A leaked document is putting the spotlight on a trade deal between Canada and the European Union that one critic says is all about “giving corporations rights.”
The text of the deal, the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), had thus far been kept from public scrutiny. But the German television show Tagesschau uploaded a 521-page portion (pdf) Wednesday, said to be roughly a third of the full text.
Garry Neil, Executive Director of the Council of Canadians, an Ottawa-based organization that has challenged CETA, sounded alarm over potential threats that still appear to be part of the deal to people in the EU and Canada.
One of those issues is the investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) mechanism. As the Toronto Star explained, this is “similar to the much-maligned Chapter 11 provisions in NAFTA that allow multinational businesses to go before a special tribunal — rather than regular courts — to sue governments over regulations a corporation believes are discriminatory.”
“The substance of the ISDS remains,” Neil told Common Dreams. “They may have put limitations on it… but effectively you still have investor-state dispute settlements. It’s a central part of the agreement.”
In fact, he said, “It’s a central part of the selling feature that our government announces to our business community. The substance of it remains the same, which is that individual companies have the right to sue governments, and those cases are tried not in a domestic court but are tried in an independent tribunal.”
A key concern linked to the ISDS has to do water, Neil explained.
While the agreement has “some good language” around water, for example, that a country has the right to prevent bulk exports of water, he said that if water becomes a “commercial service, then it becomes a good,” so the outcome is the same. “If you privatize a municipal water service, or you create a public-private partnership and then the citizens of that same municipality 10 years on decide… that they want to re-municipalize, then you open yourself up to an investor claim.”
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