Subject to Legal Review in English,
Spanish and French for Accuracy, Clarity and Consistency Subject to
Authentication of English, Spanish and French Versions
CHAPTER 2
NATIONAL TREATMENT AND MARKET ACCESS
FOR GOODS
Section A: Definitions and Scope
Article 2.1: Definitions
For the purposes of this Chapter:
advertising films and
recordings means recorded visual media or
audio materials, consisting essentially of images and/or sound, showing the
nature or operation of goods or services offered for sale or lease by a person
established or resident in the territory of a Party, provided that such
materials are of a kind suitable for exhibition to prospective customers but
not for broadcast to the general public;
commercial samples of
negligible value means commercial or trade
samples having a value, individually or in the aggregate as shipped, of not
more than one U.S. dollar, or the equivalent amount in the currency of another
Party, or so marked, torn, perforated or otherwise treated that they are
unsuitable for sale or for use except as commercial samples;
consular transactions means requirements that
goods of a Party intended for export to the territory of the other Party must
first be submitted to the supervision of the consul of the importing Party in
the territory of the exporting Party for the purpose of obtaining consular
invoices or consular visas for commercial invoices, certificates of origin,
manifests, shippers’ export declarations, or any other customs documentation
required on or in connection with importation;
consumed means (a) actually consumed; or (b)
further processed or manufactured so as to result in a substantial change in
the value, form, or use of the good or in the production of another good;
duty-free means free of customs duty;
good(s) means any merchandise, product,
article or material;
goods admitted for sports purposes means
sports requisites for use in sports contests, demonstrations or training in the
territory of the Party into whose territory such goods are admitted;
goods intended for display or demonstration includes
their component parts, ancillary apparatus, and accessories;
import licensing means an administrative
procedure requiring the submission of an application or other documentation
(other than that generally required for customs clearance purposes) to the
relevant administrative body as a prior condition for importation into the
territory of the importing Party;
Import Licensing Agreement means the WTO Agreement
on Import Licensing Procedures;
performance requirement means a requirement
that:
(a) a given level or percentage of goods or services
be exported;
(b) domestic goods or services of the Party granting
a waiver of customs duties or an import license be substituted for imported
goods;
(c) a person benefiting from a waiver of customs
duties or a requirement for an import license purchase other goods or services
in the territory of the Party granting the waiver of customs duties or the
import license, or accord a preference to domestically produced goods;
(d) a person benefiting from a waiver of customs
duties or a requirement for an import license produce goods or supply services,
in the territory of the Party granting the waiver of customs duties or the
import license, with a given level or percentage of domestic content; or
(e) relates in any way to the volume or value of
imports to the volume or value of exports or to the amount of foreign exchange
inflows;
but does not include a requirement that an imported
good be:
(f) subsequently exported;
(g) used as a material in the production of another
good that is subsequently exported;
(h) substituted by an identical or similar good used
as a material in the production of another good that is subsequently exported;
or
(i) substituted by an identical or similar good that
is subsequently exported; and
printed advertising
materials means those goods classified in
Chapter 49 of the Harmonized System, including brochures, pamphlets, leaflets,
trade catalogues, yearbooks published by trade associations, tourist
promotional materials and posters, that are used to promote, publicise or
advertise a good or service, are essentially intended to advertise a good or
service, and are supplied free of charge.
Article 2.2: Scope
Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, this
Chapter applies to trade in goods of a Party.
Section: B - National Treatment and Market Access
for Goods
Article 2.3: National Treatment
1. Each Party shall accord national treatment to the goods of
the other Parties in accordance with Article III of GATT 1994, including its
interpretative notes, and to this end, Article III of GATT 1994 and its
interpretative notes are incorporated into and shall form part of this
Agreement, mutatis mutandis.
2. For greater certainty, the treatment to be
accorded by a Party under paragraph 1 means, with respect to a regional level
of government, treatment no less favourable than the most favourable treatment
that regional level of government accords to any like, directly competitive, or
substitutable goods, as the case may be, of the Party of which it forms a part.
3. Paragraph 1 shall not apply to the measures set
out in Annex 2-A (National Treatment and Import and Export Restrictions).
Article 2.4: Elimination of Customs Duties
1. Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, no
Party may increase any existing customs duty, or adopt any new customs duty, on
an originating good.
2. Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement,
each Party shall progressively eliminate its customs duties on originating
goods in accordance with its Schedule to Annex 2-D (Tariff Elimination).
3. On the request of any Party, the requesting Party
and one or more other Parties shall consult to consider accelerating the
elimination of customs duties set out in the Schedules to Annex 2-D (Tariff
Elimination).
4. An agreement between two or more of the Parties to
accelerate the elimination of a customs duty on an originating good shall
supersede any duty rate or staging category determined pursuant to their
Schedules to Annex 2-D (Tariff Elimination) for that good when approved by each
Party to that agreement in accordance with its applicable legal procedures. The
parties to that agreement shall inform the other Parties as early as
practicable before the new rate of customs duty takes effect.
5. A Party may at any time unilaterally accelerate
the elimination of customs duties on originating goods of one or more of the
other Parties set out in its Schedule in Annex 2-D (Tariff Elimination). A
Party shall inform the other Parties as early as practicable before the new
rate of customs duty takes effect.
6. For greater certainty, no Party shall prohibit an
importer from claiming for an originating good the rate of customs duty applied
under the WTO Agreement.
7. For greater certainty, a Party may raise a customs
duty to the level established in its Schedule to Annex 2-D (Tariff Elimination)
following a unilateral reduction for the year respective.
Article 2.5: Waiver of
Customs Duties
1. No Party may adopt any new
waiver of customs duties, or expand with respect to existing recipients or
extend to any new recipient the application of an existing waiver of customs
duties, where the waiver is conditioned, explicitly or implicitly, on the
fulfilment of a performance requirement.
