EU-US Regulatory
Cooperation Approaches and Experiences
Jan E. FrydmanHead of Unit for International Regulatory Agreements and Toy Safety
Directorate General for Enterprise and IndustryEuropean Commission
Jeff WeissSenior Director, Technical Barriers to Trade
Office of the United States Trade Representative
WTO TBT Committee Workshop on Regulatory Cooperation Between Members
November 8-9, 2011
What do we do?
US and European regulators actively pursue cooperation through a broad range of horizontal policy tools and sectoral activities in the area of TBTs
Regulator to regulator dialogue – increasingly on prospective regulation
Policy spectrum from ad hoc, informal information exchanges – to structured dialogues – to binding government agreements (e.g., MRAs)
Appropriate approach selected depends on policy context and objective
Why do we do it?
In US-EU trade relationship, with relatively low tariffs, non-tariff barriers are an increasingly important factor to address
Reduce unnecessary cost to business/improve competitiveness, while improving quality of regulations
Deeper US-EU regulatory cooperation is viewed as essential activity to promote more compatible transatlantic regulatory approaches and enhanced economic ties
Objectives
Minimize unnecessary regulatory divergences Facilitate trade; minimize trade frictions Promote better quality regulation Reduce unnecessary regulatory burdens Increase consumer confidence
InstrumentsUS and EU have pursued a variety of policy initiatives
over past decade which feature regulatory cooperation in the area of TBTs as a key element:
Transatlantic Economic Partnership (1998) US-EU MRA (1998) Guidelines for US-EU Regulatory Cooperation and
Transparency (2002); ECJudgement 2004 US-EU Positive Economic Agenda (2002) US-EU Economic Initiative (2005) Framework for Enhancing Transatlantic Economic
Integration (2007)
Main Tools
Regulatory Cooperation Roadmap Sectoral dialogues OMB-EC methodological dialogue on good regulatory practices
High Level Regulatory Cooperation Forum (senior-level platform for follow-up and cross-cutting issues)
Political oversight provided through
Transatlantic Economic Council, TEC (2007) US-EU Summit
Sectoral CooperationTo advance sectoral cooperation, the US and EC have developed:
Guidelines for Regulatory Cooperation promote procedural steps for more effective dialogues (e.g., consultations, data sharing)
A document on “Best Cooperative Practices”
Confidentiality arrangements to permit sharing of non-public information between regulators has facilitated cooperation in key areas such as pharmaceuticals, medical devices, food safety
Specific dialogues/activities in a number of different TBT sectors (e.g., pharmaceuticals, medical devices, cosmetics, toys, food safety, auto safety, consumer product safety, import safety…).
-- Increased focus on prospective regulations (or even earlier). -- Cooperation often leverages work in pluri/multilateral fora (e.g., ICH).-- Aim to reduce TBTs and promote compatible regulatory approaches
Sectoral Cooperation: ExamplesSome illustrations of US-EU sectoral cooperation in past years:
Pharmaceuticals – pilot projects on parallel product/substance approvals; common format for applications; intensified cooperation on vaccines, pharmacovigilance and counterfeit medications; agreed common format for orphan drug designations
Auto safety - dialogue initiated to streamline adoption of global regulations, including cooperation on specific GTRs
Marine equipment - established a two-way alert system for unsafe equipment and agreed to expand the product scope of MRA
Consumer products - established a program for sharing information on recalls of unsafe products
Toys – successful bilateral cooperation, and third country outreach
OMB-EC Methodological Dialogue Dialogue established in 2005 between the US Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) - Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) and relevant experts in the European Commission (led by Secretariat General)
Focus is to addresses methodological issues (i.e. related to good regulatory practice), such as impact assessment, stakeholder consultation, etc. in order to improve our understanding of each others' regulatory systems and practices
Results/Ongoing work includes: -- Analysis of respective practices on impact assessments; development of a common understanding on regulatory principles and best practices-- Exchanges of respective regulatory workplans to help upstream coordination/early warning
TEC The Transatlantic Economic Council (TEC) provides
minister-level political guidance for implementation of the 2007 Framework for Advancing Transatlantic Economic Integration.
First meeting in November 2007; next meeting end November 2011
Three main themes/areas discussed now: Innovation, new industries and technologies Facilitating trade and foster regulatory cooperation Investment cooperation
HL Regulatory Cooperation Forum The High-Level Regulatory Cooperation Forum was established in 2005
as a platform for senior-level regulators to agree on areas for cooperation and promote cooperation on cross-cutting regulatory topics – such as new technologies or policy developments that may impact multiple authorities on each side.
