Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- United States - Measures Concerning the Importation, Marketing and Sale of Tuna and Tuna Products (WT/DS381)
- Table of Contents
- CASES CITED IN THIS REPORT
- ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THIS REPORT
- I INTRODUCTION
- II ARGUMENTS OF THE PARTICIPANTS AND THE THIRD PARTICIPANTS
- III ISSUES RAISED ON APPEAL
- IV BACKGROUND AND OVERVIEW OF THE MEASURE AT ISSUE
- V LEGAL CHARACTERIZATION OF THE MEASURE AT ISSUE
- VI ARTICLE 2.1 OF THE TBT AGREEMENT
- VII ARTICLE 2.2 OF THE TBT AGREEMENT
- VIII ARTICLE 2.4 OF THE TBT AGREEMENT
- IX MEXICO'S CLAIMS UNDER ARTICLES I:1 AND III:4 OF THE GATT 1994
- X FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS
- ANNEX I Notification of an Appeal by the United States, WT/DS381/10
- ANNEX II Notification of an Other Appeal by Mexico, WT/DS381/11
- Table of Contents
- TABLE OF WTO DISPUTES CITED IN THIS REPORT
- TABLE OF GATT DISPUTES CITED IN THIS REPORT
- LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
- LIST OF US EXHIBITS CITED IN THIS REPORT
- LIST OF MEXICAN EXHIBITS CITED IN THIS REPORT
- LIST OF AMICUS CURIAE EXHIBITS CITED IN THIS REPORT
- I INTRODUCTION
- II FACTUAL ASPECTS
- III PARTIES' REQUESTS FOR FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
- IV ARGUMENTS OF THE PARTIES
- V ARGUMENTS OF THE THIRD PARTIES
- VI INTERIM REVIEW
- VII FINDINGS
- VIII RULINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
- Cumulative List of Published Disputes
V - LEGAL CHARACTERIZATION OF THE MEASURE AT ISSUE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 December 2017
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- United States - Measures Concerning the Importation, Marketing and Sale of Tuna and Tuna Products (WT/DS381)
- Table of Contents
- CASES CITED IN THIS REPORT
- ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THIS REPORT
- I INTRODUCTION
- II ARGUMENTS OF THE PARTICIPANTS AND THE THIRD PARTICIPANTS
- III ISSUES RAISED ON APPEAL
- IV BACKGROUND AND OVERVIEW OF THE MEASURE AT ISSUE
- V LEGAL CHARACTERIZATION OF THE MEASURE AT ISSUE
- VI ARTICLE 2.1 OF THE TBT AGREEMENT
- VII ARTICLE 2.2 OF THE TBT AGREEMENT
- VIII ARTICLE 2.4 OF THE TBT AGREEMENT
- IX MEXICO'S CLAIMS UNDER ARTICLES I:1 AND III:4 OF THE GATT 1994
- X FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS
- ANNEX I Notification of an Appeal by the United States, WT/DS381/10
- ANNEX II Notification of an Other Appeal by Mexico, WT/DS381/11
- Table of Contents
- TABLE OF WTO DISPUTES CITED IN THIS REPORT
- TABLE OF GATT DISPUTES CITED IN THIS REPORT
- LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
- LIST OF US EXHIBITS CITED IN THIS REPORT
- LIST OF MEXICAN EXHIBITS CITED IN THIS REPORT
- LIST OF AMICUS CURIAE EXHIBITS CITED IN THIS REPORT
- I INTRODUCTION
- II FACTUAL ASPECTS
- III PARTIES' REQUESTS FOR FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
- IV ARGUMENTS OF THE PARTIES
- V ARGUMENTS OF THE THIRD PARTIES
- VI INTERIM REVIEW
- VII FINDINGS
- VIII RULINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
- Cumulative List of Published Disputes
Summary
178. Before the Panel, Mexico challenged the consistency of the US “dolphin-safe” labelling provisions with Articles I:1 and III:4 of the GATT 1994 and Article 2 of the TBT Agreement. Before proceeding to examine the substance of Mexico's claims, the Panel stated that it would determine, as a threshold matter, whether, as contended by Mexico, the measure at issue constitutes a “technical regulation” to which Article 2 of the TBT Agreement applies.
179. In its analysis of this question, the Panel applied what it described as a “three-tier test” and made three intermediate findings. First, the Panel found that the measure at issue applies to an “identifiable” product or group of products, namely, “tuna products” as defined in the DPCIA and Section 216.3 of Title 50 of the United States Code of Federal Regulations. Second, the Panel found that the measure at issue sets out the conditions under which tuna products may be labelled “dolphin-safe” and that it thus establishes “labelling requirements, as they apply to a product, process or production method” within the meaning of Annex 1.1 to the TBT Agreement. Third, the Panel found that the measure at issue establishes “labelling requirements, compliance with which is mandatory”. The United States does not contest the first two intermediate findings made by the Panel. Instead, its appeal focuses on the Panel's finding that the measure at issue establishes labelling requirements “with which compliance is mandatory” and the Panel's conclusion that the US measure therefore constitutes a “technical regulation” within the meaning of Annex 1.1.
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- Dispute Settlement Reports 2012 , pp. 1920 - 1929Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014