2. No Party may, explicitly
or implicitly, condition on the fulfilment of a performance requirement the
continuation of any existing waiver of customs duties
Article 2.6: Goods Re-entered after Repair or
Alteration
1. No Party shall apply a customs duty to a good,
regardless of its origin, that re-enters its territory after that good has been
temporarily exported from its territory to the territory of another Party for
repair or alteration, regardless of whether such repair or alteration could be
performed in the territory of the Party from which the good was exported for
repair or alteration or has increased the value of the good.1
[1 With respect to Canada, this paragraph shall not
apply to certain ships of Chapter 89 that have been repaired or altered. These
ships will be treated in a manner consistent with the notes associated with the
relevant tariff items in Canada’s Tariff Schedule to Annex 2-D (Tariff
Elimination).]
2. No Party shall apply a
customs duty to a good, regardless of its origin, admitted temporarily from the
territory of another Party for repair or alteration.
3. For the purposes of this Article, repair or
alteration does not include an operation or process that:
(a) destroys a good's essential characteristics or
creates a new or commercially different good; or
(b) transforms an unfinished good into a finished
good.
Article 2.7: Duty-Free Entry of Commercial Samples
of Negligible Value and Printed Advertising Material
Each Party shall grant duty-free entry to commercial
samples of negligible value and printed advertising material imported from the
territory of another Party, regardless of their origin, but may require that:
(a) such samples be imported solely for the
solicitation of orders for goods, or services provided from the territory, of
another Party or a non-Party; or
(b) such advertising materials are imported in
packets that each contain no more than one copy of each material and that
neither such materials nor packets form part of a larger consignment.
Article 2.8: Temporary Admission of Goods
1. Each Party shall grant duty-free temporary
admission for the following goods, regardless of their origin:
(a) professional equipment, including equipment for
the press or television, software and broadcasting and cinematographic
equipment, necessary for carrying out the business activity, trade or
profession of a person who qualifies for temporary entry pursuant to the laws
of the importing Party;
(b) goods intended for display or demonstration;
(c) commercial samples and advertising films and
recordings; and
(d) goods admitted for sports purposes.
2. Each Party shall, at the
request of the person concerned and for reasons its customs authority considers
valid, extend the time limit for temporary admission beyond the period
initially fixed.
3. No Party may condition the duty-free temporary
admission of goods referred to in Paragraph 1, other than to require that such
goods:
(a) be used solely by or under the personal
supervision of a national or resident of another Party in the exercise of the
business activity, trade, profession, or sport of that person;
(b) not be sold or leased while in its territory;
(c) be accompanied by a security in an amount no
greater than the charges that would otherwise be owed on entry or final
importation, releasable on exportation of the good;
(d) be capable of identification when imported and
exported;
(e) be exported on the departure of the person
referenced in subparagraph (a), or within such other period reasonably related
to the purpose of the temporary admission as the Party may establish, or within
one year, unless extended;
(f) be admitted in no greater quantity than is
reasonable for their intended use; and
(g) be otherwise admissible into the Party’s
territory under its laws.
4. Each Party shall grant duty-free temporary
admission for containers and pallets regardless of their origin, in use or to
be used in the shipment of merchandise or goods in international traffic.
(a) For the purposes of this paragraph, container
means an article of transport equipment that is fully or partially enclosed to
constitute a compartment intended for containing merchandise or goods, is
substantial and has an internal volume of one cubic meter or more, is of a
permanent character and accordingly strong enough to be suitable for repeated
use, is used in significant numbers in international traffic, is specially
designed to facilitate the carriage of merchandise or goods by more than one
mode of transport without intermediate reloading, and is designed both for
ready handling, particularly when being transferred from one
[Where’s (b)?]
(c) no Party shall condition the release of any
obligation, including any security that it imposes in respect of the entry of a
vehicle or container into its territory on its exit through any particular
customs port of departure; and
(d) no Party shall require that the vehicle or
carrier bringing a container from the territory of another Party into its
territory be the same vehicle or carrier that takes such container to the
territory of that other Party, or to the territory of any other Party.
10. For purposes of paragraph 9, “vehicle” means a
truck, a truck tractor, a tractor, a trailer unit or trailer, a locomotive, or
a railway car or other railroad equipment.
Article 2.10: Ad hoc Discussions
1. Each Party shall designate a Contact Point for
Trade in Goods to facilitate communications amongst the Parties on any matter
covered by this Chapter, including any request or information conveyed under
Article 26.5 relating to measures of a Party which affects the operation of
this Chapter.
2. Any Party (“the requesting Party”) may request ad
hoc discussions to discuss any matter arising under this Chapter (including
specific non-tariff measures), except a matter that could be addressed under a
Chapter-specific consultation mechanism established under another Chapter, that
the requesting Party believes may adversely affect its interests in trade in
goods by delivering a written request to another Party (“the requested Party”)
through the Contact Points for Trade in Goods of the requesting Party and requested
Party. The request shall be in writing and identify the reasons for the
request, including a description of the requesting Party’s concerns and an
indication of the provisions of this Chapter to which the concerns relate. The
requesting Party may provide all the other Parties with a copy of the request.
3. To the extent that the Party to which the request
is directed considers that the matter which is the subject of the request
should be addressed under a Chapter-specific consultation mechanism established
under another Chapter, it shall promptly notify the Contact Points for Trade in
Goods of the requesting Party including the reasons it considers that the
request should be addressed under the other mechanism and forward the request
and such notification to the Parties’ respective contact points designated
under Article 27.5 (Contact Points) for appropriate action.
4. Within 30 days of receipt of a request under
paragraph 2, the requested Party shall provide a written reply to the
requesting Party. Within 30 days of the requesting Party’s receipt of the
reply, the requesting and requested Parties (“the discussing Parties”) shall
meet in person or via electronic means to discuss the matter identified in the
request. If the discussing Parties choose to meet in person, the meeting shall
take place in the territory of the requested Party, unless otherwise decided by
the discussing Parties.
5. Any Party may submit a written request to the
discussing Parties to participate in the ad hoc discussions. If the
matter has not been resolved prior to receipt of such request and if discussing
Parties agree, such Party may participate in the ad hoc discussions held
under this Article subject to such conditions as the discussing Parties may
decide.
