,
and the European Union to open the hearing to public observation and
adopting additional procedures for the conduct of the hearing. Public
observation of the oral hearing in the proceedings took place via simultaneous
closed-circuit television broadcast to a separate room. Transmission was turned
off during statements made by those third participants who had indicated their
wish to maintain the confidentiality of their statements.
The respective
appeals of China and the United States in US – Countervailing and
Anti-Dumping Measures (China) (DS449) and China – Rare
Earths (DS431) were filed simultaneously. In the past, the
Appellate Body had attributed appeal numbers sequentially based on the date
and time of receipt of the Notice of Appeal. Given the unprecedented
situation of simultaneous filings of appeals, the Chairman of the Appellate
Body invited the parties to these disputes to provide their views as to the
considerations relevant to the determination of how to allocate appeal numbers
AB-2014-3 and AB-2014-4 between the two appeals.
The Appellate
Body received comments from China, the European Union, Japan, and the
United States. On the same day, the Chairman of the Appellate Body sent a
letter to the parties to these disputes informing them that, after
consideration of their submissions, the Appellate Body determined that the
usual manner of assigning such numbers – according to the sequence in which
they were appealed – was not available. The Appellate Body underlined the
necessity of assigning an appeal number to each appeal before the Appellate
Body Members constituting the respective divisions could be selected. The
Appellate Body recalled that Rule 6(2) of the Working Procedures calls for the
Members constituting a division to be selected taking into account, inter alia, "the principles of random selection
[and] unpredictability". In order to ensure respect for these principles
in the specific circumstances of a simultaneous filing of two appeals, the Appellate Body
invited the parties to the disputes to the Appellate Body Secretariat to
witness the assignment of appeal numbers through a random draw. As a
result of this draw, the appeal initiated by the United States in China – Rare Earths was assigned appeal number AB-2014-3,
and the appeal by China in US – Countervailing and
Anti-Dumping Measures (China) was assigned appeal number AB-2014-4.
In China – Rare Earths,
China requested the Appellate Body to reject the
United States' Notice of Appeal in DS431 on the grounds that, due to its
"conditional" nature, the Notice of Appeal did not constitute a
proper Notice of Appeal within the meaning of the Working Procedures.[35] The Chairman
of the Appellate Body sent a letter to the participants, and third participants
inviting them to provide their comments on China's request. After receiving
comments from Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, the European Union, Japan, and
the United States, the Appellate Body Division hearing the appeal in DS431
issued a Procedural Ruling, declining China's request to reject the United
States' Notice of Appeal due to its "conditional" nature. The
Division considered that its jurisdiction to hear the United States' appeal was
validly established given that the Notice of Appeal conformed to the
requirements of Rule 20 of the Working Procedures. Such jurisdiction was
not, in the opinion of the Division, affected by the possibility that it might
not need to rule on the issues raised by the United States in the event that
the scenarios identified in its Notice of Appeal were to materialize.
In China – Rare Earths, the Division decided, pursuant to Rule
16(1) of the Working Procedures, to consolidate the appeals of the panel
reports in China – Rare Earths (WT/DS431/R;
WT/DS432/R; WT/DS433/R). Given this consolidation, and taking account of
certain requests made by the participants and third participants, the Division
found it necessary to make certain additional modifications to the Working
Schedules in order to ensure fairness and orderly procedure in the conduct of
these appeals.[36] More
specifically, the Division set a single deadline for the third participants'
submissions in respect of all these disputes; allowed the United States, the
European Union, and Japan to elect to have their submissions filed in the
capacity of participant in their respective disputes also serve as their third
participants' submissions in the disputes in which they were third
participants, without prejudice to their respective rights to file third
participants' submissions separate from their appellees' submissions; and
decided to hold a single oral hearing for all these appellate proceedings.
In US – Countervailing and Anti-Dumping Measures (China), the
United States requested an extension of the deadline for the filing of certain
documents pursuant to Rule 16(2) of the Working Procedures on account of
"exceptional circumstances", particularly: (i) the filing of China's
Notice of Appeal and appellant's submission 12 days after the circulation of
the panel report; (ii) the simultaneous filing of the appeals in this
dispute and in China – Rare Earths; and
(iii) the granting of an extension to China to file its Notice of
Other Appeal in China – Rare Earths. The
Appellate Body Division issued a Procedural Ruling extending the time period
for the United States to file its Notice of Other Appeal and other
appellant's submission.[37] The Division
also extended the deadlines for the filing of the appellees' submissions and
the third participants' submissions.
In the same
appeal, Japan also requested the Appellate Body, pursuant to Rule 16 of the
Working Procedures, to extend the date for the filing of the third
participants' submission because the original deadline fell within a holiday
period in Japan. The Division denied Japan's request on the ground that the
difficulties that Japan could encounter in finalizing its submission during
this period did not constitute "exceptional circumstances" that would
result in "manifest unfairness" within the meaning of Rule 16(2) of
the Working Procedures.[38]
In China – Rare Earths, along with its challenge to the Notice
of Appeal filed by the United States, China also requested the Appellate
Body, pursuant to Rule 16(2) of the Working Procedures, to extend the time
limits for filing relevant documents in the event that the Appellate Body were
not to reject the United States' Notice of Appeal. After inviting the
participants, and third participants to provide their comments on China's
request, the Division granted China's request for an extension of the time
period for China to file a Notice of Other Appeal and appellant's submission in
DS431.[39] As a
consequence of this decision, and in order to preserve the sequence of and
periods between the other deadlines prescribed under the Working Procedures,
the Appellate Body also modified the dates for the filing of other submissions
set out in the Working Schedule.
In the same appellate
proceedings, the Appellate Body Division hearing the appeal in DS431 received a
letter from Japan requesting an extension of the deadline for filing the
third participants' submissions pursuant to Rule 16 of the Working
Procedures. The Division sent a letter to the participants and the third
participants in DS431 stating that it was considering the request by Japan and
would revert to the matter in due course. However, the Division subsequently observed
in its Procedural Ruling that, having decided to consolidate the appeals
in DS431, DS432, and DS433, and to establish a single deadline for the
filing of all third participants' submissions in respect of all these appeals,
it was not necessary to deal separately with Japan's request for an extension
of the deadline for the filing of the third participants' submissions in DS431.[40]
In US – Carbon Steel (India), the United States requested the
Appellate Body Division to extend the deadline for filing the United States'
appellee's submission by seven calendar days due to the size and complexity of
India's appeal. The Division invited India and the third parties to comment in
writing on the United States' request. India requested that any extension of
the deadline for the United States to file its appellee's submission be
granted equally to India. The European Union requested the Division, if it
accepted the United States' request, to consequently extend the deadline for
third participants to file their notifications and written submissions. The
Division issued a Procedural Ruling to the participants and third parties in
respect of the United States' request.[41] Pursuant to
Rule 16 of the Working Procedures, the Division decided to extend the date for
filing the appellees' submissions by six calendar days, and the third
participants' written submissions and notifications by five calendar days.
In EC – Seal Products,
Canada, Norway, and the European Union requested the Appellate Body to postpone
the dates for the oral hearing due to logistical difficulties faced by the
parties. The Division invited the third parties to comment in writing on
this request. Japan, Mexico, and the United States indicated that they had no
objection. The Division issued a Procedural Ruling rescheduling the oral hearing.[42]
In China – Rare Earths,
China requested the Appellate Body to extend the time limits, pursuant to Rule
16(2) of the Working Procedures, for filing relevant documents in the event
that the Appellate Body were not to reject the United States' Notice of
Appeal. The Division granted China's request.[43]
As a consequence, and in order to preserve the sequence of and periods between
the other deadlines prescribed under the Working Procedures, the Appellate Body
also modified the dates for the filings of other submissions set out in the
Working Schedule.
