In April 2023, the United States accepted the World Trade Organization's (WTO) Agreement on Fisheries Subsidies,Footnote 1 the first WTO deal that focuses on environmental issues and just the second agreement reached under the WTO's auspices.Footnote 2 “We are proud to be among the first WTO members to accept this agreement. . . . It will help improve the lives of fishers and workers here in the United States and elsewhere,” remarked U.S Trade Representative Ambassador Katherine Tai.Footnote 3 Adopted at the WTO's twelfth ministerial conference in June 2022, the agreement, which establishes three disciplines that prohibit certain forms of fisheries subsidies,Footnote 4 is the result of more than two decades of negotiations.Footnote 5 The world's top five fisheries subsidizers—China, the European Union, Japan, South Korea, and the United States—have already signed on to the agreement,Footnote 6 which will enter into force upon acceptance by two-thirds of the WTO's membership.Footnote 7 Though an important initial step, the agreement is only partial. Negotiations continue on “outstanding issues . . . [to] achieve a comprehensive agreement on fisheries subsidies.”Footnote 8
Governments pay an estimated $35 billion a year in fisheries subsidiesFootnote 9 (defined by the WTO as “financial contributions” by a government or public body that confer a “benefit”).Footnote 10 Subsidies drive overfishing by reducing operating costs. The Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that more than one-third of fish stocks are overfished.Footnote 11 More than $22 billion in subsidies (approximately 63 percent) are capacity-enhancing, “allow[ing] vessels to travel farther, stay at sea longer and catch more fish than they could normally afford to, resulting in a depletion of fish populations beyond sustainable levels.”Footnote 12 It is estimated that “85% of all commercial stocks are now fished up to their biological limits or beyond.”Footnote 13 According to a 2018 study, without subsidies, as much as 54 percent of the high seas fishing industry would be unprofitable.Footnote 14 The elimination of subsidies would likely lead to a significant increase in fish biomass.Footnote 15 Beyond depleting fish stocks, overfishing “can impact entire ecosystems . . . creat[ing] an imbalance that can erode the food web and lead to a loss of other important marine life.”Footnote 16 It can also result in the loss of jobs,Footnote 17 particularly in coastal communities, and food insecurity for populations that rely on fish for animal protein.Footnote 18 The World Bank has estimated the economic losses of overfishing at $83 billion annually.Footnote 19 Though fisheries subsidies are “fully subject to the disciplines of the [WTO's Subsides and Countervailing Measures] Agreement,”Footnote 20 that agreement focuses on the trade distortions caused by subsidies and not their environmental impacts.
The Fisheries Subsidies Agreement establishes three disciplines for WTO members.Footnote 21 The first prohibits members from “grant[ing] or maintain[ing] any subsidy to a vessel or operator engaged in illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing or fishing related activities in support of IUU fishing.”Footnote 22 A “vessel or operator . . . [is] considered to be engaged in IUU fishing” if a determination is made by: (1) a coastal member “for activities in areas under its jurisdiction”; (2) a flag state member “for activities for vessels flying its flag”; or (3) a regional fisheries management organization or arrangement (RFMO/A) “in areas and for species under its competence.”Footnote 23 Minimum evidentiary and procedural requirements seek to ensure the fairness of that determination.Footnote 24 Subsidizing members retain some control over the prohibition through the power to set its duration by “tak[ing] into account the nature, gravity, and repetition of IUU fishing committed by a vessel or operator.”Footnote 25 The subsidizer's discretion is limited, however, by the requirement that the prohibition be “at least as long as the sanction resulting from the determination triggering the prohibition remains in force, or at least as long as the vessel or operator is listed by an RFMO/A, whichever is the longer.”Footnote 26 This discipline will assist in the fight against IUU fishing,Footnote 27 which represents between 13 percent and 31 percent of reported catches worldwide,Footnote 28 perhaps encouraging countries to improve monitoring and enforcement.
The second discipline prohibits “grant[ing] or maintain[ing] subsidies for fishing or fishing related activities regarding an overfished stock.”Footnote 29 Coastal members “under whose jurisdiction the fishing is taking place” or an RFMO/A “in areas and for species under its competence” determine whether a fish stock is “overfished” on the basis of the “best scientific evidence available.”Footnote 30 Nonetheless, members may grant or maintain subsidies “if such subsidies or other measures are implemented to rebuild the stock to a biologically sustainable level.”Footnote 31 That level is determined by coastal members or RFMO/As based on “reference points such as maximum sustainable yield . . . commensurate with the data available for the fishery.”Footnote 32 Importantly, this discipline links subsidies to sustainability.
The third discipline comprises three obligations. Members are prohibited from “grant[ing] or maintain[ing] subsidies provided to fishing or fishing related activities outside of the jurisdiction of a coastal Member or a coastal non-Member and outside the competence of a relevant RFMO/A.”Footnote 33 Members are required to “take special care and exercise due restraint when granting subsidies to vessels not flying that Member's flag.”Footnote 34 Members are also required to “take special care and exercise due restraint when granting subsidies to fishing or fishing related activities regarding stocks the status of which is unknown.”Footnote 35 Together, these provisions seek to prohibit subsidies in situations where members have attenuated control of the subsidies' impact on fish stocks, creating a high risk to sustainability.