6. If the requesting Party believes that the matter
is urgent, it may request that any discussions take place within a time frame
shorter than that provided for under paragraph 4. Any Party may request urgent ad
hoc discussions where a measure:
(a) is applied without prior notice or without an
opportunity for Parties to avail themselves of the opportunities for ad hoc discussions
provided in paragraphs 2, 3 and 4; and
(b) may threaten to impede the importation, sale or
distribution of an originating good which is in the process of being
transported from the exporting Party to the importing Party, or has not been
released from Customs control or is in storage in a warehouse regulated by the
Customs Administration of the importing Party.
7. Ad hoc discussions under this Article shall
be confidential and without prejudice to the rights of any Party, including
being without prejudice to rights pertaining to dispute settlement proceedings
under Chapter 28 (Dispute Settlement).
Article 2.11: Import and Export Restrictions
1. Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, no Party
shall adopt or maintain any prohibition or restriction on the importation of
any good of another Party or on the exportation or sale for export of any good
destined for the territory of another Party, except in accordance with Article
XI of the GATT 1994 and its interpretative notes, and to this end Article XI of
the GATT 1994 and its interpretive notes are incorporated into and made a part
of this Agreement, mutatis mutandis.
2. The Parties understand that the GATT 1994 rights
and obligations incorporated by paragraph 1 prohibit, in any circumstances in
which any other form of restriction is prohibited, a Party from adopting or
maintaining:
(a) export and import price requirements, except as
permitted in enforcement of countervailing and antidumping duty orders and
undertakings;
(b) import licensing conditioned on the fulfilment of
a performance requirement; or
(c) voluntary export restraints inconsistent with
Article VI of the GATT 1994, as implemented under Article 18 of the SCM
Agreement and Article 8.1 of the AD Agreement.
3. For greater certainty, paragraph 1 applies to the
importation of commercial cryptographic goods.
4. For the purposes of paragraph 3:
commercial cryptographic goods means any good
implementing or incorporating cryptography, where the good is not designed or
modified specifically for government use and is sold or otherwise made
available to the public.
5. Paragraphs 1 and 2 shall not apply to the measures set out
in Annex 2-A (National Treatment and Import and Export Restrictions).
6. In the event that a Party adopts or maintains a
prohibition or restriction on the importation from or exportation to a
non-Party of a good, no provision of this Agreement shall be construed to
prevent that Party from:
(a) limiting or prohibiting the importation of the
good of the non-Party from the territory of another Party; or
(b) requiring as a condition for exporting the good
of that Party to the territory of another Party, that the good not be
re-exported to the non-Party, directly or indirectly, without being consumed in
the territory of the other Party.
7. In the event that a Party adopts or maintains a
prohibition or restriction on the importation of a good from a non-Party, the
Parties, on the request of any Party, shall consult with a view to avoiding
undue interference with or distortion of pricing, marketing, or distribution
arrangements in another Party.
8. No Party may, as a condition for engaging in
importation or for the importation of a good, require a person of another Party
to establish or maintain a contractual or other relationship with a distributor
in its territory.4
[4 This paragraph shall not apply to the importation or
distribution of rice and paddy in Malaysia.]
9. For greater certainty, paragraph 8 does not
prevent a Party from requiring that a person referred to in that paragraph
designate a point of contact for the purpose of facilitating communications
between its regulatory authorities and that person.
10. For the purposes of paragraph 8:
distributor means a person of a Party who is
responsible for the commercial distribution, agency, concession, or
representation in the territory of that Party of goods of another Party;
Article 2.12: Remanufactured Goods
1. For greater certainty, paragraph 1 of Article 2.11
(Import and Export Restrictions) applies to prohibitions and restrictions on
the importation of remanufactured goods.
2. If a Party adopts or maintains measures
prohibiting or restricting the importation of used goods, it shall not apply
those measures to remanufactured goods.56
[5 For greater certainty, subject to its obligations
under this Agreement and the relevant WTO Agreements, a Party may require that
remanufactured goods:
(a) be identified as such for distribution or sale in
its territory, and
(b) meet all applicable technical requirements that
apply to equivalent goods in new condition.]
[6 This paragraph shall not apply to the treatment of
certain remanufactured goods by Vietnam as set out in Annex 2-B (Remanufactured
Goods).]
Article 2.13: Import Licensing
1. No Party may adopt or maintain a measure that is
inconsistent with the Import Licensing Agreement.
2. Promptly after this Agreement enters into force
for a Party, that Party shall notify the other Parties of its existing import
licensing procedures, if any. The notification shall include the information
specified in Article 5.2 of the Import Licensing Agreement and any information
required under paragraph 6.
3. A Party shall be deemed to be in compliance with
paragraph 2 with respect to an existing import licensing procedure if:
(a) it has notified that procedure to the Committee
on Import Licensing provided for in Article 4 of the Import Licensing Agreement
together with the information specified in Article 5.2 of that agreement;
(b) in the most recent annual submission due before
entry into force of this Agreement for that Party to the Committee on Import
Licensing in response to the annual questionnaire on import licensing
procedures described in Article 7.3 of the Import Licensing Agreement, it has
provided, with respect to that procedure, the information requested in that
questionnaire; and
(c) it has included in either the notification
described in subparagraph (a) or the annual submission described in
subparagraph (b) any information required to be notified to the other Parties
to this Agreement under paragraph 6.
4. Each Party shall comply with Article 1.4(a) of the
Import Licensing Agreement with respect to any new or modified import licensing
procedure. A Party shall publish on an official government internet site any
information that it is required to publish under Article 1.4(a) of the Import
Licensing Agreement in a source that it has notified to the Committee on Import
Licensing.
5. Each Party shall notify the other Parties of any
new import licensing procedures it adopts and any modifications it makes to its
existing import licensing procedures, whenever possible, no later than 60 days
before the new procedure or modification takes effect. In no case shall a Party
provide such notification later than 60 days following the date of its
publication. The notification shall include any information required under
paragraph 6. A Party that notifies a new import licensing procedure or a
modification to an existing import licensing procedure to the Committee on
Import Licensing in accordance with Articles 5.1 to 5.3 of the Import Licensing
Agreement and that includes in its notification any information required to be
notified to the other Parties to this Agreement under paragraph 6 shall be
deemed to have complied with this requirement.
