EU and Canada Struggling to Reach Trade Deal

Please note that we are not authorised to provide any investment advice. The content on this page is for information purposes only.


Although international economic treaty news has lately been peppered with more stories about better-known trade deals like the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), there is another treaty that has been generating just as much discussion and, in some cases, animosity.

The treaty in question is the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), intended to be an agreement between the European Union (EU) and Canada. Unfortunately, while negotiators announced that they had reached an agreement on CETA back in October 2014, it has been stuck in the approval phase ever since.


Although international economic treaty news has lately been peppered with more stories about better-known trade deals like the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), there is another treaty that has been generating just as much discussion and, in some cases, animosity.

The treaty in question is the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), intended to be an agreement between the European Union (EU) and Canada. Unfortunately, while negotiators announced that they had reached an agreement on CETA back in October 2014, it has been stuck in the approval phase ever since.

During this phase, sometimes called the “legal scrubbing” phase, the text of the agreement is translated into all the relevant languages, pored over by legal and political experts, and modified slightly to ensure minimal loopholes resulting from variances in the language.

Public sentiment in several EU states, however, has been growing increasingly hostile to the treaty, and EU officials have been forced to continuously extend this period in an effort to improve public sentiment and ensure successful ratification of the agreement.

Unfortunately, those efforts have not been going entirely according to plan. Just as the European Union believed it had reached a point where ratification would be assured, Romania announced that it would not ratify CETA as a response to Canada’s refusal to lift certain visa requirements on Romanian nationals.

Romania is upset about Canada’s decision to require Romanian and Bulgarian citizens to obtain visas before visiting Canada given that citizens of every other EU state can enter the country without one. As a result, a Romanian government official (who asked to remain anonymous) told the press that Romania would “veto” the CETA ratification.

Similarly, the government of a French-speaking region of Belgium, called Wallonia, has also indicated its refusal to ratify CETA. This is despite the fact that the Belgian cabinet has already approved the EU-Canada free trade treaty. Wallonia’s reluctance to ratify the agreement could cause Belgium to back away from the agreement. Without Belgium’s approval, the agreement may fall apart.

The European Commission is worried that without the approval of Belgium and Romania, CETA may fail to obtain ratification. These developments put the EU into an area of international treaty negotiation that it has not previously explored, and the long-term legal and political consequences are uncertain. It may also add fuel to the fire of the “Brexit” movement in the UK, where a growing number of people wish to have the nation exit the EU entirely.

Under normal circumstances, the ratification of the CETA treaty should have concluded by 2016 or early 2017. At this point, it is uncertain when or if the treaty will ever be ratified.

About EW News Desk Team PRO INVESTOR

Latest news about the state of the world economy.