In US –
Countervailing Measures (China), Russia and Viet Nam provided their delegation lists for the oral hearing
to the Appellate Body Secretariat and the participants and third participants
in these appellate proceedings two days before the first day of the oral
hearing. Without prejudice to rulings the Appellate Body may make in future
appeals, the Division hearing the appeal interpreted the actions of Russia and
Viet Nam as notifications expressing an intention to attend the oral hearing
pursuant to Rule 24(4) of the Working Procedures. The Division emphasized that
while strict compliance with Rule 24(4) of the Working Procedures requires written notification
of such intention, it was nevertheless satisfied that, in this case, the lack
of strict compliance with Rule 24(4) did not raise any due process
concerns.[44]
In EC – Seal Products,
the Appellate Body received three unsolicited amicus
curiae briefs from: (i) a group of animal welfare
organizations[45];
(ii) the International Fur Federation; and (iii) three individuals.
The participants and third participants were given an opportunity to
express their views on the admissibility and substance of these briefs at
the oral hearing. The Appellate Body Division noted that the third amicus curiae brief was received on the first day of the
oral hearing. In
the light of its late filing, and mindful of the requirement to ensure that
participants and third participants are given an adequate opportunity fully to
consider any written submission filed with the Appellate Body, the Division
deemed this brief inadmissible. The Division did
not find it necessary to rely on the other two amicus
curiae briefs in rendering its decision.[46]
The
90-day time period stipulated in Article 17.5 of the DSU for the
circulation of reports was exceeded in EC – Seal Products,
China – Rare Earths, US – Carbon Steel (India), and
US – Countervailing
Measures (China). The Appellate Body Report in
US – Countervailing and Anti‑Dumping
Measures (China) was circulated within the 90-day time period.
The
Appellate Body communicated to the DSB Chair the reasons why it was not
possible to circulate the Appellate Body report within the 90-day time period
in each of the appeals for which this time period was not met in 2014.[47]
These reasons included the postponement and rescheduling of the oral
hearing; requests for extension of deadlines for filing appellees' and third
participants' submissions; the volume and complexity of issues raised on
appeal; the time required for translation; the heavy workload of the
Appellate Body; the overlap in the composition of the divisions hearing
different appeals; the unfilled vacancy on the Appellate Body; and the
consolidation of several appellate proceedings.
In
the appellate proceedings in China – Rare Earths,
the European Union requested "an Appellate Body Report issued as
a single document, with separate pages for the findings and conclusions in
each of the three disputes". Japan and the United States submitted a joint
letter requesting "that the Division issue a separate Appellate Body
report for each of the appeals, in the form of a single document with separate
findings and conclusions bearing the document symbol only relating to that
appeal." At the oral hearing in these appeals, the Division afforded all
participants and third participants an opportunity to comment on these
requests. No comments were made, and the Division acceded to these requests.
Individual
Appellate Body Members have been appointed to serve as arbitrators under
Article 21.3(c) of the DSU to determine the "reasonable period of time"
for the implementation by a WTO Member of the recommendations and rulings
adopted by the DSB in dispute settlement cases. The DSU does not specify who
shall serve as arbitrator. The parties to the arbitration select the arbitrator
by agreement or, if they cannot agree on an arbitrator, the Director-General of
the WTO appoints the arbitrator. To date, all those who have served as
arbitrators pursuant to Article 21.3(c) have been current or former
Appellate Body Members. In carrying out arbitrations under
Article 21.3(c), Appellate Body Members act in an individual capacity.
No
Article 21.3(c) arbitration proceedings were carried out in 2014.
Appellate Body
Secretariat staff participated in the WTO Biennial Technical Assistance and
Training Plan 2014–2015[48], particularly in activities
relating to training in dispute settlement procedures. Annex 10 provides a list
of the technical assistance activities carried out by Appellate Body
Secretariat staff in 2014 under the WTO Technical Assistance and Training Plan.
Appellate
Body Secretariat staff participate in briefings organized for groups visiting
the WTO, including students. In these briefings, Appellate Body Secretariat
staff speak to visitors about the WTO dispute settlement system in general, and
appellate proceedings in particular. Appellate Body Secretariat staff also
participate as judges in moot court competitions. A list of these activities
carried out by Appellate Body Secretariat staff during the course of 2014 can
be found in Annex 11.
The Appellate Body Secretariat participates
in the WTO internship programme, which allows post‑graduate university students
to gain practical experience and a deeper knowledge of the global multilateral
trading system in general, and WTO dispute settlement procedures in particular.
Interns in the Appellate Body Secretariat obtain first-hand experience of the
procedural and substantive aspects of WTO dispute settlement and, in particular,
appellate proceedings. The internship programme is open to nationals of
WTO Members and to nationals of countries and customs territories engaged in
accession negotiations. An internship is generally for a three-month period.
During 2014, the Appellate Body Secretariat welcomed interns from Australia,
Brazil, Colombia, Georgia, Germany, India, Italy, Romania, the Russian
Federation, and the United States. A total of 124 post-graduate
students, of 51 nationalities, have completed internships with the
Appellate Body Secretariat since 1998. Further information about the WTO internship
programme, including eligibility requirements and application instructions, may
be obtained online at:
<https://erecruitment.wto.org/public/hrd-cl-vac-iew.asp?jobinfo_uid_c=3475&vaclng=en>
9.3 The WTO Digital Dispute Settlement Registry
The
WTO Digital Dispute Settlement Registry is being developed as a comprehensive
application to manage the workflow of the dispute settlement process, as well
as to maintain digital information about disputes. This application features:
(i) a secure electronic registry for filing and serving dispute settlement
documents online; (ii) a central electronic storage facility for all dispute
settlement records; and (iii) a research facility on dispute settlement
information and statistics.
The
Digital Registry will provide for the electronic filing of submissions in
disputes, and for the creation of an e-docket of all documents submitted
in a particular case. The system will feature: (i) a facility to securely
file submissions and other dispute-related documents electronically; (ii) a
means of paperless and secure service on other parties of submissions and
exhibits; and (iii) a comprehensive calendar of deadlines to assist
Members and the Secretariat with workflow management.
As a
storage facility, the Digital Registry will provide access to information about
WTO disputes, in particular, it will serve as an online repository of all
panel and Appellate Body records. Over the course of 2014, a large amount of
dispute-related documents were scanned, catalogued and entered into the
system.
As a
research facility, the Digital Registry will allow Members and the public to
search the digital records of publicly available data of past disputes. Users
will have access to a broader range of information and statistics than in the
past. With the extent of the information available, WTO Members and the
Secretariat, as well as the interested public, will be able to generate more
in-depth and informative statistics on WTO dispute settlement activity.
The
creation of the Digital Registry is a cross-divisional project led by the Legal
Affairs Division and involving the Appellate Body Secretariat, the Rules
Division, and the Information Technology Solutions, Languages, Documentation
and Information Management Divisions. Work on this project began in 2010. In
2014, work focused on scanning dispute-related documents; developing the design,
functionality, and security of the new system; and consulting and training delegates
of WTO Members. The Appellate Body Secretariat participated in the review and
cataloguing of data to be uploaded into the database. A pilot phase is expected
to start in 2015.
