From Jean Blaylock, Global Justice Now <[email protected]>
Subject Drop corporate courts from the Pacific trade deal
Date March 3, 2023 4:38 PM
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We’ve just heard that the UK might be close to joining the Pacific trade deal. That’s bad news for the climate, for food standards and for...

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Hi John,
We’ve just heard that the UK might be close to joining the Pacific trade deal. That’s bad news for the climate, for food standards and for global inequality.

The Pacific trade deal (1), was agreed in 2018 between eleven countries around the Pacific rim. The UK has been trying to join it for the last few years in a highly secretive process. This week there are news stories that this process could be nearing the finish line.(2)

What has been less talked about is that the Pacific trade deal includes the notorious corporate court mechanism. These are secret tribunals written into trade deals which enable corporations to sue governments outside of the national legal system for billions. Fossil fuel companies have been using them to challenge climate action.

Right now, the UK government is recognising the dangers that corporate courts pose to climate policy in the Energy Charter Treaty. It hasn’t yet taken the action that we’ve all been telling it is needed, but it accepts there is a problem.

Yet at the same time the government might lock itself into the same danger all over again by accepting corporate courts in the Pacific trade deal!

Can you add your name to the petition telling the UK to drop corporate courts from the Pacific trade deal?
Sign the petition ([link removed])
Together we previously campaigned successfully to get corporate courts dropped from the Australia and Canada trade deals. We knew then that there was a risk of corporate courts being sneaked back in via the Pacific trade deal if it went ahead. But we also know the government responded to public pressure before, and we can win again.

The risk is clear. In the UK, our current government has made the disastrous decision to green-light the West Cumbria coal mine. But campaigners have filed a legal challenge and the decision could still be reversed - including by a future government.

The investor behind the mine is an Australian company, EMR Capital. If the decision is later changed, then with corporate courts in the Pacific trade deal this is exactly the kind of case where EMR could sue. Or what could actually be worse for the planet, the company could use the threat of the case to try and influence a future government’s decision and let the mine go ahead.

Instead, the UK needs to exclude itself from the corporate court mechanism in the Pacific trade deal. This is entirely possible - New Zealand has already done it. Help us dial up the pressure by signing the petition:
Add your name ([link removed])
The deal is already threatening food standards. The Canadian government is pushing for the UK to drop its ban on hormone beef as a condition for joining the Pacific trade deal.(3) Growth hormones are used in industrial cattle farming in countries like Canada and Australia, but have been banned in the UK for more than 30 years on public health grounds. But the trade deal is being used as leverage to try and change that, and former agriculture minister, George Eustice, has warned of the risk that these standards will be sacrificed.(4)

Thank you for your support as we raise the alarm about the risks from the Pacific trade deal.

Jean Blaylock
Trade campaigner at Global Justice Now
1. The Pacific trade deal is also known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP). The countries in the trade deal are Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam.
2. “Northern Ireland deal unlocks UK accession to transpacific trade bloc ([link removed]) ”, Financial Times, 1 Mar 2023
3. “Canada still pushing to kill UK hormone beef ban as Pacific trade pact nears ([link removed]) ”, Politico, 27 Feb 2023
4. “Eustice warns Pacific trade plans put hormone beef ban at risk ([link removed]) ”, Farmers Weekly, 1 Feb 2023
** Stop corporate courts blocking climate action
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Fossil fuel companies are using secret tribunals written into trade deals to sue governments over climate action. But a movement is coming together to call on the UK and governments around the world to scrap these ‘corporate courts’.

Regular gifts give us the long-term stability to plan effective campaigns for a more just world, and help build global solidarity.

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