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MID-TUESDAY
UPDATE: As
of Tuesday afternoon, 16 February, delegates met in morning sessions
of Sub-Working Group I (SWG-I) and Sub-Working Group (SWG-II) and
continued contact group and informal group discussions. SWG-I heard contact group reports on risk management and then further debated the issue. They also established a contact group to discuss contained use. SWG-II heard a report from the contact group considering capacity building, which reported no breakthroughs. The contact group considering trade issues reported that the discussion had clarified positions, in that delegates had discussed the practicality of including a ban on trade with non-parties and possible conflicts with WTO agreements. Contact Group-I (CG-I) continued debating definitions and the Preamble. The Sub-Group of Contact Group-II (CG-II) considering liability and redress discussed a non-paper from the Chair that may serve as the basis for a protocol Article on the issue, with enabling language for future consideration. However there was concern that the language did not go far enough in ensuring future work. MONDAY RECAP: On Monday, 15 February, some delegates followed the Colombian Environment Minister's advice to loosen their formal neckties, but most BSWG-6 delegates went a step further and rolled up their sleeves to get down to serious work. As Chair Koester's Wednesday deadline approaches, over nine contact groups, as well as Sub-Working Groups, regional groups and informal groups met, some running late into the evening. Despite this effort, delegates did not report major breakthroughs on any of the longstanding, polarized disagreements. A mixed chorus of voices was heard reiterating their preference for "no protocol rather than a bad protocol." Still others recalled that position shifts in negotiations, especially for legally binding agreements, frequently await the final hour. Some predicted that the Friends of the Chair meeting held in the evening would intensify the impetus for agreement. |
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On the issue of contained use, some delegations stated that LMOs destined for contained use should be subject to the same provisions as other LMOs. Others said that different provisions should apply to these LMOs, specifically, that their transboundary movements should not be covered by AIA procedures. One delegation stated that LMOs for contained use should be excluded from the protocol. Co-Chair Wint (Jamaica) convened an informal group, co-chaired by Australia (shown here here) and Peru, to continue discussions |
Press conference
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