ANNEX
1
In April 2014, the Appellate Body issued a communication addressing post-employment
guidelines for former Appellate Body Members, former Appellate Body Secretariat
staff, and former interns at the Appellate Body Secretariat. This communication
was communicated to the WTO Membership, and is reproduced below.
WT/AB/22 16
April 2014
POST-EMPLOYMENT GUIDELINES
_______________
communication
from the appellate body
The Appellate Body and its Secretariat are bound by various rules of
conduct in their work. For example, Articles 17.10 and 18.2 of the Understanding
on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (DSU), together
with paragraphs II and VII:1 of the Rules of Conduct for the Understanding
on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (Rules of Conduct)
and WTO Staff Regulation 1.7 provide for the comprehensive protection of
confidential information relating to appellate proceedings. In respect of
certain obligations of conduct, in particular those relating to
confidentiality, the Rules of Conduct and WTO Staff Regulations expressly
provide that such obligations continue even after the individual concerned has
ceased to serve as an Appellate Body Member or as part of the Appellate Body
Secretariat.
In order to facilitate compliance with relevant
obligations and to set clear expectations for
individuals involved in WTO dispute settlement following a term of service as
an Appellate Body Member, or in the Appellate Body Secretariat, the Appellate
Body has decided to adopt post-employment guidelines in respect of former
Appellate Body Members, former Appellate Body Secretariat staff, and former
interns at the Appellate Body Secretariat.
The guidelines articulate limitations on the ability of these
individuals to serve as advisers or panelists in disputes in which they were
involved while serving the Appellate Body, or disputes in which the same
measures are challenged and the same claims are raised (the same
"matter"), as well as limitations on the ability of such individuals
to attend an oral hearing in an appeal for some period following their
departure (a so-called "cooling-off" period). Apart from the
limitation on advising or serving as a panelist in the same dispute or matter,
which is prohibited indefinitely for all former Appellate Body Members, former
Appellate Body Secretariat staff, and former interns at the Appellate Body
Secretariat, the limitations are applied for different lengths of time to each of
these classes of individuals, based on the degree of their involvement in a given case.
In addition, the guidelines call upon former Appellate Body Members not to
accept any appointment as a panelist for a period of two years following their
term of office.
The guidelines seek to safeguard the independence of the Appellate Body
and secure its reputation by guarding against actual and perceived conflicts of
interests and risks of bias. The guidelines also seek to minimize the
likelihood that former Appellate Body Members, Secretariat staff, and interns
will be placed in circumstances where incentives or pressure could be brought
to bear on them to divulge confidential information regarding their work with, or
the inner workings of, the Appellate Body. At the same time, the guidelines aim
to strike a balance between promoting these institutional considerations and
safeguarding the independence of the Appellate Body, on the one hand, and
avoiding undue or unreasonable restrictions on the future employment of the
individuals concerned, on the other hand.
The
Appellate Body requests the cooperation of WTO Members in facilitating
compliance with these guidelines.
POST-EMPLOYMENT GUIDELINES IN RESPECT
OF FORMER APPELLATE BODY MEMBERS,
FORMER APPELLATE BODY SECRETARIAT STAFF, AND FORMER INTERNS AT
THE APPELLATE BODY SECRETARIAT
The Appellate Body expects the individuals concerned to abide by, and
requests WTO Members to assist in the respect of, the guidelines below.
1.
A former Appellate Body Member shall not:
a. be involved as an adviser or panelist in any dispute or matter the
same as one that was before the Appellate Body during his or her term of office
as an Appellate Body Member. A former Appellate Body Member may, however,
accept appointment as an arbitrator in an arbitration under Article 21.3(c) of
the DSU in respect of any dispute;
b. for a period of three years following the end of his or her term of
office, attend the oral hearing in any appeal before the Appellate Body as a
member of a delegation of a participant or third participant;
c. for a period of two years following the end of his or her term of
office, accept appointment as a panelist in any WTO dispute.
2.
A former member of staff of the Appellate
Body Secretariat shall not:
a.
be involved as an adviser or panelist in any dispute or matter the same
as one in which he or she had a significant degree of involvement as part of
his or her responsibilities at the Appellate Body Secretariat;
b.
for a period of one year following the cessation of his or her service,
attend the oral hearing in any appeal before the Appellate Body as a member of a
delegation of a participant or third participant.
3.
A former intern in the Appellate Body
Secretariat shall not:
a.
be involved as an adviser or panelist in any dispute or matter when,
during the internship period, he or she carried out substantive tasks or
attended meetings in connection with an appeal in the same dispute or matter as
part of his or her responsibilities at the Appellate Body Secretariat;
b.
for a period of one year following the completion of his or her
internship, attend the oral hearing in any appeal before the Appellate Body as
a member of a delegation of a participant or third participant unless he or she
has obtained prior written authorization from the Director of the Appellate
Body Secretariat. Such authorization will be granted unless the specific
circumstances of the appeal are such that the Director of the Appellate Body
Secretariat reasonably considers that the former intern's attendance at the
oral hearing is likely to give rise to an actual or perceived conflict of
interest or risk of bias.
4.
A short-term
staff member who was employed by the Appellate Body Secretariat for a total
period of less than two years shall abide by the guidelines applicable to
interns. A short‑term staff member who was employed by the Appellate Body
Secretariat for a total period of two years or more shall abide by the
guidelines applicable to Appellate Body Secretariat staff.
5.
For purposes of
these guidelines, a "dispute" includes original proceedings, as well
as any proceedings under Articles 21.3(c), 21.5, 22.6, and 25 of the DSU.
6.
For purposes of
these guidelines, a "matter" consists of two elements: a specific
legal basis of the complaint (claim) and a specific measure at issue. (See
Appellate Body Report, Guatemala – Anti‑Dumping
Investigation Regarding Portland Cement from Mexico, para. 72) Thus,
the same claim brought against the same measure of a Member would constitute
the same "matter", even if the claim were brought by a WTO Member
other than the original complaining party.
_______________
ANNEX 2
Speech to the Dispute
Settlement Body on 26 September 2014
by Robert Azevêdo, Director-General of the WTO
I would like to talk to you about the current
situation in the DSB: the challenges we face, what we are doing to overcome
them — and what more we may need to do.
There is no question that the WTO's dispute
settlement system has been a success. The numbers tell their own story about
how valued it has become. In just under 20 years since the
system came into being, 482 requests for consultation have been received. In 47
years under the GATT, 300 disputes were received. And in 68 years the
International Court of Justice has received 162 cases.
So we have seen a remarkable level of activity.
Looking at the economic importance of the system, researchers found that, in
the first 16 years of the DSB, we handled disputes covering at least US$1
trillion of trade flows. And members clearly hold the system in high esteem.
Two thirds of our membership have participated in the system in one way or
another.
It has been suggested that the ever-increasing
number of RTAs might pose a challenge, but this has not proved to be the case.
Most dispute settlement mechanisms provided for in RTAs are rarely used —
indeed, some have never been used at all. Yet one in every five of WTO disputes
involve parties who are also parties to RTAs. This means that the system is in
very high demand. In fact, as you are aware, we are experiencing unprecedented
volume of work in dispute settlement. And while this is welcome, it does create
some very real challenges.
