Donors:
UNDP
Implementation: UNCTAD. STAMEQ will be the lead Government
cooperating agency for this project. But support will also be
provided by the Ministry of Trade, MOSTE, and MPI.
Beneficiary Countries: Vietnam
Status: ongoing
Description:
The project will address four key issues,
each of which is briefly described below.
1. The
impact of environmental requirements on market access and export
performance.
Environmental factors play an important role in Vietnam's efforts
to achieve rapid and sustained export growth. A recent study
(under RAS/92/034) indicates that a variety of environmental
requirements are emerging in sectors of export interest to Vietnam.
These requirements have generated market access and competitiveness
concerns, for example among exporters of agricultural and fisheries
products, as well as textiles and clothing. However, environmental
concerns may also provide new trading opportunities to the extent
that Vietnamese firms are able to take advantage of niche markets.
Both the government and the business community can play an important
role in avoiding negative and maximizing positive effects.
The
project will identify sector-specific examples of environmental
requirements having potentially negative and positive effects
on market access and export competitiveness of Vietnamese firms.
It will also examine how these have been addressed (successfully
or not) with a view to enhancing understanding of policies and
measures that the government and the business community can
adopt, eventually with the support of bilateral and multilateral
aid agencies, to strengthen national capacities to respond to
environmental requirements.
The
purpose of policy analysis under this project is to provide
a general assessment of the extent to which environmental measures
affect market access and export competitiveness, and to identity
existing and anticipate future significant impacts which need
to be addressed through appropriate policy measures.
2. Environmentally
friendly products, marine resources, and eco-tourism.
A subregional workshop on environmental management of natural
resource-based sectors (principally fisheries and tourism) was
held in Hanoi on 25-28 September 1996 and attended by 30 Vietnamese
participants. At the end of the workshop, the Ministry of Fisheries
and the Vietnam National Environment Agency (NEA) expressed
interest in follow up activities, including cooperation in further
training and environmental policy making.
Moreover; the participants called for additional seminars on
the following specialized issues:
While
all the recommendations cannot be covered by this project, in
the light of these recommendations and the current work program
of the Diversification and Natural Resources Section, the project
will undertake case studies focusing on enhancing exports of
environmentally friendly-products and marine resources.
3. Trade
and environment linkages: the provisions of the multilateral
trading system.
As Vietnam prepares to accede to the WTO, it is important that
the government and the business community gain an understanding
of the issues and the relevance of WTO agreements and provisions,
particularly those contained in: (a) the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade (GATT), (b) the Agreement on Technical Barriers
to Trade (TBT), (c) the Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Measures (SPS) and (d) the Agreement on Trade-Related Intellectual
Property Rights (TRIPs).
The
project will prepare training materials as well as conduct informal
workshops to create greater awareness of trade and environment
linkages, with particular reference to biodiversity and waste
management, both within the government and the business sector
from the perspective of the WTO agreements and provisions, focusing
on deliberations in the CTE.
4.
Trade implications of environmental management standards
such as ISO 14001.
International standards on environmental management standards
(EMS), such as ISO 14001, may create both barriers to trade
as well as provide opportunities to increase competitiveness
and strengthen market positions. National implementation issues
are of key importance in this regard. For companies, EMS standards
may be a useful tool to control the environmental effects of
their activities, to achieve cost savings and to obtain other
economic benefits. Although ISO 14001 is only recent, it is
generally believed that developing countries have an interest
in promoting its wider use.
Vietnam
is adopting a proactive approach with the proposed implementation
of a pilot program on ISO 14001 by the end 1998. Many questions
still need to be addressed, however, particularly certification
and accreditation issues and the constraints faced by small
and medium sized enterprises. Another issue refers to the role
of the government in promoting the wider use of EMS, for example
in providing supporting infrastructure.
The
project will take stock of existing experiences and ongoing
initiatives in the ASEAN region, organize consultations and
carry out policy analysis with a view to:
- identifying policies
and measures, particularly in the context of standard implementation
at the national level, to ensure that ISO 14001 does not create
an obstacle to trade for Vietnamese companies but rather assists
them in strengthening market positions;
- enhancing the
effective participation of Vietnam in international standard-setting,
particularly in view of the review of the ISO 14000 standards
in 1999; and
- examining the
WTO implications, if any, of the ISO 14000 standards. (Needs
2 work-months, STAMEQ is the consultant identified.)
Objectives
and Activities:
The overall objective of the project is to develop a clearer
understanding in Vietnam of the impact of environmental factors
on trade. This will be achieved through conducting further research,
providing policy advice and raising awareness trade and environment
issues. The SPPD project therefore aims to:
(a)
support policy analysis in Vietnam by, for example, carrying
out research on trade and environment, conducting workshops,
creating "policy dialogues" between trade and environmental
policy specialists, and gaining experience with multi-stakeholder
approaches;
(b) enhance
policy coordination and policy coherence on trade, environment
and development at the national level;
(c) strengthen
Vietnam's national capacities to address trade and environment
issues and to achieve environmentally-sound export growth;
(d) assist
the business community to enhance international competitiveness
in the light of environmental factors, by providing information
and analyses;
(e) support
the effective participation of Vietnam in international deliberations
and negotiations on trade, environment and development (WTO,
MEAS), and in the development of international standards in
the field of the environment (in particular ISO 14000).