Seal product ban will withstand WTO challenge: EU
Last Updated: Tuesday, July 28, 2009 | 12:15 PM ET
CBC News
Canada is challenging the European Union's new ban on the import of seal productsa at the World Trade Organization. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)The European Union said Tuesday it will defend its ban on seal products based on scientific evidence and legislative guidelines that should withstand Canada's challenge of the ban at the World Trade Organization.
EU officials said they are confident the 27-nation bloc's decision to ban the import of seal products will withstand the WTO challenge Canada announced it would launch on Monday.
"We have checked the WTO legislation, and we are confident that the legislation is in conformity with WTO regulations," said EU spokeswoman Barbara Helfferich.
The legislation is not protectionist or discriminatory because it applies to all seal products whether they are from Canada or not, European Commission spokesperson Lutz Gullner told Agence France-Presse.
"If others choose to challenge it in the WTO, then the European Commission will vigorously defend it," he said.
Canada's East Coast seal hunt is the largest of its kind in the world, with an average annual kill of about 300,000 harp seals. Canada exported about $2.5 million worth of seal products to EU countries in 2008.
Unfair trade restriction
The EU approved the ban at a meeting of foreign ministers in Brussels on Monday without debate.
Canada has argued the ban — which applies to all products and processed goods derived from seals, including fur, meat, oil blubber and even omega-3 pills made from seal oil — is an unfair trade restriction.
The import ban in all 27 EU member countries is expected to take effect in October and apply to the 2010 hunting season.
The new rules still let Canada ship seal products through Europe but bar the promotion of the products.
The regulations also exempt products from traditional hunts carried out by Inuit in Canada, Greenland, Alaska and Russia.
Public pressure
The EU has said its decision to ban the seal products came in response to mounting public pressure questioning whether the annual hunt, was humane. Seal hunters use rifles to kill their prey or occasionally bludgeon them with the blunt end of a hakapik.
Giovanni Di Girolamo, the European Commission's representative in Canada, said most Europeans feel the hunt is inhumane.
"People feel this hunting is not necessary," Di Girolamo told CBC News. "This kind of product derived from hunting, from animals — they don't want, in the end, for it to be sold in the Union."
While the European Commission says its decision was based on scientific studies, Canada will argue its own studies prove the hunt is humane.
The seal hunt has been determined by veterinarians to be humane and follows the environmental rules of sustainability, Trade Minister Stockwell Day said Monday when he announced the WTO challenge.
Canada's seal hunt is practised according to procedures established, in part, by an EU study done in 2006, Day said.
"It is, in our view, inappropriate that a trade decision is taken which is not based on science," Day said.
The EU ban should include an exemption for countries that humanely harvest seal products, Day said. WTO consultations are expected to last for 60 days, after which Canada will launch an official appeal if no agreement is reached.
With files from The Asscioated PressShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- Everest victim’s husband says family not seeking government help
- The husband of a Toronto woman who died trying to climb Mt. Everest on Saturday says his family is not seeking government help to cover the cost of bringing his wife's body home. more »
- Employment Insurance review boards to be scrapped
- The federal government is scrapping two review boards used by people appealing decisions made about their employment insurance. more »
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Raw stories about bullying emerged when a video booth was set up inside a Quebec high school. more »
- Serial carjacker gets life term for fatal crash
- An Ontario judge was moved to tears while delivering a life prison sentence to a serial carjacker who killed a woman and injured five others after driving a stolen van into her car during a 2010 police chase. more »
Latest World News Headlines
- Everest victim’s husband says family not seeking government help
- The husband of a Toronto woman who died trying to climb Mt. Everest on Saturday says his family is not seeking government help to cover the cost of bringing his wife's body home. more »
- Canadian restrained on flight to Miami arrested
- A 24-year-old Canadian man is in federal custody for rushing toward the front of an American Airlines flight from Jamaica after the plane landed in Miami. more »
- Suspect in Etan Patz death charged with murder
- A New Jersey man accused of luring six-year-old Etan Patz into a New York City convenience store in 1979 and killing him has been charged with second-degree murder. more »
- Reclaiming the dead on Mt. Everest

- The difficulty, danger and expense of removing the bodies of climbers who died in Mount Everest's "death zone" mean most of the dead remain on the mountain as a stark reminder to other climbers of the risks. more »
Dispatches »
- Foreign slaves serving the U.S. military machine May. 24, 2012 3:33 PM How does a hairdresser recruited for work in Dubai, wind up slaving for the U.S. military in a war zone in Iraq? There are tens of thousands serving in what's come to be known as America's "Invisible Army."
Connect Newsroom Blog
Etan Patz Arrest, Helene Campbell & Facebook Flop May. 24, 2012 8:54 PM Three decades after a U.S. child Etan Patz disappeared, an arrest has finally been made.
- Aylmer triple stabbing leads to first-degree murder charges
- Everest victim’s husband says family not seeking government help
- Reclaiming the dead on Mt. Everest
- Employment Insurance review boards to be scrapped
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Canada ending 'Buffalo shuffle' for visas, closing consulate
- Brave cat makes epic leap of faith
- Double-lung recipient dances on Ellen show
- What a Greek euro exit could mean for Canada