CURRENT SITUATION
So let us take a look at the current situation in
the DSB. I will not be spending too much time on this today as I want to focus
more on prescription, rather than diagnosis. The total number of active
proceedings being serviced by the Legal Affairs Division, Rules Division, and
the Appellate Body Secretariat has roughly doubled since 2012. Today there are
19 active panels requiring full-time assistance, 3 ongoing appeals, and 4
panels in composition. Our estimates suggest that this is not just a temporary
surge and I do not believe that dispute settlement volume will soon diminish.
In fact, 2014 is moving faster than 2013 in terms of the number of panels
established by this time of year.
As for appeals, you are well aware that the rate of
appeal has always been very high — and much higher than expected when the
negotiators created a body of 7 part time Members. The average rate of appeal
is approximately two-thirds. This means we should prepare for around
10-12 appeals being filed per year during the next 24 months including
possible appeals in the two complex aircraft cases. If we shut the doors
today, panels and the Appellate Body will have enough work to keep them and
their Secretariat staff busy for the next 2 years. But of course the doors will
not be shut — new requests will keep coming in. But it is not just the number
of disputes and appeals that places demands on the dispute settlement system.
Disputes are generally much more complex now than they were in the first
decade. It is now common for disputes to involve multiple parties advancing a
variety of claims with more voluminous submissions, increased third-party
participation, more demand for translation, and greater procedural complexity.
I am now going to show a few slides illustrating
the upward trend in the complexity of disputes:
The first graph shows the total number of
active disputes per year since the beginning of the system in 1995 including
all stages of disputes.
The next two graphs show the number of pages
of interim review and findings in the panel reports per 4-year period from 1995
to 2014.
The first includes the two LCA reports.
The second excludes those two reports as they
are outliers in terms of their length. Nevertheless you can see that the trend
is unchanged. For the most recent 4-year period the average is nearly 200 pages
— which is almost four times greater than the first 4-year period, when there
was an average of 50 pages.
The final graph shows the average number of
exhibits for the first five years of the system at about 94 — and for the most
recent five years of the system, at just over 300.
As with the upward trend in the number of cases, I
do not expect this increased level of complexity to change.
We are in a situation where the demand is severely
testing our capacity. And there are some clear constraints on our ability to
extend that capacity — such as the budgetary situation and some aspects of how
the system was designed. For example, we have had some difficulties in
retaining staff, which have contributed to some extent to the challenges we are
facing. Speaking frankly, the private sector, and others, can offer WTO dispute
settlement lawyers more stable and lucrative long-term working conditions and
better career advancement opportunities. That is just reality. We therefore
lost a number of trained and experienced lawyers — and their institutional and
case law memory. Under the present circumstances, we need senior and
experienced lawyers to lead panel teams, especially bearing in mind that
panellists are part-time. And some of them are not experienced with the system.
We must also be mindful of the fact that the
capacity of the Appellate Body is limited, first and foremost by the fact that
the DSU stipulates that the Appellate Body shall be composed of 7 members.
The intensity of the work required to complete an appeal within the 90 day
timeframe means that it is not possible for an Appellate Body Member to serve
on two divisions with identical or largely overlapping schedules. The
likelihood that appeals will remain too numerous for the Appellate Body,
composed of 7 members, to handle in parallel is to be continued. Even with
somewhat staggered appeal filings the Appellate Body cannot hear more than
three of the nowadays more complex appeals in parallel. Therefore, even if we
could service more panels than we currently do, we still have an insurmountable
bottleneck at the Appellate Body stage.
All these factors explain why some Members are
experiencing delays with panels getting up and running after composition. It
also explains why the Appellate Body will need more than 90 days to complete
some appeals over the coming months and why parties may have to wait for an
appeal slot to become available. I can assure you that we are cognisant of the
delays that some of you have experienced recently, particularly after panel
composition. I understand that this can pose difficulties for you, including
financial difficulties. I want to be clear that in working through cases, we
are proceeding in a strictly chronological order without discrimination or
favouritism. There is no arbitrary or subjective approach to determining the
sequence.
ADDRESSING THE SITUATION
So, in very plain terms, that is where we stand
today.
When I started the job this time last year, I found
that things were even worse than I had expected. It was an emergency situation.
Despite the number of disputes rising to its
highest in a decade starting in 2012, this slide shows that in 2013 the
Secretariat did not have enough lawyers who could be assigned in new disputes.
This is partly because we had lost a number of trained and experienced lawyers
in the preceding few years. So I took immediate steps to deal with the
problems. I reallocated resources so that the 3 dispute settlement divisions
could recruit junior lawyers through temporary contracts for 1 to 2 years,
using funds that were available from vacant posts. A total of 17 temporary
contracts have been awarded in the three divisions since February 2013. Part of
this reallocation has addressed the need for additional native speakers of
Spanish.
And we have achieved some results through staff
mobility. I am envisaging to temporarily assign 2-3 staff members from
non-dispute settlement divisions to pending and upcoming disputes as lead
lawyers. These staff members had previously worked on disputes, but they are
currently in different divisions. Of course, there is a very limited number of
staff with this experience. The same is true for support staff, which require
specific expertise more akin to that of registrars, paralegals and professional
editors. Therefore mobility (in short, moving people from one division to
another) is not the silver bullet that some may think it is. We need to be
prepared to take some bigger steps. Simply put, the need for specialised skills
means that we will need to hire new staff at both the senior and junior levels.
Although we have been able to attract qualified
people through temporary contracts in the recent past, we are unable to retain
them without offering more stability and long-term career opportunities. And
when they leave, the considerable effort and time that we have invested in
training them is completely lost. So we must find ways to retain the best and
the brightest once we have recruited and trained them. Moreover we must bring
new people in at the senior level — and this is where the most acute problem is
at the moment. The supply is just not there. Let us be realistic. Even if we
bring in new people at the senior level, it also takes at least a year to
18 months for them to develop specialized skills and experience necessary
to lead a panel or an appeal team. So this is something that we will address.
I have recently allocated 15 additional posts to
the 3 dispute settlement divisions — 6 at the senior level and 9 at the junior
level. Vacancies for these posts will be announced shortly. In fact, my
intention is to create overcapacity in the dispute settlement area. Should
dispute settlement activity wane in a year or two, which is again very
unlikely, then we will put these talents to work elsewhere in the Secretariat —
and bring them back if the work in dispute settlement so requires.
Of course hiring staff at present is problematic.
Members have put very clear limitations on what I can do. And I am not whining.
First, there is the overall cap on the budget. Second, there is the cap on the
proportion of the budget which can be used for personnel. Of course I must
observe both of these caps, and therefore my options are limited. I am
reallocating resources within the organization. When senior posts are vacated elsewhere
in the Secretariat, a significant proportion saved there will be reallocated to
disputes.
Of course this approach will inevitably have some
consequences. It means, for example, that we will have to stop doing some
things or that we will have to do certain things with less and perhaps we will
also have to outsource even more of our work, including translation. Clearly
there are limits to the sustainability of this approach, which Members will
want to consider. There are some other steps that we can take to alleviate some
of the pressure on the system, in addition to those we are taking on staff. To
start, we must address the complexity of disputes. There are precedents for
this. For example:
Simplifying the descriptive part of a panel
report by annexing parties' executive summaries to the report. That simplifies
things a little. Sometimes setting time limits for oral presentations before
panels. Seeking ways to streamline selection of panel experts. And, in the
Appellate Body, standardizing the content and format of routine communications
and rulings.
Members could think about taking additional steps
in a similar vein in going forward. I am trying to ask you to be helpful!
