This workshop focused on key issues related to Regional Trade Agreements (RTA) and the environment. It had three main objectives: (i) to take stock of current experience and insights on RTAs and the environment from different stakeholders, and to establish a stakeholder dialogue on this topic; (ii) to investigate how RTAs can serve as a vehicle to advance a resource efficient and circular economy transition; and (iii) to explore the potential of RTAs in addressing the nexus of illegal trade and environmental crime
OECD Workshop on Regional Trade Agreements and the Environment Session 2.1 - Yamaguchi
1. INTERNATIONAL TRADE
AND CIRCULAR ECONOMY -
WHAT ROLE FOR
REGIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS?
Shunta Yamaguchi, Policy Analyst
Environment and Economy Integration Division
Environment Directorate, OECD
OECD Workshop on Regional Trade Agreements
and the environment
10-11 June 2021
2. 0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060
Non-metallic minerals Metals Fossil fuels Biomass
Gigatonnes 1
Materials use will increase in the coming
decades
Source: OECD (2019), Global Material Resources Outlook to 2060
1
3. 2
Interlinkages between
trade and circular economy
National boundary
Repair
Recycling
(secondary raw materials)
Eco-
design
policies
Refurbishment and Remanufacturing
Reuse
(second-hand goods)
Trade in second-hand goods
Trade in waste for recovery
Trade in goods for
refurbishment and remanufacturing
Trade in secondary raw materials
Product-service-systems
Trade flows:
Trade in services
Source: based on Yamaguchi (2018)
Global supply chains
4. Specific provisions on circular economy so far found in 1 agreement + 5 drafts
• EU-United Kingdom Trade and Co-operation Agreement (MEA, Article 400)
• (Draft) EU-Mexico Global Agreement, Modernisation (TSD Chapter, Article 13)
• (Draft) EU-New Zealand FTA (TSD Chapter, Article 5)
• (Draft) EU-Australia FTA (TSD Chapter, Article 5)
• (Draft) EU-Mercosur FTA (TSD Chapter, Article 13)
• (Draft) EU-Chile FTA, Modernisation (TSD Chapter, Article 12)
Circular economy related provisions found more broadly
• natural resources and waste management
• references to the Basel Convention
• specific provisions on food waste (i.e. USMCA)
• specific article on remanufactured goods (i.e. EU-Vietnam FTA)
3
Regional trade agreements
Source: Yamaguchi (2021) International trade and circular economy – policy alignment, https://doi.org/10.1787/ae4a2176-en.
6. Standards on organization and management of the circular economy
• UK (2017), France (2018),
• ISO (on-going from 2019)
Standards on recycling facilities
• e.g. e-Stewards, R2 Standard, EuCertPlast
Product related standards for the circular economy
• Material content standards (recycled content, hazardous content)
• Recyclability and reparability standards
• Standards on sustainable production
• Material quality standards (e.g. secondary raw materials)
• Product quality standards (e.g. second-hand goods)
5
Circular economy related standards with
implications to TBT and market access
Source: Yamaguchi (2021) International trade and circular economy – policy alignment, https://doi.org/10.1787/ae4a2176-en.
7. 6
Issues for consideration
• Trade impediments for circular business models need to be addressed
• Trade leading to negative environmental consequences needs to be avoided
• Environmentally sustainable just transition for the extractive sector is vital
• Promising areas (e.g. secondary raw materials, refurbishing & remanufacturing)
• Challenging areas with potential trade-offs between environmental protection and
economic efficiency (e.g. trade in waste and scrap, second-hand-goods)
• Typically require the movement of people, information and data
• Definitions & classifications, standards, regulations, trade facilitation, innovation
Trade can contribute to a circular economy via economies of scale
Circular economy concept should extend to supply chains
Circular economy opportunities for end-of-life value chains are mixed
Trade in services appear critical for circular business models
Better transparency & traceability of value chains needed
Source: Yamaguchi (2021) International trade and circular economy – policy alignment, https://doi.org/10.1787/ae4a2176-en.
OECD (2020) Workshop on international trade and circular economy – summary report, https://www.oecd.org/env/workshop-trade-circular-economy-summary-report.pdf
8. 7
Possible role for RTAs to facilitate trade for
resource efficiency and circular economy
• Goods for recycling and waste management
• Secondary-raw materials, goods for refurbishment and remanufacturing
• Clarify different definitions and classifications of waste, secondary materials,
second-hand goods, goods for refurbishment and remanufacturing between Parties
• Co-operation towards alignment of industry codes beyond HS codes
• Harmonisation and mutual acceptance of circular economy related standards and
mutual recognition of conformity assessment procedures
• Co-operation towards common standards (e.g. quality of secondary raw materials)
• Tackling illegal waste trade, tackle free-riding from online sales (EPR schemes)
• Swift implementation of prior informed consent procedures
• Removing trade restrictions where possible
• Sharing best practices, Aid for Trade, trade facilitation, digital technology, innovation
Regulations
Promoting trade in environmental goods and services
Standards
Definitions & classifications
Further areas for co-operation
9. 8
Thank you for joining
the discussion!
Access reports: http://oe.cd/trade-ce
For more information, contact:
Shunta.Yamaguchi@OECD.org