Freshfel Europe urges EU to adopt fully-fledged SPS Strategy to ensure reciprocity in trade 

In response to the new EU Trade Policy Review, Freshfel Europe is publishing a policy reflection paper, ‘SPS Export Protocols: towards greater reciprocity in fresh produce trade’.
Thu 18/03/2021 by Richard Wilkinson
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The paper summarises market access hurdles faced by the European fresh fruit and vegetables sector, which is confronted with the need to negotiate individual ‘SPS export protocols’ to start business with many trade partners, whereas similar specific protocols are not required for the majority of imports of fresh produce into the Union. This situation is leading to an appalling lack of reciprocity in SPS market access conditions that urgently needs to be addressed. In its paper, Freshfel Europe urges the European Commission to define with Member States a concrete EU SPS strategy to secure market diversification by easing market access conditions based on safe trade guaranteed by the EU regulatory environment.

SPS protocols to access third countries market are the main challenge for EU fresh fruit and vegetables exporters. Witnessing a significant lack of reciprocity in the implementation of plant health systems Freshfel Europe laments that this significant challenge is not featured in the new EU trade policy strategy ‘An Open, Sustainable and Assertive Trade Policy’, published on 18 February. Freshfel Europe General Delegate Philippe Binard noted that,

“The absence of any reference to the complex challenges of negotiating SPS protocols to export fresh produce to third countries markets and the lack of reciprocity resulting thereof in SPS barriers mentioned in the EU Trade Policy Review is worrying. It indirectly suggests business as usual, leaving exporters to negotiate their market access with third countries Member State by Member State and product by product. Our experience demonstrates that the negotiating process is lengthy, costly, non-transparent and often discriminatory, exposing our exporters to different conditions for the same pest. This contrasts with EU rules for imports which are transparent and immediately applicable to all suppliers concerned to mitigate identified pests not known to occur in the EU.”

Freshfel Europe’s reflection paper explores this lack of reciprocity in plant health and calls for a fully- fledged EU SPS strategy to coordinate market access and support European exporters of fresh fruit and vegetables to overcome SPS difficulties. Natalia Santos, Freshfel Europe’s Trade & Market Access Director clarified, “On the short-term, the EU should secure proportional, scientifically justified SPS conditions and obtain additional SPS simplifications through Free Trade Agreements. Proper enforcement of partners’ commitments and the maximisation of synergies among EU capitals should also contribute to alleviate the situation and facilitate trade. In the long-run, we urge the EU to raise the problems created by SPS export protocols at WTO level, as a major trade bloc which has managed to secure a trade -friendly, transparent and proportional plant health system”. The current discrepancies between open and closed SPS systems are neither sustainable nor leading to fair and reciprocal trade in fresh fruit and vegetables. This should be among the top priorities for the EU’s trade agenda for the competitiveness and livelihood of EU growers and for the development of mutually beneficial trade relationships with partners around the world operating under a trade environment that is as least distorting as possible.

 

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