6. (a) A notification made pursuant to paragraph 2,
3, or 5 shall state if, under any procedure that is a subject of the
notification:
(i) the terms of an import license for any product
limit the permissible end users of the product; or
(ii) the Party imposes any of the following conditions
on eligibility for obtaining a license to import any product:
(A) membership in an industry association;
(B) approval by industry association of the request
for an import license;
(C) a history of importing the product or similar
products;
(D) minimum importer or end user production capacity;
(E) minimum importer or end user registered capital;
or
(F) a contractual or other relationship between the
importer and a distributor in the Party’s territory.
(b) Any notification stating, pursuant to
subparagraph (a), the existence of a limitation on permissible end users or a
license-eligibility condition shall:
(i) list all products for which the end-user
limitation or license eligibility condition applies; and
(ii) describe the end-user limitation or
license-eligibility condition.
7. Each Party shall respond within 60 days to a reasonable
enquiry from another Party concerning its licensing rules and its procedures
for the submission of an application for an import license, including the
eligibility of persons, firms, and institutions to make such an application,
the administrative body(ies) to be approached, and the list of products subject
to the licensing requirement.
8. Where a Party has denied an import license
application with respect to a good of another Party, it shall, on request of
the applicant and within a reasonable period after receiving the request,
provide the applicant with a written explanation of the reason(s) for the
denial.
9. No Party shall apply an import licensing procedure
to a good of another Party unless it has, with respect to that procedure, met
the requirements of paragraph 2 or paragraph 4, as applicable.
Article 2.14: Transparency in Export Licensing
Procedures7
[7 The obligations in this Article apply only to procedures
for applying for an export license.]
1. Within 30 days after the date this Agreement
enters into force, each Party shall notify the other Parties in writing of the
publications in which its export licensing procedures, if any, are set out,
including addresses of relevant government websites. Thereafter, each Party
shall publish in the notified publications and websites any new export
licensing procedure, or any modification of an export licensing procedure, it
adopts as soon as practicable but no later than 30 days after the new procedure
or modification takes effect.
2. Each Party shall ensure that it includes in the
publications it has notified under paragraph 1:
(a) the texts of its export licensing procedures,
including any modifications it makes to these procedures;
(b) the goods subject to each licensing procedure;
(c) for each procedure, a description of:
(i) the process for applying for a license;
(ii) any criteria an applicant must meet to be
eligible to seek a license, such as possessing an activity license,
establishing or maintaining an investment, or operating through a particular
form of establishment in a Party’s territory;
(d) a contact point or points from which interested
persons can obtain further information on the conditions for obtaining an
export license;
(e) the administrative body or bodies to which an
application or other relevant documentation must be submitted;
(f) a description of or a citation to a publication
reproducing in full any measure or measures that the export licensing procedure
is designed to implement;
(g) the period during which each export licensing
procedure will be in effect, unless the procedure will remain in effect until
withdrawn or revised in a new publication;
(h) if the Party intends to use a licensing procedure
to administer an export quota, the overall quantity and, where practicable,
value of the quota and the opening and closing dates of the quota; and
(i) any exemptions or exceptions available to the
public that replace the requirement to obtain an export license, how to request
or use these exemptions or exceptions, and the criteria for them.
3. Except where doing so would reveal business
proprietary or other confidential information of a particular person, on the
request of another Party that has a substantial trade interest in the matter, a
Party shall provide, to the extent possible, the following information
regarding a particular export licensing procedure that it adopts or maintains:
(a) the aggregate number of licenses the Party has
granted over a recent period that the requesting Party has specified; and
(b) measures, if any, that the Party has taken in
conjunction with the licensing procedure to restrict domestic production or
consumption or to stabilize production, supply, or prices for the relevant
good(s)
4. Nothing in this Article shall be construed in a
manner that would require a Party to grant an export license, or that would
prevent a Party from implementing its obligations/commitments under United
Nations Security Council Resolutions, as well as multilateral non-proliferation
regimes, including: the Wassenaar Arrangement on Export Controls for
Conventional Arms and Dual-Use Goods and Technologies; the Nuclear
Suppliers Group; the Australia Group; the Convention on the Prohibition of
the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on
Their Destruction, done at Paris, January 13, 1993; the Convention on
the Prohibition of the Development, Production and Stockpiling of
Bacteriological (Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on Their Destruction,
done at Washington, London, and Moscow, April 10, 1972; the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons; and the Missile Technology Control
Regime.
5. For the purposes of this Article:
export licensing procedure means a requirement
that a Party adopts or maintains under which an exporter must, as a condition
for exporting a good from the Party’s territory, submit an application or other
documentation to an administrative body or bodies, but does not include customs
documentation required in the normal course of trade or any requirement that
must be fulfilled prior to introduction of the good into commerce within the
Party’s territory.
Article 2.15: Administrative Fees and Formalities
1. Each Party shall ensure, in accordance with Article VIII:1
of the GATT 1994 and its interpretive notes, that all fees and charges of
whatever character (other than export taxes, customs duties, charges
equivalent to an internal tax or other internal charge applied consistently
with Article III:2 of GATT 1994, and antidumping and countervailing duties)
imposed on or in connection with importation or exportation are limited in
amount to the approximate cost of services rendered and do not represent an
indirect protection to domestic goods or a taxation of imports or exports for
fiscal purposes.
2. No Party may require consular transactions,
including related fees and charges, in connection with the importation of any
good of the other Parties.
3. Each Party shall make available through the
Internet a current list of the fees and charges it imposes in connection with
importation or exportation.
4. No Party shall levy fees and charges on or in
connection with importation or exportation on an ad valorem basis.8
[8 The Merchandise Processing Fee (MPF) shall be the
only fee or charge of the United States to which this paragraph shall apply. In
addition, this paragraph shall not apply to any fee or charge of the United
States until three years after the date of entry into force of the Agreement.
Further, this paragraph shall not apply to any fee or charge of Mexico on or in
connection with the importation or exportation of a non-originating good until
five years after the entry into force of this Agreement for Mexico.]
