Beijing - AFP
An impasse over a global pact to streamline customs procedures poses "the most serious crisis the WTO has faced" and has paralysed all negotiations in the trade body, its chief Roberto Azevedo said on Saturday.
A draft of the so-called Trade Facilitation Agreement was hammered out last December during tough negotiations at a World Trade Organization conference in Bali -- the WTO's first global accord since its 1995 founding.
But the WTO's 160 members failed in July to reach a final agreement on the deal, which Azevedo himself has said is crucial to ensuring the WTO's relevance.
"The impasse has effectively paralysed the multilateral negotiations in the organization," Azevedo told reporters in Beijing.
"Substantial discussions on all the measures in the Bali package programme have come to a halt.
"I have described this impasse to members as the most serious crisis the WTO has faced," he said on the sidelines of the 21-member Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum's annual gathering, hosted this year by China.
Members of the Geneva-based WTO set trade rules among themselves in an attempt to ensure a level playing field, and spur growth by opening markets and removing trade barriers including subsidies, excessive taxes and regulations.
The Bali negotiations were seen as make-or-break for its mission of achieving a worldwide trade agreement fair to both rich and poor nations, which Azevedo has said is under threat from proliferating bilateral and regional trade deals often skewed in favour of richer countries.
Bali was the WTO's first ever global agreement and signalled the first concrete progress on the Doha Round of trade liberalisation talks.
Those discussions, launched in 2001, aim to underpin development in poorer nations, but agreement has been elusive amid protectionist reflexes.
Negotiators instead extracted parts of the Doha package for the far less ambitious Bali customs accord, in the hope of creating momentum towards the wider agreement.
But the trade facilitation deal has been put on ice by post-Bali sparring between WTO members, notably over demands from India that the group approves the developing power's stockpiling of food.
It took nearly a decade to conclude the customs talks, which began in 2004, and Azevedo warned that the patience of many WTO members is "fast running out".
India and its developing-world supporters say food stockpiling is essential to ensure poor farmers and consumers survive in the cut-throat world of business.
Western countries, led by the United States, have raised concerns that such stocks could leak onto global markets, skewing trade.
Azevedo said US Trade Representative Michael Froman had told him talks between Washington and New Delhi on the issue had resumed.
"It seems, however that we still don't have a breakthrough in these bilateral talks," said Azevedo.
He plans to stress the severity of the situation again next week when he attends a summit of the Group of 20 biggest economies, hosted by Australia.