Members could also consider some more fundamental steps. And this is for you to
consider. Some years ago there was a proposal to increase the number of AB Members.
Under the current situation the 7 member AB can handle around 10-12 appeals at
most per year. That is stretching the envelope. And this is with AB Members
working almost full-time. This operational cap is thus simply not enough given
the level of demand. If, for example, Members decided to increase the number of
members to 9, the maximum per year could be increased by approximately a third.
This could potentially address the bottleneck at the AB stage to some degree.
But of course this is entirely in your hands.
CONCLUSION
We will continue to work hard to address these
issues. But, I think that members need to reflect on the situation that I have
outlined today. I think it is important to consider how the system was designed
— and how it has evolved since then. We thought we had built a sailboat — but
now we have discovered that what we have on our hands is an ocean liner. And of
course an ocean liner requires more resources, more fuel and a bigger crew. So
we will need to consider what resources we are prepared to provide if we want
to stay afloat. I am taking concerted action to resolve the challenges before
us — but I am working within constraints. No amount of mobility or invention
will adequately resolve our situation definitely. We need to confront the
situation as we find it today — and we need to be honest about what it means if
it goes unaddressed.
The WTO dispute settlement system has served the
membership extremely well. It is recognized the world over for providing fair,
high quality results that respond to both developing and developed country
members. It is faster than most if not all international adjudicative systems
operating today, to say nothing of domestic courts the world over. We need to
ensure that this remains the case. And for this, I invite you to start thinking
seriously about the hard options and decisions we will have to face to fix the
system.
Finally, I would like to take this opportunity to
thank staff members for their very hard work in assisting panels and the
Appellate Body Members. The WTO dispute settlement system would not have
achieved its current success without their professionalism and dedication.
ANNEX 3
MEMBERS OF THE APPELLATE BODY
(1 JANUARY TO 31 DECEMBER 2014)
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
Ujal Singh
Bhatia (India) (2011–2015)
Ujal
Singh Bhatia was born in India on 15 April 1950. He was India's Permanent
Representative to the WTO from 2004 to 2010 and represented India in a number of dispute settlement cases.
He also served as a WTO dispute settlement
panelist in 2007–2008.
Mr Bhatia
has also served as Joint Secretary in the Indian Ministry of Commerce, as well
as Joint Secretary of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, apart from
two decades in Orissa State in various fields and State-level administrative
assignments that involved development administration and policy-making. His
legal and adjudicatory experience spans three decades, and focused on domestic
and international legal/jurisprudence issues, negotiations in trade agreements
and policy issues at the bilateral, regional, and multilateral levels, and the implementation
of trade and development policies in the agriculture and service industries.
Mr Bhatia has often lectured on international trade issues and has published numerous papers
and articles on a wide range of trade and economic topics. He holds an MA in
Economics from the University of Manchester and from Delhi University, as well
as a BA (Hons) in Economics, also from Delhi University.
Seung Wha Chang (Korea)
(2012–2016)
Born
in Korea on 1 March 1963, Seung Wha Chang is currently Professor of Law at
Seoul National University where he teaches International Trade Law and
International Arbitration.
He
has served on several WTO dispute settlement panels, including US – FSC, Canada – Aircraft Credits
and Guarantees, and EC – Trademarks and
Geographical Indications. He has also served as Chairman or Co-arbitrator of numerous arbitral tribunals dealing with commercial matters. Until he joined the Appellate Body
in 2012, he had served as a Member of the International Court
of Arbitration.
Professor
Chang began his professional academic career at the Seoul National University
School of Law in 1995. He has taught international trade law and, in
particular WTO dispute settlement, at more than ten foreign law schools,
including Harvard Law School, Yale Law School, Stanford Law School, New York
University, Duke Law School, and Georgetown University. In 2007, Harvard Law
School granted him an endowed visiting professorial chair title, the Nomura
Visiting Professor of International Financial Systems.
In
addition, Professor Chang previously served as a Seoul District Court judge,
handling many cases involving international trade. He also practised as a
foreign attorney at a leading law firm in Washington DC, handling
international trade matters, including trade remedies and WTO-related disputes.
Professor
Chang has published many books and articles in the field of international trade
law in internationally recognized journals. In addition, he serves as an
Editorial or Advisory Board Member of the Journal of International
Economic Law (Oxford University Press) and the Journal of
International Dispute Settlement (Oxford University Press).
Professor
Chang holds a Bachelor of Laws degree (LLB) and a Master of Laws degree (LLM)
from Seoul National University School of Law; and a Master of Laws degree (LLM)
as well as a Doctorate in International Trade Law (SJD) from Harvard Law
School.
Thomas R. Graham (United
States) (2011–2015)
Born
in the United States on 23 November 1942, Tom Graham is the former head of the
international trade practice at a large international law firm, and the founder
of the international trade practice at another large international law firm. He
was one of the first US lawyers to represent respondents in trade remedy cases
in various countries around the world, and he was among the first to bring
economists, accountants, and other non-lawyer professionals into the international
trade practices of private law firms. Mr Graham also headed his
international trade practice group's committee on long-term planning and
development.
In
private law practice, Mr Graham often collaborated with local counsel and
national authorities in various countries to develop legal interpretations of
laws and regulations consistent with GATT/WTO agreements, and in negotiating
the resolution of international trade disputes.
Mr Graham
served as Deputy General Counsel in the Office of the US Trade Representative,
where he was instrumental in the negotiation of the Tokyo Round Agreement on
Technical Barriers to Trade and where he represented the US Government in
dispute settlement proceedings under the GATT. Earlier in his career, Mr Graham
served for three years in Geneva as a Legal Officer at the United Nations
Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).
Mr Graham
was the first chairman of the American Society of International Law's Committee
on International Economic Law, and the chair of the American Bar Association's
Subcommittee on Exports. He has been a visiting professor at the University of
North Carolina Law School and an adjunct professor at the Georgetown University
Law Center and the American University Washington College of Law. He has edited
books on international trade policy, and international trade and environment,
and he has written many articles and monographs on international trade law and
policy as a Guest Scholar at the Brookings Institution, and as a Senior
Associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Mr Graham
holds a BA in Political Science, with emphasis on International Relations and
Economics, from Indiana University and a JD from Harvard Law School.
Ricardo Ramírez-Hernández
(Mexico) (2009–2017)
Born
in Mexico on 17 October 1968, Ricardo Ramírez-Hernández holds the Chair of
International Trade Law at the Mexican National University (UNAM) in Mexico
City. He was Head of the International Trade Practice for Latin America of an
international law firm in Mexico City. His practice focused on issues related
to NAFTA and trade across Latin America, including international trade dispute
resolution.
Prior
to practicing with a law firm, Mr Ramírez-Hernández was Deputy General
Counsel for Trade Negotiations of the Ministry of Economy in Mexico for more
than a decade. In this capacity, he provided advice on trade and competition
policy matters related to 11 free trade agreements signed by Mexico, as well as
with respect to multilateral agreements, including those related to the WTO,
the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), and the Latin American Integration
Association (ALADI).
Mr Ramírez-Hernández
also represented Mexico in complex international trade litigation and
investment arbitration proceedings. He acted as lead counsel to the Mexican
government in several WTO disputes. He has also served on NAFTA panels.
Mr Ramírez-Hernández
holds an LLM degree in International Business Law from the American University
Washington College of Law, and a law degree from the Universidad Autónoma
Metropolitana.