5. Each Party shall periodically review its fees and
charges with a view to reducing their number and diversity, where practicable.
Article 2.16: Export Duties, Taxes or Other
Charges
Except as provided for in Annex 2-C (Export Duties,
Taxes or Other Charges), no Party may adopt or maintain any duty, tax, or other
charge on the export of any good to the territory of another Party, unless such
duty, tax or charge is adopted or maintained on any such good when destined for
domestic consumption.
Article 2.17: Committee on Trade in Goods
1. The Parties hereby establish a Committee on Trade
in Goods (Committee), comprising representatives of each Party.
2. The Committee shall meet at such times as the
Parties mutually decide to consider any matters arising under this Chapter.
Meetings shall take place in such locations and through such means as the
Parties mutually decide. During the first five years after entry into force of
this Agreement, the Committee shall meet no less than once a year.
3. The Committee’s functions shall include:
(a) promoting trade in goods between the Parties,
including through consultations on accelerating tariff elimination under this
Agreement and other issues as appropriate;
(b) addressing barriers to trade in goods between the
Parties, other than those within the competence of TPP bodies other than the
Commission, especially those related to the application of non-tariff measures,
and, if appropriate, referring such matters to the Commission for its
consideration;
(c) reviewing the future amendments to the Harmonized
System to ensure that each Party’s obligations under this Agreement are not
altered, including by establishing, as needed, guidelines for the transposition
of Parties’ Schedules to Annex 2-D (Tariff Elimination), and consulting to
resolve any conflicts between:
(i) amendments to the Harmonized System and Annex
2-D; or
(ii) Annex 2-D and national nomenclatures;
(d) consulting on and endeavouring to resolve any
difference that may arise among the Parties on matters related to the
classification of goods under the Harmonized System and Annex 2-D; and
(e) undertaking any additional work that the
Commission may assign to it.
4. The Committee shall consult, as appropriate, with
other committees established under this Agreement when addressing issues of
relevance to those committees.
5. The Committee shall, within two years of entry
into force of this Agreement, submit to the Commission an initial report on its
work under subparagraphs 3(a) and 3(b). In producing this report, the Committee
shall consult, as appropriate, with the Committee on Agricultural Trade
established under Section C of this Chapter and the Committee on Textile and
Apparel Trade Matters established under Chapter 4 of the Agreement on portions
of the report of relevance to those committees.
Article 2.19: Publication
Each Party shall promptly publish the following
information in a non-discriminatory and easily accessible manner, in order to
enable interested parties to become acquainted with them:
(a) importation, exportation and transit procedures
(including port, airport, and other entry-point procedures) and required forms
and documents;
(b) applied rates of duty, and taxes of any kind
imposed on or in connection with importation or exportation;
(c) rules for the classification or the valuation of
products for customs purposes;
(d) laws, regulations and administrative rulings of
general application relating to rules of origin;
(e) import, export or transit restrictions or
prohibitions;
(f) fees and charges imposed on or in connection with
importation, exportation or transit;
(g) penalty provisions against breaches of import,
export or transit formalities;
(h) appeal procedures;
(i) agreements or parts thereof with any country or
countries relating to importation, exportation or transit;
(j) administrative procedures relating to the
imposition of tariff quotas; and,
(k) correlation tables showing correspondence between
any new national nomenclature and the previous national nomenclature.
Article 2.20: Trade in Information Technology
Products
Each Party shall be a participant in the WTO
Ministerial Declaration on Trade in Information Technology Products
(Information Technology Agreement, or ITA) and have completed the procedures
for modification and rectification of its Schedule of Tariff Concessions, set
out in the Decision of 26 March 1980, L/4962, in accordance with paragraph 2 of
the ITA.9
[9 Article 2.20 shall not
apply to Brunei Darussalam until one year after the date of entry into force of
the Agreement. Notwithstanding Article 2.20, Chile and Mexico shall endeavour
to become participants in the Information Technology Agreement. The eventual
participation of Chile and Mexico in the ITA shall be subject to the completion
of their domestic legal procedures.]
Section C – Agriculture
Article 2.21: Definitions
For the purposes of this Section:
agricultural goods means those goods referred
to in Article 2 of the WTO Agreement on Agriculture;
export subsidies shall have the meaning
assigned to that term in Article 1(e) of the WTO Agreement on Agriculture,
including any amendment of that article;
modern biotechnology means the application of:
(a) in vitro nucleic acid techniques,
including recombinant deoxyribonucleic acid (rDNA) and direct injection of
nucleic acid into cells or organelles, or
(b) fusion of cells beyond the taxonomic family, that
overcome natural physiological reproductive or recombinant barriers and that
are not techniques used in traditional breeding and selection; and
products of modern biotechnology means
agricultural goods, as well as fish and fish products10, developed using
modern biotechnology, but does not include medicines and medical products.
[10 Fish and fish products are defined as products in
Chapter 3 of the Harmonized System.]
2.22: Scope
This Section applies to measures adopted or
maintained by a Party relating to trade in agricultural goods.
Article 2.23: Agricultural Export Subsidies
1. The Parties share the objective of the
multilateral elimination of export subsidies for agricultural goods and shall
work together to achieve an agreement in the WTO to eliminate those subsidies
and prevent their reintroduction in any form.
[page 20 empty]
(a) Any Party that:
(i) imposes such a prohibition or restriction, on the
exportation or sale for export of foodstuffs to another Party to prevent or
relieve a critical shortage of foodstuffs, shall in all cases notify the
measure to the other Parties prior to its effective date, and, except where the
critical shortage is caused by an event constituting force majeure, shall
notify the measure to the other Parties at least 30 days prior to its effective
date; or
(ii) as of the date of entry into force of this
Agreement for that Party maintains such a prohibition or restriction, shall,
within 30 days of that date, notify the measure to the other Parties.
(b) A notification under this paragraph shall include
the reasons for imposing or maintaining the prohibition or restriction, as well
as an explanation of how the measure is consistent with Article XI.2(a) of GATT
1994, and shall note alternative measures, if any, that the Party considered
before imposing the prohibition or restriction.
