France will reject the ambitious TTIP transatlantic trade pact if it endangers the future of French agriculture, President Francois Hollande warned Sunday.
PARIS: France will reject the ambitious TTIP transatlantic
trade pact if it endangers the future of French agriculture, President
Francois Hollande warned on Sunday (May 1).
"We in France have to defend a certain number of principles"
and be "extremely vigilant as it is the future of agriculture which
could be at stake," Hollande's office said.
French politicians have queued up in recent days to express
reservations about the proposed Transatlantic Trade and Investment
Partnership (TTIP) pact, while public support for the pact has also
noticeably been sagging in neighbouring EU powerhouse Germany.
Hollande said France was watching the TTIP proposals take shape "but
will say no to any conclusion which would put our agriculture in
difficulty."He added that France wanted to see trade based on principles "including environmental ones," while stressing the importance of certain products retaining protected designation of origin status, such as cheeses and champagne.
Hundreds of products across the European Union enjoy such status within an EU legal framework.
Hollande weighed into the debate after French Prime Minister Manuel Valls warned Tuesday that any deal "will not succeed if it does not guarantee that the (quality) standards we have in France for our citizens' health and environment will be maintained."
France's minister of state for foreign trade Matthias Fekl is also hawkish on the outcome.
Asked if a deal may be reached before the end of US
President Barack Obama's term in January, Fekl, French envoy to the TTIP
talks, said last week: "No, I don't think so. The likelihood, or risk,
of reaching any accord is fading."
Also last week, French Finance Minister Emmanuel Macron said
"there is no urgency" to sign a deal which France has to be sure is
"complete, ambitious and which does not disown any of our interests."
TTIP aims to topple regulatory and tariff barriers to trade
and investment between the United States and Europe, open up the EU
services sector and better European access to US government procurement
projects.
Negotiators said last week they had made significant progress in New York targeting a deal by the end of the year.But they warned that significant sticking points remain, noting that while 97 per cent of tariff issues had been covered, three percent - the most challenging, including for farm products, remained and could be some of the last things to deal with.
- AFP/ec
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