Overview of the Main Features of the 1994 SPS Agreement Sample Clauses

Overview of the Main Features of the 1994 SPS Agreement. The SPS Agreement tries to balance the right of Member governments to enact measures for the protection of human, animal and plant life or health in their territories against risks contained in imported products, with the goal of liberalizing trade in agricultural and food products. It thus aims to reconcile free trade with the legitimate concerns of governments for the life and health of humans, animals and plants. It does this by recognizing the right 32 Some significant differences between the Xxxxxx Draft and the final version of the SPS Agreement were: (1) the addition of a footnote clarifying what the “scientific justification” required when an SPS measure deviates from an international standard is composed of; (2) the change in the initial requirement of Article 5.6 that SPS measures be least restrictive to trade, to indicate that they must be no more trade restrictive that required to achieve their appropriate level of sanitary or phytosanitary protection; (3) the indication in Article 5.3 that the requirement that economic factors be taken into account in a risk assessment does not apply to human health risks; and (4) the extension of the transitional period for implementation of the SPS Agreement from two years to five years, for least-developed country Members. THE GATT URUGUAY ROUND: A NEGOTIATING HISTORY (1986–1994), VOL. IV: THE END GAME 44–45 (Xxxxxxx X. Xxxxxxx xx. 1999).
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