Current Forum issues include:
Standards New areas, such as nanotechnology, electric cars Possible future areas of cooperation (US stakeholder consultation) SME policies
Practical Lessons LearnedBased on experience advancing US-EU regulatory dialogues, the Forum
identified the following “Best Cooperative Practices” in 2006:
Define scope of cooperation clearly Identify appropriate mechanisms for cooperation Cultivate senior-level support for cooperative activity Provide sufficient resources to support cooperation Provide transparency and opportunity for stakeholder input Promote dialogue between own regulators on best cooperative practices
Horizontal Forum Issues: Regulation “Common Understanding” of Regulatory Principles
Transparency and openness, allowing participation by stakeholders and the public;
Consideration of benefits and costs; Careful analysis of alternatives, including less stringent and more
stringent; Selection of least burdensome approach; Use of performance-based and behaviorally informed approaches; Avoid unnecessarily divergent or duplicative requirements; and Evaluate existing regulatory measures on a periodic basis through a
transparent procedure
Horizontal Forum Issues: Regulation (2) Improving Existing Mechanisms for Cooperation
Use of online planning tools; Soliciting input from international stakeholders; Ensuring comments on proposals to supplement/
modify existing regulatory measures; and Exchanging information on ex-post evaluations
and reviews of regulatory measures
Horizontal Forum Issues: Regulation (3)
Explore New Cooperation Mechanisms Explore new ways to use planning tools to facilitate
cooperation; Expand the use of online planning tools to exchange
information; Consider publishing an annual notice seeking public
comment; and Explore additional consultation mechanisms
Status Update
Horizontal Forum Issues: Standards Joint Statement on Standards in Regulation
Each side has a different approach to standards Need to enhance cooperation so as to minimize
unnecessary divergences and creation of NTBs Important to enhance transparency and stakeholder
participation, participation in int’l standard setting Agree to develop proposal to implement these principles Will encourage trading partners to adopt similar principles
Status update
Sectoral Issues Current Issues
Energy Efficiency Manufactured Nanomaterials E-mobility (electric vehicles)
Future Areas of Focus? FR notice Other stakeholder outreach
Toys as a success story
First meeting of TEC 2007 identified safety of imported products as a priority for future work; Forum report of 2008 on how to improve cooperation, including information exchange on unsafe products
USCPSC and EC DG ENTR and DG SANCO established Working Group on Toy Safety; covers information exchange, regulatory and standards developments, potential areas for harmonization, new initiatives to enhance toy safety
Quarterly video-conferences, with contacts between meetings; resulted in greatly enhanced understanding of our systems
Common challenge of implementing new toy safety regulations (US: 2008 Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act; EU: 2009 Toy Safety Directive (both upgrade old regs, and require development of new or upgraded standards)
Toys as a success story (cont’d)
Current priorities include Promote greater convergence of EU and US toy safety standards Promote global solutions (ISO standards) in line with the high level of
safety required under both systems Develop common approaches to common issues, like definitions, risk
assessment, traceability, format of declarations of conformity Develop closer cooperation on enforcement matters, e.g. information
exchange on US recalls and EU market surveillance Joint outreach and training in China for regulators, manufacturers and
traders
ExperienceThrough variety of approaches over the past decade, US-EU regulatory
cooperation efforts have grown/expanded:
Cooperation now deeper and broader – more decentralized and routine Confidence-building between regulatory counterparts is essential No “magic wand” – regulatory cooperation is technical, hard work No “one size fits all” approach – specific context matters Focus on prospective regulations is far easier than changing existing
regulations Replicate models that work well – apply to other sectors/dialogues Near-term, practical results are key to maintain momentum/support Expectations management: benefits accumulate – robust over time Political oversight of technical negotiations (involves legislation)
Experience (2) Need highest level political will/clear commitment (e.g. TEC) and senior level
implementation (e.g., Forum) Note: this is a necessary but not sufficient condition for a successful outcome
Avoid long-standing trade irritants Understand your limitations (flexibility is key) Focus on areas with best prospects of success and where net benefits are highest Resource constraints can create both challenges and opportunities Don’t waste a good crisis Ensure all relevant players are aware/involved (e.g., legislatures, States,
regulators, stakeholders) Stakeholder-driven agenda – ongoing stakeholder involvement
But provide us with robust data/evidence, not assertions
Experience (3) Start as early as possible Internal coordination matters “Cheat”
Use of performance standards, acceptance of more than one standard that meets regulatory objectives
Encourage regulator/stakeholder participation in international standards development, following the coherence principle More likely that standards will be performance based, integrate regional
differences, not conflict with each other minimizes potential for divergence
Use of international systems of conformity assessment
Concluding Panel:
Needed for successful international regulatory cooperation: Comparable jurisdictions over the subject matter (to be) regulated Common powers, including comparable institutional structures and
regulatory competences (involve/talk to the right players) Shared values on role of government, acceptable risk and issues such as
impact assessment, risk assessment, transparency Confidence and trust between regulators (normally a national mandate
with focus on domestic policies, not a trade mandate, not used to cooperate with foreign regulators/authorities (“bottom-up”)
Need for highest level political will/supervision of bureaucratic process (“top-down”)
Common interest/utility; focused, selective agenda Resources Stakeholder driven Issue of creating new (easier) versus changing old/existing regulations
(harder)
Further Information
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/international_regulatory_cooperation#irc
http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/enterprise_policy/inter_rel/eu_us/index_en.htm