US to seek comprehensive agriculture access in EU trade talks

The United States on January 11 signaled it would not bow to the European Union's request to keep agriculture out of planned US-EU trade talks, publishing negotiating objectives that seek comprehensive EU access for American farm products.

US and EU flags are pictured during the visit of Vice President Pence to the European Commission headquarters in Brussels. (File photo: Reuters)
US and EU flags are pictured during the visit of Vice President Pence to the European Commission headquarters in Brussels. (File photo: Reuters)

The objectives, required by Congress under the "fast-track" trade negotiating authority law, seek to reduce or eliminate EU tariffs on US farm products and break down non-tariff barriers, including on products developed through biotechnology, the US Trade Representative's (USTR) office said.

Agricultural issues were among the major sticking points in past negotiations for a major US-EU trade deal, the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), before talks were shelved after Donald Trump was elected president in 2016.

EU trade commissioner Cecilia Malmström told US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer in Washington on January 9 that the 28-country bloc could not negotiate on agriculture in a new, more limited set of negotiations expected to start this year.

"We have made very clear agriculture will not be included," Malmström told reporters after meeting Lighthizer, adding that the two sides had not yet agreed on the scope of the talks.

Trump and EU president Jean-Claude Juncker agreed last July to re-launch negotiations to cut tariffs on industrial goods, including autos, and also discuss ways for Europe to buy more US soybeans.

Trump told Juncker that he would refrain from levying threatened 25-percent tariffs on EU-produced cars and auto parts, which he is considering imposing worldwide on national security grounds.

Trump has long complained about Europe's 10-percent import tariff on autos. The US passenger car tariff is only 2.5 percent, although US tariffs on pickup trucks and other commercial trucks are 25 percent.

The US negotiating wish list does not specifically mention autos, but pledges to seek duty-free market access for US industrial goods that eliminate non-tariff barriers such as "unnecessary differences in regulation."

USTR's decision to push for a full-fledged trade negotiation on agricultural goods follows a hearing in December at which US farm, food and beverage groups argued for their products to be included.

Influential lawmakers such as Senate Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, an Iowa farmer, have warned they might not support an EU deal that did not include agriculture.

Now that the US objectives have been published, the USTR may be ready to formally launch negotiations in as little as 30 days.

But the EU's own negotiating mandates on industrial goods and regulatory cooperation need to be cleared by the European Commission, the bloc's executive branch, and approved by member states, and it is unclear how long that process will take.

The United States had a US$151 billion goods deficit with the EU in 2017, despite two-way annual trade of about US$1.1 billion.

USTR also said it will seek commitments by Europe not to impose duties on any digital downloads of US software, movies, music and other products nor any rules that restrict cross-border data flows or require data localization, USTR said.

In an objective aimed at Europe's efforts to tax products and services from US-based internet giants, including Alphabet Inc's Google, Facebook and Amazon.com, USTR said it would seek a "guarantee that these products will not face government-sanctioned discrimination based on the nationality or territory in which the product is produced."

Reuters