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108 Nw. U. L. Rev. 401 (2013-2014)
The Next Generation of Trade and Environment Conflicts: The Rise of Green Industrial Policy

handle is hein.journals/illlr108 and id is 415 raw text is: Copyright 2014 by Mark Wu and James Salzman             Printed in U.S.A.
Vol. 108, No. 2
Articles
THE NEXT GENERATION OF TRADE AND
ENVIRONMENT CONFLICTS: THE RISE OF
GREEN INDUSTRIAL POLICY
Mark Wu & James Salzman
ABSTRACT-A major shift is transforming the trade and environment field,
triggered by governments' rising use of industrial policies to spark nascent
renewable energy industries and to restrict exports of certain minerals in
the face of political economy constraints. While economically distorting,
these policies do produce significant economic and environmental benefits.
At the same time, they often violate World Trade Organization (WTO)
rules, leading to increasingly harsh conflicts between trading partners.
This Article presents a comprehensive analysis of these emerging
conflicts, arguing that they represent a sharp break from past trade and
environment disputes. It examines the causes of the shift and the nature of
the industrial policies at issue. The ascendance of these Next Generation
conflicts transforms both the international and domestic political
economies of trade litigation and environmental policy. It raises
implications for the choice of forum for trade litigation, the divide between
industrialized and developing countries' strategic interests, the stability of
domestic political alliances, and the availability of WTO legal exceptions
for environmental measures.
Perhaps surprisingly, the most worrisome implication of Next
Generation cases for both environmental protection and trade liberalization
arises from often-overlooked trade remedy laws. The choice of litigation
forum matters greatly because the compliance options differ depending on
the forum. As a result, the environmentally harmful consequences of Next
Generation cases are likely to be greater in domestic trade remedies cases
than in WTO dispute settlement cases. To mitigate the environmental
harms from Next Generation cases and reduce the threat of a green trade
war, this Article suggests that we focus on reforming domestic trade
remedies rules.
AUTHORS-Mark Wu is an Assistant Professor of Law, Harvard Law
School. James Salzman is the Samuel F. Mordecai Professor of Law and
Nicholas Institute Professor of Environmental Policy, Duke University,
who serves as a member of the Trade and Environment Policy Advisory
Committee (TEPAC), a statutorily mandated body that provides policy

401

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