(c) A measure shall not be subject to notification
under this paragraph or paragraph 4 if it prohibits or restricts the exportation
or sale for export only of a foodstuff or foodstuffs of which the Party
imposing the measure has been a net importer during each of the three calendar
years preceding imposition of the measure, excluding the year in which the
Party imposes the measure.
(d) If a Party that adopts or maintains a measure
referred to in subparagraph (a) has been a net importer of each foodstuff
subject to that measure during each of the three calendar years preceding
imposition of the measure, excluding the year in which the Party imposes the
measure, and that Party does not provide the other Parties with a notification
under subparagraph (a), the Party shall, within a reasonable period of time,
provide to all other Parties trade data demonstrating that it was a net importer
of the foodstuff or foodstuffs during these three calendar years.
3. Any Party required to notify a measure pursuant to
paragraph 2(a) shall:
(a) consult, upon request, with any other Party
having a substantial interest as an importer of the foodstuffs subject to the
measure, with respect to any matter related to the measure;
(b) upon the request of any Party having a substantial
interest as an importer of the foodstuffs subject to the measure, provide that
Party with relevant economic indicators bearing on whether a critical shortage
within the meaning of Article XI.2(a) of GATT 1994 exists or is likely to occur
in the absence of the measure, and on how the measure will prevent or relieve
the critical shortage; and
(c) respond in writing to any question posed by any
other Party regarding the measure within 14 days from receipt of the question.
4. Any Party which considers that another Party
should have notified a measure under paragraph 2(a) may bring the matter to the
attention of such other Party. If the matter is not satisfactorily resolved
promptly thereafter, the Party which considers that the measure should have
been notified may itself bring the measure to the attention of the other
Parties.
5. A Party should ordinarily terminate a measure
subject to notification under paragraphs 2(a) or 4 within 6 months of the date
it is imposed. A Party contemplating continuation of a measure beyond 6 months
from the date it is imposed shall so notify the other Parties no later than 5
months following the date the measure is imposed and provide the information
specified in subparagraph 2(b). Unless it has consulted with all other Parties
who are net importers of any foodstuff the exportation of which is prohibited
or restricted under the measure, the Party shall not continue the measure
beyond 12 months from the date it is imposed. The Party shall immediately
discontinue the measure at such time that the critical shortage, or threat
thereof, no longer exists.
6. No Party shall apply any measure subject to
notification under paragraphs 2(a) or 4 to food purchased for non-commercial
humanitarian purposes.
Article 2.27: Committee on Agricultural Trade
1. The Parties hereby establish a Committee on
Agricultural Trade with representatives of each Party.
2. The Committee on Agricultural Trade shall provide
a forum for:
(a) promoting trade in agricultural goods between the
Parties under this Agreement and other issues as appropriate;
(b) monitoring and promoting cooperation on the
implementation and administration of this Section, including notification of
export restrictions on agricultural products as stipulated in Article 2.26
(Export Restrictions-Food Security), and discussing the cooperative work
identified in Article 2.23 (Agricultural Export Subsidies), Article 2.24
(Export Credits, Export Credit Guarantees or Insurance Programmes) and Article
2.25 (Agricultural Export State Trading Enterprises);
(c) consultation among the Parties on matters related
to this Section in coordination with other committees, subcommittees, working
groups, or other bodies established under this Agreement;
(d) undertaking any additional work that the
Committee on Trade in Goods and the Commission may assign
3. The Committee on Agricultural Trade shall meet at
such times as the Parties mutually decide. Meetings shall take place in such
locations and through such means as the Parties mutually decide. During the
first five years after entry into force of this Agreement, the Committee shall
meet no less than once a year.
Article 2.28: Agricultural Safeguards
Originating agricultural goods from any Party shall
not be subject to any duties applied pursuant to any special safeguard taken
under the WTO Agreement on Agriculture.
Article 2.29: Trade of Products of Modern
Biotechnology
1. The Parties confirm the importance of
transparency, cooperation and exchanging information related to the trade of
products of modern biotechnology.
2. Nothing in this Article shall prevent a Party from
adopting measures in accordance with its rights and obligations under the WTO
Agreements or other provisions of this Agreement.
3. Nothing in this Article shall require a Party to
adopt or modify its laws, regulations, and policies for the control of products
of modern biotechnology within its territory.
4. When available and subject to its laws,
regulations and policies, each Party shall make available publicly:
(a) any documentation requirements for completing an
application for the authorization of a product of modern biotechnology;
(b) a summary of any risk or safety assessment that
has led to the authorization of a product of modern biotechnology; and
(c) a list or lists of the products of modern
biotechnology that have been authorized in its territory.
5. Each Party shall identify contact point(s) for the
sharing of information on issues related to low level presence (LLP)13 .
occurrences
[13 For purposes of this Article, LLP occurrence
means the inadvertent low level presence in a shipment of plants or plant
products, except for a plant or plant product that is a medicine or medical
product, of rDNA plant material that is authorized for use in at least one
country, but not in the importing country, and if authorized for food use, a
food safety assessment has been based on the Codex Guideline for the Conduct of
a Food Safety Assessment of Food Derived from rDNA plants.]
6. In order to address an LLP occurrence, and with a
view to preventing a future LLP occurrence, at the request of an importing
Party, an exporting Party shall, where available and subject to its laws,
regulations and policies:
(a) provide a summary of the risk or safety
assessment or assessments, if any, that the exporting party conducted in
connection with an authorization of a specific plant product of modern
biotechnology;
(b) provide, if known to the exporting Party, contact
information for any entity within its territory that received authorization for
the plant product of modern biotechnology and whom the Party believes is likely
to possess:
(i) any existing, validated methods for the detection
of the plant product of modern biotechnology found at a low level in a
shipment;
(ii) any reference sample necessary for the detection
of the LLP occurrence; and
(iii) relevant information that can be used by the
importing Party to conduct a risk or safety assessment or, if a food safety
assessment is appropriate, relevant information for a food safety assessment in
accordance with Annex 3 of the Codex Guideline for the conduct of Food
Safety Assessment of Foods Derived from Recombinant-DNA Plants (CAC/GL
45-2003);and
(c) encourage the entity to share information
referred to in 2(b) with the importing Party.
