European University Institute Library

Canada <U+0127> renewable energy, implications for WTO law on green and not-so-green subsidies, Steve Charnovitz and Carolyn Fischer

Label
Canada <U+0127> renewable energy, implications for WTO law on green and not-so-green subsidies, Steve Charnovitz and Carolyn Fischer
Language
eng
Abstract
In the first dispute on renewable energy to come to WTO dispute settlement, the domestic content requirement of Ontario's feed-in tariff was challenged as a discriminatory investment-related measure and as a prohibited import substitution subsidy. The panel and Appellate Body agreed that Canada was violating the GATT and the TRIMS Agreement. But the SCM Article 3 claim by Japan and the European Union remains unadjudicated, because neither tribunal made a finding that the price guaranteed for electricity from renewable sources constitutes a benefit pursuant to the SCM Agreement. Although the Appellate Body provides useful guidance to future panels on how the existence of a benefit could be calculated, the most noteworthy aspect of the new jurisprudence is the Appellate Body's reasoning that delineating the proper market for benefit analysis entails respect for the policy choices made by a government. Thus, in this dispute, the proper market is electricity produced only from wind and solar energy
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Canada <U+0127> renewable energy
Oclc number
993043177
Responsibility statement
Steve Charnovitz and Carolyn Fischer
Series statement
EUI working papers. RSC, 2014/109EUI papersGlobal Governance Programme, 139
Sub title
implications for WTO law on green and not-so-green subsidies
Content
Mapped to

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