Book contents
- The Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership
- The Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction: The Trans-Pacific Partnership Becomes the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for TPP
- 2 Trade Agreements and the U.S. Congress – the Case of the TPP
- 3 The TPP, a Horizontal Overview
- 4 Market Access for Trade in Goods Negotiations in the TPP
- 5 Trade Provisions as Legos? How Chapter 2 of the TPP Was Influenced by WTO Negotiations and Prior US Trade Deals
- 6 The TPP, Agricultural Trade and Food Security
- 7 Rules of Origin and Origin Procedures
- 8 Trade in Textiles and Apparel Goods
- 9 How Far Beyond the TFA? Trade Facilitation in the WTO and the TPP
- 10 Treatment of Trade Remedies under the Trans-Pacific Partnership, Chapter 6
- 11 The SPS Chapter under the TPP Agreement and its Implications
- 12 Technical Barriers to Trade: Improving the Day-To-Day Functioning
- 13 Addressing the Right to Regulate in the CPTPP Investment Chapter: Identifying New Treaty Practice
- 14 Protecting Investment under NAFTA, the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Comprehensive and Progressive TPP
- 15 The Trans-Pacific Partnership as a Development of the Australia–United States Free Trade Agreement: Services Liberalisation and Investment Protection
- 16 The TPP Agreement’s Substance and Impact on International Trade, NAFTA/USMCA, and Other FTAs: Services Overview: Background, Strategy and Solutions
- 17 Cross-Border Trade in Services (Chapter 10) and Temporary Entry for Business Persons (Chapter 12)
- 18 Financial Services in the TPP
- 19 Telecommunications Chapter in the TPP
- 20 Understanding the TPP Agreement E-Commerce Chapter
- 21 Government Procurement in the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: A Global Beachhead for Market Access and Good Governance
- 22 The TPP’s Competition Policy Chapter: Towards Convergence
- 23 Rules for State-Owned Enterprises in Chapter 17 of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: Balancing Market-Oriented Discipline and Policy Flexibility for States
- 24 Non-Commercial Assistance Rules in the TPP: A Comparative Analysis with the SCM Agreement
- 25 IP in the TPP: How Far Beyond the Existing FTAs Does It Go?
- 26 Strengthening Labor Rights in the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: A Lost Opportunity?
- 27 TPP Trade and Environment Chapter
- 28 Horizontal Regulatory Coherence Aspects of the TPP
- 29 Transparency and Anticorruption
- 30 State-to-State Dispute Settlement under TPP Chapter 28 and NAFTA Chapter 20
- 31 Initial Provisions, Administrative Provisions, Exceptions and Final Provisions (TPP Chapters 1, 27, 29 and 30)
- Index
27 - TPP Trade and Environment Chapter
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2021
- The Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership
- The Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction: The Trans-Pacific Partnership Becomes the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for TPP
- 2 Trade Agreements and the U.S. Congress – the Case of the TPP
- 3 The TPP, a Horizontal Overview
- 4 Market Access for Trade in Goods Negotiations in the TPP
- 5 Trade Provisions as Legos? How Chapter 2 of the TPP Was Influenced by WTO Negotiations and Prior US Trade Deals
- 6 The TPP, Agricultural Trade and Food Security
- 7 Rules of Origin and Origin Procedures
- 8 Trade in Textiles and Apparel Goods
- 9 How Far Beyond the TFA? Trade Facilitation in the WTO and the TPP
- 10 Treatment of Trade Remedies under the Trans-Pacific Partnership, Chapter 6
- 11 The SPS Chapter under the TPP Agreement and its Implications
- 12 Technical Barriers to Trade: Improving the Day-To-Day Functioning
- 13 Addressing the Right to Regulate in the CPTPP Investment Chapter: Identifying New Treaty Practice
- 14 Protecting Investment under NAFTA, the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Comprehensive and Progressive TPP
- 15 The Trans-Pacific Partnership as a Development of the Australia–United States Free Trade Agreement: Services Liberalisation and Investment Protection
- 16 The TPP Agreement’s Substance and Impact on International Trade, NAFTA/USMCA, and Other FTAs: Services Overview: Background, Strategy and Solutions
- 17 Cross-Border Trade in Services (Chapter 10) and Temporary Entry for Business Persons (Chapter 12)
- 18 Financial Services in the TPP
- 19 Telecommunications Chapter in the TPP
- 20 Understanding the TPP Agreement E-Commerce Chapter
- 21 Government Procurement in the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: A Global Beachhead for Market Access and Good Governance
- 22 The TPP’s Competition Policy Chapter: Towards Convergence
- 23 Rules for State-Owned Enterprises in Chapter 17 of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: Balancing Market-Oriented Discipline and Policy Flexibility for States
- 24 Non-Commercial Assistance Rules in the TPP: A Comparative Analysis with the SCM Agreement
- 25 IP in the TPP: How Far Beyond the Existing FTAs Does It Go?
- 26 Strengthening Labor Rights in the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: A Lost Opportunity?
- 27 TPP Trade and Environment Chapter
- 28 Horizontal Regulatory Coherence Aspects of the TPP
- 29 Transparency and Anticorruption
- 30 State-to-State Dispute Settlement under TPP Chapter 28 and NAFTA Chapter 20
- 31 Initial Provisions, Administrative Provisions, Exceptions and Final Provisions (TPP Chapters 1, 27, 29 and 30)
- Index
Summary
The use of trade policy instruments to support the achievement of environmental protection objectives goes back at least to 1973 when the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) was concluded. From its use of non-automatic licensing systems to control trade of certain species covered by that agreement, to outright bans on the trade of certain products as found in the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer (Montreal Protocol), countries have often agreed to use specific trade policy measures or instruments as a means to implement the goals of multilateral environmental agreements. Moreover, while those measures may often run counter to the trade obligations agreed to in other international agreements, countries accept these specific conflicts between competing treaties as the trade policy measures have been identified as necessary for the implementation and achievement of the objectives of these multilateral environmental agreements.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific PartnershipAnalysis and Commentary, pp. 633 - 649Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021