7. In the event of an LLP occurrence, the importing
Party shall, subject to its laws, regulations and policies:
(a) inform the importer or the importer’s agent of
the LLP occurrence and of any additional information which the importer will be
required to submit to allow the importing Party to make a decision on the
disposition of the shipment in which the LLP occurrence has been found;
(b) when available, provide to the exporting Party a
summary of any risk or safety assessment that the importing Party has conducted
in connection with the LLP occurrence;
(c) ensure that the measures14 applied to address
the LLP occurrence are appropriate to achieve compliance with its domestic
laws, regulations and policies.
[14 For purposes of this paragraph, “measures” does not
include penalties.]
8. To reduce the likelihood of trade disruptions from
LLP occurrences:
(a) each exporting party shall consistent with its
domestic laws, regulations, and policies endeavor to encourage technology
developers to submit applications to Parties for authorization of plants and
plant products of modern biotechnology; and
(b) a Party authorizing plant and plant products
derived from modern biotechnology shall endeavor to:
(i) allow year-round submission and review of
applications for authorization of plants and plant products of modern
biotechnology; and
(ii) increase communications among and between the
Parties regarding new authorizations of plants and plant products of modern
biotechnology so as to improve global information exchange.
9. The Parties hereby establish a working group on
products of modern biotechnology under the Committee on Agricultural Trade
(Working Group) for information exchange and cooperation on trade-related
matters associated with products of modern biotechnology. The Working Group
shall be comprised of representatives of all Parties that, in writing, inform
the Committee on Agricultural Trade that they will participate in the Working
Group and name one or more representatives to the Working Group.
10. The Working Group shall provide a forum to:
(a) exchange, subject to a Party’s laws, regulations
and policies, information on issues, including on existing and proposed
domestic laws, regulations and policies related to the trade of products of
modern biotechnology; and
(b) further enhance cooperation among two or more
Parties, where there is mutual interest related to the trade of products of
modern biotechnology.
11. The Working Group may meet in person, or by any
other means as mutually determined by the Parties who have named
representatives to the Working Group.
Section D: Tariff Rate Quota Administration
Article 2.30: Scope and General Provisions
1. Each Party shall implement and administer tariff-rate
quotas (TRQs15) in accordance with Article XIII of GATT 1994
(including its interpretive notes), the Import Licensing Agreement and Article
2.13 (Import Licensing). All TRQs established by a Party under this Agreement
shall be incorporated into that Party’s Schedule to Annex 2-D (Tariff
Elimination).
[15 For the purposes of this Section, tariff rate quotas
(TRQs) means only TRQs that are established under this Agreement as set out in
a Party’s Schedule to Annex 2-D (Tariff Elimination). For greater certainty,
this Section shall not apply to TRQs set out in a Party’s Schedule to the WTO
Agreement.]
[16 For greater certainty, this Paragraph does not apply to
conditions, limits or eligibility requirements that apply regardless of whether
or not the importer utilises the TRQ when importing the good.]
2. Each Party shall ensure that its procedures for
administering its TRQs are made available to the public, are fair and
equitable, are no more administratively burdensome than absolutely necessary,
are responsive to market conditions and are administered in a timely manner.
3. The Party administering a TRQ shall publish all
information concerning its TRQ administration, including the size of quotas and
eligibility requirements; and, if the TRQ will be allocated, application
procedures, the application deadline, and the methodology or procedures that
will be used for the allocation or reallocation, on its designated publicly
available website at least 90 days prior to the opening date of the TRQ
concerned.
Article 2.31: Administration and Eligibility
1. Each Party shall administer its TRQs in a manner
that allows importers the opportunity to utilise fully TRQ quantities.
2. (a) Except as provided in subparagraphs (b) and (c), no
Party shall introduce a new or additional condition, limit or eligibility
requirement on the utilisation of a TRQ for importation of a good, including in
relation to specification or grade, permissible end-use of the imported product
or package size beyond those set out in its Schedule to Annex 2-D (Tariff Elimination).
16
(b) A Party seeking to introduce a new or additional
condition, limit or eligibility requirement on the utilisation of a TRQ for
importation of a good shall notify the other Parties at least 45 days prior to
the proposed effective date of the new or additional condition, limit or
eligibility requirement. Any Party with a demonstrable commercial interest in
supplying the good may submit a request in writing to the Party seeking to
introduce the new or additional condition, limit or eligibility requirement
requesting consultations. Upon receipt of such a request for consultations, the
Party seeking to introduce the new or additional condition, limit or
eligibility requirement shall promptly undertake consultations with the Party
submitting the request, in accordance with paragraph 6 of Article 2.34
(Transparency).
(c) The Party seeking to introduce the new or
additional condition, limit or eligibility requirement may do so if:
(i) it has consulted with any Party with demonstrable
commercial interest in supplying the good that has submitted in writing a
request for consultations pursuant to subparagraph (b); and
(ii) no Party with a demonstrable commercial interest
in supplying the good that submitted in writing a request for consultations
pursuant to subparagraph (b) objected, after the consultation, to the
introduction of the new or additional condition, limit or eligibility
requirement.
(d) A new or additional condition, limit or
eligibility requirement that is the outcome of any consultation held pursuant
to subparagraph (c), shall be circulated to Parties prior to implementation.
Article 2.32: Allocation17
[17 For the purposes of this Section, “allocation mechanism”
includes any system where access to the TRQ is granted on a basis other than
first-come first-served.]
1. In the event that access under a TRQ is subject to
an allocation mechanism, each importing Party shall ensure that:
(a) Any person of a Party that fulfils the importing
Party’s eligibility requirements shall be able to apply and to be considered
for a quota allocation under the TRQs.
(b) Unless otherwise agreed, it does not allocate any
portion of the quota to a producer group, condition access to an allocation on
the purchase of domestic production, or limit access to an allocation to
processors.
(c) Each allocation shall be made in commercially
viable shipping quantities and, to the maximum extent possible, in the amounts
that importers request.
(d) An allocation for in-quota imports shall be
applicable to any tariff lines subject to the TRQ and be valid throughout the
TRQ year.