Shree Baboo Chekitan Servansing (Mauritius) (2014–2018)
Born
in Mauritius on 22 April 1955, Shree Baboo Chekitan Servansing enjoyed a long
and distinguished career with the Mauritian civil service. From 2004 to 2012,
Mr Servansing was Mauritius' Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the
United Nations Office and other International Organizations in Geneva,
including the WTO. During his tenure as Permanent Representative, he served on
various Committees at the WTO, and chaired the Committees on Trade and
Environment, and Trade and Development. He also chaired the Work Programme on
Small Economies, the dedicated session on Aid-for-Trade, and the African Group,
and was coordinator of the African Caribbean Pacific (ACP) Group.
Mr
Servansing previously worked, in various capacities, for the Mauritius Ministry
of Foreign Affairs in Mauritius, India and Belgium. During his tenure at the
Mauritius Embassy in Belgium, he was intensively involved in the ACP-EU
negotiations leading to the Cotonou Agreement and subsequently in the Economic
Partnership Agreement (EPA) negotiations. Mr Servansing also served as the
personal representative of the Prime Minister of Mauritius on the Steering
Committee of the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD). In this
capacity he was engaged in the strategic formulation of Africa's flagship
development framework.
Upon
retiring from civil service, Mr Servansing served as the head of the ACP-EU
Programme on Technical Barriers to Trade in Brussels from 2012 to 2014. In this
position, he was responsible for facilitating the building of capacity among
ACP countries in order to enhance their export competitiveness, and improve
their Quality Infrastructure to comply with technical regulations.
Mr
Servansing's experience in trade policy, trade negotiations, and the
multilateral trading system spans three decades. He has frequently spoken on
international trade issues, and has published numerous papers and articles in
Mauritian and foreign journals on a variety of trade-related issues.
Mr
Servansing holds an M.A. from the University of Sussex, a Postgraduate Diploma
in Foreign Affairs and International Trade from Australian National University,
and a B.A. (Hons.) from the University of Mauritius.
Peter Van den Bossche (European Union; Belgium) (2009–2017)
Born
in Belgium on 31 March 1959, Peter Van den Bossche is Professor of
International Economic Law at Maastricht University, the Netherlands. Van den
Bossche is also visiting professor at the College of Europe, Bruges (since
2010); the University of Barcelona (IELPO Programme) (since 2008); the China-EU
School of Law, Beijing (since 2008); and the World Trade Institute, Berne (MILE
Programme) (since 2002). He is member of the Board of Editors of the Journal of International Economic Law and
member of the Advisory Board of the Journal of World Investment and Trade and
the Revista Latinoamericana de Derecho
Comercial International. He is also member of the Advisory
Board of the WTO Chairs Programme (WCP).
Mr Van
den Bossche holds a Doctorate in Law from the European University Institute in
Florence, an LLM from the University of Michigan Law School, and a Licence en
Droit magna cum laude from the
University of Antwerp. From 1990 to 1992, he served as a référendaire of Advocate
General W. van Gerven at the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg. From
1997 to 2001, Mr Van den Bossche was Counsellor and subsequently Acting
Director of the WTO Appellate Body Secretariat. In 2001, he returned to
academia and from 2002 to 2009 frequently acted as a consultant to
international organisations and developing countries on issues of international
economic law. He also served on the faculty of the
Université libre de Bruxelles (2002–2009); at the Trade Policy Training Centre
in Africa (trapca), Arusha, Tanzania (2008 and 2013); at the Foreign Trade
University, Hanoi & Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam (2009 and 2011); at the
Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador (2013); and at the Law School of
Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey (2013).
Mr Van
den Bossche has published extensively in the field of international economic
law. He is author of the book The Law and Policy of the
World Trade Organization, of which the third edition (with Werner
Zdouc) was published by Cambridge University Press in 2013.
Yuejiao Zhang (China)
(2008–2016)
Yuejiao Zhang is Professor of International Economic Law at Tsinghua
University and at Shantou University in China. She is an arbitrator at the
International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and at China's International Trade and
Economic Arbitration Commission (CIETAC). She served as Vice‑President of
China's International Economic Law Society. She is also a member of the
Advisory Board of the International Development Law Organization (IDLO).
Professor Zhang served as a Board Director to
the West African Development Bank from 2005 to 2007. Between 1998 and 2004, she
held various senior positions at the Asian Development Bank (ADB), including as
Assistant General Counsel, Co-Chair of the Appeal Committee, and Director‑General.
She was the head of the ADB experts group on international trade and the ADB
contact point to the WTO. Prior to this, she held several positions in
government and academia in China, including as Director-General of Law and
Treaties at the Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation (1984–1997).
She participated in the preparation of China's first joint‑venture law, general
principles of civil law, contract law, and foreign trade law. From 1987 to
1996, she was one of China's chief negotiators on intellectual property and was
involved in the preparation of China's patent law, trademark law, and copyright
law. She also served as the chief legal counsel for China's GATT resumption.
Between 1982 and 1985, she worked as legal counsel at the World Bank. She was a
Member of the Governing Council of the International Institute for the
Unification of Private Law (UNIDROIT) from 1987 to 1999 and a Board Member of
IDLO from 1988 to 1999. Professor Zhang was a member of the UNIDROIT and
UNCITRAL drafting committees concerning several international trade and
economic conventions, such as the General Principles of Commercial Contract and
the International Financial Leasing Convention.
Professor Zhang has authored several books
and articles on international economic law and international dispute
settlement. She has a BA from China High Education College, a BA from Rennes
University, France, and an LLM from Georgetown University. Professor Zhang also lectured at universities in France and in Hong
Kong, Macau of China.
* * *
Director of the Appellate Body Secretariat
Werner
Zdouc
Director
of the WTO Appellate Body Secretariat since 2006, Werner Zdouc obtained a law
degree from the University of Graz in Austria. He then went on to earn an LLM
from Michigan Law School and a Ph.D. from the University of St Gallen in
Switzerland. Dr Zdouc joined the WTO Legal Affairs Division in 1995, advised
many dispute settlement panels, and conducted technical cooperation missions in
many developing countries. He became legal counsellor at the
Appellate Body Secretariat in 2001. He has been a lecturer and Visiting
Professor for international trade law at Vienna Economic University, the
Universities of Zurich and Barcelona and the Geneva Graduate Institute. From
1987 to 1989, he worked for governmental and non-governmental development
aid organizations in Austria and Latin America. Dr Zdouc has authored
various publications on international economic law and is a member of the Trade
Law Committee of the International Law Association.
ANNEX
4
Welcome of A New APPELLATE BODY MEMBER
Remarks of
the Director-General Azevêdo to the Dispute Settlement Body of the WTO, Geneva,
20 October 2014
Thank you Ambassador de Mateo
for that introduction, and for your work both as chair of the Dispute Settlement
Body, and also as the chair of the Appellate Body Selection Committee.
I'm pleased to join you in
welcoming Mr Shree Baboo Chekitan Servansing, who will shortly be sworn in as
the newest Member of the Appellate Body. It is great to see the Appellate
Body's membership restored to seven, following the departure of Mr David
Unterhalter in December last year.
