THE BRAZILIAN TYRES CASE: TRADE SUPERSEDES HEALTH
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NLU Jodhpur
Abstract
The recent WTO Appellate Body decision in Brazil – Retreaded Tyres raises several
interesting institutional and substantive issues. Institutionally, it starkly illustrates the
inherent tension and potential for conflict that exists between regional dispute settlement
systems and the WTO dispute settlement mechanism. In showing remarkably little
deference towards the earlier decision of the MERCOSUR Arbitral Tribunal on the
same issue, the Appellate Body essentially espouses a regime of supremacy – of WTO law
over regional dispute settlement bodies, and of jurisprudence generated by WTO appellate
bodies over jurisprudence generated by WTO panels. This attitude appears to be
unsustainable in the light of the increasing proliferation of international courts and
tribunals and the inevitable consequence of disputes being adjudicated by different courts
and tribunals at various levels. Substantively, the dispute is a prime example of the
difficulties of balancing non-trade interests and trade interests, with the latter prevailing.
However, the Appellate Body’s narrow application of Article XX of GATT leaves
WTO members such as Brazil insufficient room to address legitimate, urgent
environmental and health problems through restrictions on trade
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1(2) TRADE L. & DEV. (2009)