(e) Where the aggregate TRQ quantity requested by
applicants exceeds the quota size, allocation to eligible applicants shall be
conducted by equitable and transparent methods.
(f) Applicants shall have at least four weeks after
the opening of the application period to submit their applications.
(g) Quota allocation takes place no later than four
weeks before the opening of the quota period, except where allocation is based
in whole or in part on import performance during the 12-month period
immediately preceding the quota period. Where the Party bases an allocation in
whole or in part on import performance during the 12-month period immediately
preceding the quota period, the Party shall make a provisional allocation of
the full quota amount no later than four weeks before the opening of the quota
period. All final allocation decisions, including any revisions, shall be made
and communicated to applicants by the beginning of the quota period.
2. During the first quota
year the Agreement is in force for a Party, if less than twelve months remain
in the quota year at the time of entry into force of the Agreement for that
Party, the Party shall make available to quota applicants, beginning on the
date of entry into force of the Agreement for the Party, the quota quantity
established in its Schedule to Annex 2-D (Tariff Elimination), multiplied by a
fraction the numerator of which shall be a whole number consisting of the
number of months remaining in the quota year at the time of entry into force of
the Agreement for the Party, including the entirety of the month in which the
Agreement enters into force for the Party, and the denominator of which shall
be twelve.
(a) The Party shall make the entire quota quantity
established in its Schedule to Annex 2-D (Tariff Elimination) available to
quota applicants beginning on the first day of each quota year thereafter that
the quota is in operation.
3. The Party administering a TRQ shall not require
the re-export of a good as a condition for application for, or utilisation of,
a quota allocation.
4. Any quantity of goods imported under a TRQ under
this Agreement shall not be counted towards, or reduce the quantity of, any
other TRQs provided for such goods in a Party’s WTO tariff schedules or under
any other trade agreements.18
[18 For greater certainty, nothing in this paragraph shall
prevent a Party from applying a different in-quota rate of customs duty to
goods from TPP Parties, as set out in the Party's Schedule to Annex 2-D (Tariff
Elimination), than that applied to the same goods of non-parties, under a
tariff rate quota established under the WTO Agreement. Further, nothing in this
paragraph requires a Party to change the in-quota quantity of any tariff rate
quota established under the WTO Agreement.]
Article 2.33: Return and Reallocation of Quotas
1. Where a TRQ is administered by an allocation
mechanism, each Party shall ensure there is a mechanism for the return and
reallocation of unused allocations in a timely and transparent manner,
providing the greatest possible opportunity for the TRQ to be filled.
2. Each Party shall publish on a regular basis on its
designated publicly available web site all information concerning amounts
allocated, amounts returned and, when available, quota utilisation rates. In
addition, each Party shall publish on the same web site amounts available for
reallocation, and the application deadline, at least two weeks prior to the
date the Party will begin accepting applications for reallocations.
Article 2.34: Transparency
1. Each Party shall identify the entity or entities
responsible for administering its TRQs, designate at least one contact point to
facilitate communications between the Parties on matters relating to the
administration of its TRQs, and provide details of its contact point(s) to the
other Parties. Each Party shall promptly notify the other Parties of any
amendments to the details of their contact point(s).
2. Where a TRQ is administered by an allocation
mechanism, the name and address of allocation holders shall be published on the
designated publicly available website.
3. Where a TRQ is administered on a first-come,
first-served basis, over the course of each year, the importing Party’s
administering authority shall publish, in a timely and continually on-going
fashion on its designated publicly available website, utilization rates and
remaining available quantities for each TRQ.
4. Where a TRQ is administered on a first-come,
first-served basis, and when a TRQ of an importing Party fills, that Party
shall publish a notice to this effect on its designated publicly available
website within 10 days.
5. Where a TRQ is administered by an allocation
mechanism, and when a TRQ of an importing Party fills, that Party shall publish
a notice to this effect on its designated publicly available website as early
as practicable.
6. At the written request of an exporting Party or
Parties, the Party administrating a TRQ shall consult with the exporting Party
regarding the administration of its TRQ.
Annex 2-A: National Treatment and Import and
Export Restrictions
1. For greater certainty, nothing in this Annex shall affect
the rights or obligations of any Party under the WTO Agreement with respect to
any measure listed in the Annex.
2. Article 2.3 (National Treatment) and Article 2.11
(Import and Export Restrictions) shall not apply to the continuation, renewal,
or amendment made to any law, statute, decree or administrative regulations
giving rise to a measure set out in this Annex to the extent that the
continuation, renewal, or amendment does not decrease the conformity of the
measure listed with Article 2.3 (National Treatment) and Article 2.11 (Import
and Export Restrictions).
Measures of Brunei Darussalam
Article 2.11 (Import and Export Restrictions) shall not apply
to the goods specified in section 31 of Customs Order 2006.
Measures of Canada
1. Articles 2.3 (National Treatment) and 2.11 (Import
and Export Restrictions) shall not apply to:
(a) the export of logs of all species;
(b) the export of unprocessed fish pursuant to
applicable provincial legislation;
(c) the importation of goods of the prohibited
provisions of tariff items 9897.00.00, 9898.00.00 and 9899.00.00 referred to in
the Schedule of the Customs Tariff;
(d) Canadian excise duties on absolute alcohol, as
listed under tariff item 2207.10.90 in Canada’s Schedule of Concessions annexed
to the Marrakesh Protocol (Schedule V), used in manufacturing under the
existing provisions of the Excise Act, 2001, 2002, c.22, as amended;
(e) the use of ships in the coasting trade of Canada;
(f) the internal sale and distribution of wine and
distilled spirits;
Article 2.3 (National Treatment) shall not apply to a
measure affecting the production, publication, exhibition, or sale of goods that
supports the creation, development or accessibility of Canadian artistic
expression or content.
2712.20.01
|
|
Paraffin wax containing less than 0.75% of oil, by weight
|
2712.90.02
|
|
Microcrystalline waxes
|
2712.90.04
|
|
Waxes, excluding those of codes 2712.90.01 and 2712.90.02
|
2712.90.99
|
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Other
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