And I would like to extend my
sincere congratulations to Mr Servansing on his appointment. As Ambassador de
Mateo has noted, Mr Servansing has vast knowledge and experience of the WTO
disciplines, trade policy, trade negotiations, and the multilateral trading
system itself. His insight and perspective will be extremely valuable as he and
his colleagues on the Appellate Body continue to assist WTO Members to resolve
disputes in the balanced, impartial, and independent manner that we have grown
to expect from the Appellate Body. I would especially like to thank Mr
Servansing for his courage in accepting to join the Appellate Body at a time
when the dispute settlement system is facing unprecedented challenges due to
its ever-increasing workload.
As I detailed at last month's
DSB meeting, the dispute settlement system has undergone a significant
evolution since 1995, as a result of Members' growing confidence in the system
— and their growing use of it. And of course this is very welcome. Recourse to
the dispute settlement system has ensured adherence to negotiated rules,
thereby helping to provide the security and predictability in international trade
that is so essential. To date, the dispute settlement system has handled
disputes covering at least US$1 trillion of world trade flows. Two-thirds of
the WTO Membership has participated in the system in one way or another.
And the Appellate Body lies at
its heart. Through its prompt settlement of the disputes that have come before
it, its rigour in reviewing panel decisions, and its clarification of Members'
rights and obligations under the WTO's covered agreements, the Appellate Body
has proven its value beyond any doubt.
However, this success comes with
a price. Appellate Body Members are called upon to do more as disputes
increase, not just in volume but in complexity as well. Judging from the number
of ongoing panel proceedings, the workload of the Appellate Body is likely to
remain high for the foreseeable future. Therefore, this appointment is very
timely. The Appellate Body really can use the help!
The dispute settlement system
negotiated in the Uruguay Round was an extraordinary achievement. Today, as it
approaches the end of its second decade, it should not be taken for granted. To
ensure that the system continues to function at optimal levels for the benefit
of all WTO Members, each of us has a responsibility to contribute to its
consolidation and further development. We must protect, at all times, the
system's hallmarks of total independence and impartiality. Members must use the
system wisely, recognising the practical challenges faced by the system as a
whole — and they must be willing to work together in addressing them. And we
must keep equipping the system properly, not only in terms of Appellate Body
Members and panelists, but also in terms of the secretariat resources that we
make available in support.
In closing, Mr Servansing, I want
to congratulate you on your appointment once again — and welcome you back to
the WTO. The system owes a large measure of its success to your colleagues and
predecessors — the Appellate Body Members and panellists who have served, and
continue to serve, the system with dedication, courage, independence, and
integrity. I have no doubt that you will maintain this tradition.
We wish you all the best in the
weeks and months ahead. Good luck and bon courage!
Remarks of
the then Chair of the Appellate Body, Mr Ricardo Ramírez Hernández, to the
Dispute Settlement Body of the WTO, Geneva, 20 October 2014
Estas
ocasiones normalmente me generan sentimientos encontrados, pues nos despedimos
de uno de nuestros colegas y le demos la bienvenida a uno nuevo. Afortunadamente
hoy solo tenemos un momento alegre al celebrar el nombramiento del Sr.
Servansing como miembro del Órgano de Apelación, puesto que hace ya algunos
meses escuchamos el memorable discurso de despedida de David.
Permítanme
comenzar por felicitar al Comité de Selección por su extraordinario trabajo.
Dada la cantidad de candidatos altamente cualificados, estoy seguro que su
tarea no fue fácil. A todos los candidatos y a los gobiernos que los nominaron,
les ofrecemos nuestro reconocimiento y apreciación por participar en este
proceso.
One of the unique features of
the Appellate Body is not only its multicultural but also its multidisciplinary
nature. 7 cultures, 7 backgrounds, 7 personalities. The fact that we can look
at a problem not only from various angles but also through different lenses
allows us to resolve disputes to the best of our collective abilities. As just
highlighted by Ambassador de Mateo and the Director-General, Mr Servansing vast
experience on trade policy and negotiations will certainly add a valuable
perspective to our deliberations. Today, Mr Servansing's presence makes our
institution wiser and stronger. I am sure that, like all of us, he will embrace
collegiality as one of the fundamental pillars of our institution. We look forward
to working with you Shree.
We see with great satisfaction
that the Appellate Body workload paper circulated last year, has started to pay
dividends. We were pleased to hear the DG's presentation at the September 26th
DSB meeting and welcome the allocation by the DG of additional human resources
to the Appellate Body along with the allocation to the divisions servicing
panels at a time of strongly increasing workload. However, as mentioned in
previous messages, there are structural problems which need to be address by
the full Membership. In this respect, we are encouraged to see the growing
awareness by the Membership of the problems ahead as reflected in their
statements at the last DSB meeting. Given the extraordinary challenges the
Appellate Body is facing with the growing number and complexity of cases, it
will be necessary not only to hire the best legal minds to support us, but also
to retain their expertise and experience and to reward them for the
extraordinary demands we place on them.
ANNEX
5
I. FORMER APPELLATE BODY MEMBERS
Name
|
Nationality
|
Term(s) of office
|
Said
El-Naggar
|
Egypt
|
1995–2000 *
|
Mitsuo
Matsushita
|
Japan
|
1995–2000 *
|
Christopher
Beeby
|
New
Zealand
|
1995–1999
1999–2000
|
Claus-Dieter
Ehlermann
|
Germany
|
1995–1997
1997–2001
|
Florentino
Feliciano
|
Philippines
|
1995–1997
1997–2001
|
Julio
Lacarte-Muró
|
Uruguay
|
1995–1997
1997–2001
|
James
Bacchus
|
United
States
|
1995–1999
1999–2003
|
John
Lockhart
|
Australia
|
2001–2005
2005–2006
|
Yasuhei
Taniguchi
|
Japan
|
2000–2003
2003–2007
|
Merit
E. Janow
|
United
States
|
2003–2007
|
Arumugamangalam
Venkatachalam Ganesan
|
India
|
2000–2004
2004–2008
|
Georges
Michel Abi-Saab
|
Egypt
|
2000–2004
2004–2008
|
Luiz
Olavo Baptista
|
Brazil
|
2001–2005
2005–2009
|
Giorgio
Sacerdoti
|
Italy
|
2001–2005
2005–2009
|
Jennifer
Hillman
|
United
States
|
2007–2011
|
Lilia
Bautista
|
Philippines
|
2007–2011
|
Shotaro
Oshima
|
Japan
|
2008–2012 **
|
David
Unterhalter
|
South
Africa
|
2006-2009
2009-2013
|
* Messrs El-Naggar and Matsushita
decided not to seek a second term of office. However, the DSB extended their
terms until the end of March 2000 in order to allow the Selection Committee and
the DSB the time necessary to complete the selection process of replacing the
outgoing Appellate Body Members. (See WT/DSB/M70, pp. 32-35)
** Mr Oshima's resignation became effective on 6
April 2012.
Mr Christopher
Beeby passed away on 19 March 2000.
Mr Said
El-Naggar passed away on 11 April 2004.
Mr John
Lockhart passed away on 13 January 2006.