Additional provisions seek to ensure the implementation of these three disciplines. One requires technical assistance and capacity-building assistance for developing countries.Footnote 36 The agreement creates a voluntary funding mechanism to support such assistance.Footnote 37 Another institutes a notification and transparency regime that requires that members disclose information through the subsidies notification process established under the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (SCM Agreement).Footnote 38 Members must provide information regarding the “type or kind of fishing activity for which the subsidy is provided” (including its form, amount, policy objective of the subsidy, its duration, and its trade effects) and, to the extent possible, the “status of the fish stocks in the fishery for which the subsidy is provided”; “conservation and management measures in place for the relevant fish stock”; “fleet capacity in the fishery for which the subsidy is provided”; names and identification of the fishing vessels; and catch data in the fishery of the subsidy.Footnote 39 Other measures require members to provide the Committee on Fisheries Subsidies, which is tasked with “review[ing] annually the implementation and operation of” the agreement,Footnote 40 with information on their implementation of the disciplines, their fisheries regimes, IUU determinations, and RFMO/As to which they are a party.Footnote 41 The White House has praised these “robust transparency provisions.”Footnote 42 If necessary, the agreement's implementation can be enforced through the WTO's dispute settlement mechanism, including provisions of the SCM Agreement.Footnote 43
The agreement has received broad support. U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai commended the agreement for prohibiting fisheries subsidies that “deplete our fisheries resources . . . [and] create unfair competition for U.S. and other fishers and workers that compete fairly.”Footnote 44 Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden praised U.S. acceptance of the agreement, stating that, “[w]hile there's still more work to be done, this agreement is an important first step towards cracking down on harmful government subsidies that deplete fishing stocks and undercut the hardworking fishers in the Pacific Northwest and around the country.”Footnote 45 Senator Tom Carper, chair of the Environment and Public Works Committee, “applaud[ed] [Ambassador Tai] for taking action to ratify the WTO agreement on fishery subsidies, which will help protect our oceans and reduce unsustainable fishing practices.”Footnote 46 Senator Sheldon Whitehouse said the agreement was “an important step towards leveling the playing field for the domestic fishing industry and cracking down on illegal fishing practices.”Footnote 47 The Stop Funding Overfishing coalition described the agreement as “a critical step towards ensuring the ocean's sustainability.”Footnote 48
Left unresolved by the agreement was a general prohibition on subsidies that contribute to overcapacity and overfishing. A draft text considered during the negotiations would have included a general prohibition and a list of examples of prohibited subsidies, such as “subsidies to construction, acquisition, modernisation, renovation or upgrading of vessels” and “subsidies to the purchase/costs of fuel, ice, or bait.”Footnote 49 Exceptions would have applied to subsidies that “are implemented to maintain the stock or stocks in the relevant fishery or fisheries at a biologically sustainable level.”Footnote 50 Exceptions would also have been given to developing countries for a period of time and under certain circumstances, such as “if [the country's] share of the annual global volume of marine capture production does not exceed [a to-be-determined] per cent.”Footnote 51 No consensus was reached, however, on these issues. The United States would like there to be “greater transparency on the use of forced labor on fishing vessels” in the final agreement.Footnote 52 More broadly, according to Ambassador Tai, “[w]e want additional, ambitious disciplines, which will improve the lives of fishers and workers here in the United States and elsewhere.”Footnote 53
The twelfth ministerial conference tasked negotiators to continue their work “with a view to making recommendations to the Thirteenth WTO Ministerial Conference for additional provisions that would achieve a comprehensive agreement.”Footnote 54 In December 2023, following the completion of the most recent week of negotiations, the chair, Ambassador Einar Gunnarsson of Iceland, said that “[w]e stand at a critical juncture for successfully concluding [a second agreement] on fisheries subsidies.”Footnote 55 It was his hope, he continued, “that this new draft of the disciplines on subsidies contributing to overcapacity and overfishing . . . will help [members] bridge the remaining divides in their positions as we begin our final push to conclude the negotiations in time for MC13.”Footnote 56 The chair's draft adopts a “‘hybrid approach’, which combines the use of an indicative list of subsidies that contribute to overcapacity or overfishing and a sustainability test for members to demonstrate that measures are implemented for healthy fish stocks.”Footnote 57 The draft “also includes the ‘two-tiered approach’, whereby the largest subsidizers would be subject to more scrutiny.”Footnote 58 A separate “standalone discipline concern[s] subsidies contingent on fishing or fishing-related activities outside the subsidizing member's jurisdiction.”Footnote 59 Negotiations will continue in January 2024. The thirteenth ministerial is scheduled for February 26–29, 2024, in Abu Dhabi.
The Fisheries Subsidies Agreement incentivizes members to reach a new accord. Failure to adopt “comprehensive disciplines” within four years of the agreement's entry into force will automatically result in its termination, absent a decision by the WTO General Council.Footnote 60