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European union says Harper sounding conciliatory on stalled free trade talks

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Core Tip:Prime Minister Stephen Harper at the G20 summit in St. Petersburg, Russia, September 2013. (Photo: www.pm.gc.ca
European unio says Harper sounding co<em></em>nciliatory on stalled free trade talks

Prime Minister Stephen Harper at the G20 summit in St. Petersburg, Russia, September 2013. (Photo: www.pm.gc.ca)

OTTAWA Prime Minister Stephen Harpers office is sounding more conciliatory about an imminent resolution to the continents stalled free-trade talks with Canada, a senior European unio official said Thursday.

That view from Brussels comes as Harper prepares to meet European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso on Friday, on the sidelines of the G20 summit in St. Petersburg, Russia.

Peter Stastny, the unios rapporteur on the Canada-Europe negotiations, said he is more optimistic than he was several months ago.

The good news is, that I keep hearing, more and more a kind of conciliatory and optimistic rhetoric, particularly from the office of Prime Minister Harper of Canada, Stastny said Thursday in a briefing to the European Parliaments international trade committee.

Im probably more optimistic now than I was before. It could happen any time soon.

Stastny said his optimism is based on his perception that Harpers office is playing down the gaps that remain on the main unresolved obstacles to a deal, including access for Canadian pork and beef, drug patents and provincial procurements.

They are minor issues that should be and could be solved, he said.

The rhetoric I keep hearing, from the EU, but mostly from Canada and (the) prime ministers office, seems to minimize these issues, and they see the end of a tunnel that hopefully will come very soon.

A Canadian source close to the talks said a small handful of key issues remain on the table, including agriculture, intellectual property and procurement.

RELATED: EU ambassador to Canada says its crunch time for free trade talks with Europe

Adam Taylor, Trade Minister Ed Fasts spokesman, said focused discussions continue across several key economic sectors, covering all regions of Canada.

Canada has made robust offers in good faith that address the EUs key interests, Taylor said in an email. He did not elaborate.

Canadians expect to be provided the same by the EU and we continue to make this clear to our EU counterparts.

The Canadian source said the latest offer was to be put before EU political leaders, including Barroso, and Karel de Gucht, the EU Commissioner for Trade, for their collective response.

Harpers office offered no public statement on his coming Friday meeting with Barrosso.

But the Canadian source said: The ball is in the EUs court. That remains what were waiting on.

Despite that assessment, Stastny lamented that two big deadlines have been missed in wrapping up negotiations for the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), which Canada and Europe started four years ago.

The two sides want a deal in time for the European Parliament to ratify by next year. That would get it in before the unio becomes distracted by separate talks with the United States, the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).

Its getting overloaded, Stastny said. And we all could benefit, the (European) commission could benefit, if the CETA would be concluded before the TTIPs begin.

The warning echoed previous ones by the Europeans that the Canadian talks could be shuffled to the back burner once the negotiations with the U.S. begin in earnest.

The U.S. and Europe formally opened discussions in July.

In August, the EU largely shut down for the summer, stalling the Canadian talks.

Fast said last month a little flexibility was needed from both sides when talks resume sometime this month.

In July, the now-departed EU ambassador to Canada, Matthias Brinkmann, blamed Ottawa for the logjam, saying a deal was possible in February. The comment was widely viewed as the latest in a series of European attempts to pressure Canada to reach a deal.

Fast later told The Canadian Press that what Brinkmann proposed was not in Canadas interest.

Stastny said he received his own briefing from European negotiators earlier this summer.

There was not too many surprises its kind of bittersweet, he said.

Its moving along. Its moving along gradually.

Stastnys assessment Thursday appeared more upbeat than the one he gave to a delegation of Canadian parliamentarians visiting Brussels in April.

Then he expressed frustration at the pace of the talks, saying the delay was not a good signal to be sending in tough economic times.

With files from Jennifer Ditchburn in St. Petersburg, Russia.


 
 
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