II. FORMER CHAIRPERSONS OF THE
APPELLATE BODY
Name
|
Nationality
|
Term(s) as Chairperson
|
Julio
Lacarte-Muró
|
Uruguay
|
7
February 1996 –
6 February 1997
7
February 1997 –
6 February 1998
|
Christopher
Beeby
|
New
Zealand
|
7
February 1998 –
6 February 1999
|
Said
El-Naggar
|
Egypt
|
7
February 1999 –
6 February 2000
|
Florentino
Feliciano
|
Philippines
|
7
February 2000 –
6 February 2001
|
Claus-Dieter
Ehlermann
|
Germany
|
7
February 2001 –
10 December 2001
|
James
Bacchus
|
United
States
|
15
December 2001 –
14 December 2002
15
December 2002 –
10 December 2003
|
Georges
Abi-Saab
|
Egypt
|
13
December 2003 –
12 December 2004
|
Yasuhei
Taniguchi
|
Japan
|
17
December 2004 –
16 December 2005
|
Arumugamangalam
Venkatachalam Ganesan
|
India
|
17
December 2005 –
16 December 2006
|
Giorgio
Sacerdoti
|
Italy
|
17
December 2006 –
16 December 2007
|
Luiz
Olavo Baptista
|
Brazil
|
17
December 2007 –
16 December 2008
|
David
Unterhalter
|
South
Africa
|
18
December 2008 –
11 December 2009
12
December 2009 –
16 December 2010
|
Lilia
Bautista
|
Philippines
|
17
December 2010 –
14 June 2011
|
Jennifer
Hillman
|
United
States
|
15
June 2011 –
10 December 2011
|
Yuejiao
Zhang
|
China
|
11
December 2011 –
31 May 2012
1
June 2012 –
31 December 2012
|
Ricardo
Ramírez Hernández
|
Mexico
|
1
January 2013 –
31 December 2013
1
January 2014 –
31 December 2014
|
ANNEX
6
APPEALS FILED: 1995–2014
Year
|
Notices of
Appeal filed
|
Notices of Appeals in original proceedings
|
Notices of Appeals in Article 21.5 proceedings
|
1995
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
1996
|
4
|
4
|
0
|
1997
|
6 a
|
6
|
0
|
1998
|
8
|
8
|
0
|
1999
|
9 b
|
9
|
0
|
2000
|
13 c
|
11
|
2
|
2001
|
9 d
|
5
|
4
|
2002
|
7 e
|
6
|
1
|
2003
|
6 f
|
5
|
1
|
2004
|
5
|
5
|
0
|
2005
|
10
|
8
|
2
|
2006
|
5
|
3
|
2
|
2007
|
4
|
2
|
2
|
2008
|
13 g
|
10
|
3
|
2009
|
3
|
1
|
2
|
2010
|
3
|
3
|
0
|
2011
|
9
|
9
|
0
|
2012
|
5
|
5
|
0
|
2013
|
1
|
1
|
0
|
2014
|
9
|
8
|
1
|
Total
|
129
|
109
|
20
|
a This number includes two Notices of
Appeal that were filed at the same time in related matters, counted separately:
EC – Hormones (Canada) and EC – Hormones (US). A single Appellate Body report was
circulated in relation to those appeals.
b This number excludes one Notice of
Appeal that was withdrawn by the United States, which subsequently filed
another Notice of Appeal in relation to the same panel report: US – FSC.
c This number includes two Notices of
Appeal that were filed at the same time in related matters, counted separately:
US – 1916 Act (EC) and US – 1916 Act (Japan). A single Appellate Body report was
circulated in relation to those appeals.
d This number excludes one Notice of
Appeal that was withdrawn by the United States, which subsequently filed
another Notice of Appeal in relation to the same panel report: US – Line Pipe.
e This number includes one Notice of
Appeal that was subsequently withdrawn: India – Autos;
and excludes one Notice of Appeal that was withdrawn by the European
Communities, which subsequently filed another Notice of Appeal in relation to
the same panel report: EC – Sardines.
f This number excludes one Notice of Appeal
that was withdrawn by the United States, which subsequently filed another
Notice of Appeal in relation to the same panel report: US –
Softwood Lumber IV.
g This number includes two
Notices of Appeal that were filed at the same time in related matters, counted
separately: US – Shrimp (Thailand) and US – Customs Bond Directive. A single Appellate Body report
was circulated in relation to those appeals.
__ANNEX 7
PERCENTAGE OF PANEL REPORTS APPEALED BY YEAR OF ADOPTION:
1995–2014 a
|
All panel reports
|
Panel reports other than
Article 21.5 reports b
|
Article 21.5
panel reports
|
Year of
adoption
|
Panel
reports adopted c
|
Panel
reports appealed d
|
Percentage
appealed e
|
Panel
reports adopted
|
Panel
reports appealed
|
Percentage
appealed
|
Panel
reports adopted
|
Panel
reports appealed
|
Percentage
appealed
|
1996
|
2
|
2
|
100%
|
2
|
2
|
100%
|
0
|
0
|
–
|
1997
|
5
|
5
|
100%
|
5
|
5
|
100%
|
0
|
0
|
–
|
1998
|
12
|
9
|
75%
|
12
|
9
|
75%
|
0
|
0
|
–
|
1999
|
10
|
7
|
70%
|
9
|
7
|
78%
|
1
|
0
|
0%
|
2000
|
19
|
11
|
58%
|
15
|
9
|
60%
|
4
|
2
|
50%
|
2001
|
17
|
12
|
71%
|
13
|
9
|
69%
|
4
|
3
|
75%
|
2002
|
12
|
6
|
50%
|
11
|
5
|
45%
|
1
|
1
|
100%
|
2003
|
10
|
7
|
70%
|
8
|
5
|
63%
|
2
|
2
|
100%
|
2004
|
8
|
6
|
75%
|
8
|
6
|
75%
|
0
|
0
|
–
|
2005
|
20
|
12
|
60%
|
17
|
11
|
65%
|
3
|
1
|
33%
|
2006
|
7
|
6
|
86%
|
4
|
3
|
75%
|
3
|
3
|
100%
|
2007
|
10
|
5
|
50%
|
6
|
3
|
50%
|
4
|
2
|
50%
|
2008
|
11
|
9
|
82%
|
8
|
6
|
75%
|
3
|
3
|
100%
|
2009
|
8
|
6
|
75%
|
6
|
4
|
67%
|
2
|
2
|
100%
|
2010
|
5
|
2
|
40%
|
5
|
2
|
40%
|
0
|
0
|
–
|
2011
|
8
|
5
|
63%
|
8
|
5
|
63%
|
0
|
0
|
–
|
2012
|
18
|
11
|
61%
|
18
|
11
|
61%
|
0
|
0
|
–
|
2013
|
4
|
2
|
50%
|
4
|
2
|
50%
|
0
|
0
|
–
|
2014
|
15
|
13
|
87%
|
13
|
11
|
85%
|
2
|
2
|
100%
|
Total
|
201
|
136
|
68%
|
172
|
115
|
67%
|
29
|
21
|
72%
|
a No panel reports were adopted in 1995.
b Under Article 21.5 of the DSU, a
panel may be established to hear a "disagreement as to the existence or
consistency with a covered agreement of measures taken to comply with the
recommendations and rulings" of the DSB upon the adoption of a previous
panel or Appellate Body report.
c The panel reports in EC – Bananas III (Ecuador), EC – Bananas
III (Guatemala and Honduras),
EC – Bananas III (Mexico), and EC – Bananas III (US) are counted as a single panel report.
The panel reports in US – Steel
Safeguards, in EC – Export Subsidies on
Sugar, and in EC – Chicken Cuts,
are also counted as single panel reports in each of those disputes.
d Panel reports are counted as having
been appealed where they are adopted as upheld, modified, or reversed by an
Appellate Body report. The number of panel reports appealed may differ from the
number of Appellate Body reports because some Appellate Body reports address
more than one panel report.
e Percentages are rounded to the nearest whole
number.