The United States requested environmental consultations with South Korea under the United States-Korea Free Trade Agreement (KORUS) in September 2019. This request occurred on the same day as the release of a report to Congress raising concerns about South Korea's response to illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing. Following the consultations, South Korea amended its law regulating the Korean fisheries industry in order to make more enforcement mechanisms available.
On September 19, 2019, the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service released its biennial report to Congress on fisheries management, which identified South Korea and two other nations as failing to adequately regulate illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing.Footnote 1 The report noted that the treaty monitoring body for the Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources had determined that, in 2017, two South Korean fishing vessels had impermissibly set “longline gear within 24 hours of a notified fishery closure.”Footnote 2 South Korea had ordered the boats to leave and suspended one boat's license for two months, but it did not impose fines or seize the illegal catch.Footnote 3 This was because its Distant Water Fisheries Development Act provided only for criminal penalties, which it chose not to pursue in response to the 2017 incident.Footnote 4 The 2019 report to Congress noted that during prior consultations with both the treaty monitoring body and U.S. negotiators, South Korea had “recognized the need for administrative enforcement authority to address cases … that are inappropriate for criminal prosecution, as well as for enabling the government to deprive the violators of the economic benefit of their violations.”Footnote 5 South Korea represented that it would soon be amending its Distant Water Fisheries Development Act to incorporate such changes.Footnote 6
Although the 2019 report recognized that South Korea was already on its way to reforming its laws, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) requested consultations with South Korea on this subject on the same day that the report was released.Footnote 7 The USTR invoked the environmental chapter of KORUS, which requires that “a party shall adopt, maintain, and implement laws, regulations, and all other measures to fulfill its obligations under the multilateral environmental agreements listed in Annex 20-A,” including the Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources.Footnote 8 U.S. officials then met with South Korean counterparts in Seoul on October 17, 2019, and, within a few weeks of this meeting, South Korea amended its Distant Water Fisheries Development Act to encompass administrative remedies.Footnote 9
U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer asserted that “the Trump Administration's strong commitment to using tools such as environmental monitoring and enforcement provisions under our trade agreements can produce real results that help protect and conserve our ocean resources.”Footnote 10 These “first ever environment consultations” under KORUS came less than a year after the USTR had pursued environmental consultations under the U.S. free trade agreement with Peru.Footnote 11 In 2019, there were thirteen U.S. free trade agreements that featured environment chapters, including the not-yet-in-force United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA).Footnote 12 In December of 2019, the Trump administration conceded to more robust enforcement mechanisms for the USMCA's environmental provisions in order to ensure its approval in the House of Representatives.Footnote 13