
Minister cautious on apparent breakthrough on Cda-EU trade deal
OTTAWA — International Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland sounded a cautionary note Thursday after an apparent European breakthrough in the long-running Canada-EU free trade saga, saying every trade agreement has “exit provisions.”
“This morning, we absolutely had a positive development; there are still many steps to be taken,” the minister said hours after an agreement was struck between Belgium and its holdout region of Wallonia.
That agreement was heralded as the change that would allow the lucrative trade deal to be signed in the coming days. Wallonia held a veto over the Belgium’s ability to support the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, or CETA, which needs the backing of all 28 EU countries.
The changes contained in the Belgian agreement may give national and regional parliaments throughout Europe new powers over the controversial investor protection provisions of the pact.