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The old man and the seas – The future of the ACP-EU relationship

Development Policy23 Jun 2011Mirjam van Reisen

The ACP has emerged out of a unique relationship with the European Union (EU). However, while the EU needs the ACP’s backing to get support in international governance, and needs its raw materials and markets, the EU is indecisive about continuing this special relationship. The ACP represents almost half the world’s states but does not have a voice in global governance forums, such as the Group of Twenty (G-20), which exclude the poorest countries. The ACP is re-evaluating its partnership with the EU and exploring opportunities with emerging countries. The EU must decide whether it wants to build a partnership with ACP countries on equal terms.

Globalization has made the world more interdependent than ever before. Problems are no longer the responsibility of the few. Whether the global financial crisis, climate change, human security or rising food prices, no country is exempt from the impact of these problems. But not all countries are equally influential, if at all, in the global institutions that address these problems. Think of the Group of Twenty (G-20), the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the United Nations (UN) Security Council. Each of these institutions dances to the tune of the major world powers. The African, Caribbean, Pacific Group of States (ACP), on the other hand – the obvious representative of the world’s poor, marginalized countries – barely has a say in such global institutions and hence little influence in global governance.

How, then, is the ACP going to claim the position it should rightly have in global governance, as a bloc representing almost half of the world’s nations? This is not about border conflicts or military tensions. Those problems fall under the domain of the African Union and the Unions of Caribbean and Pacific States. The ACP is well placed to fill this gap in international governance issues such as climate change, finance or trade. It can take advantage of its members’ diversity and the clout of its larger ones, such as South Africa. The ACP could further strengthen itself as a group through South-South economic linking, investing in high-quality products and creating added value for its exports. The ACP supplies essential raw materials, not only to Europe but also to emerging economies. It therefore has the potential to become a bloc of countries that global institutions feel they must reckon with.

The first step towards securing a voice for itself as a group entails re-evaluating its partnerships. The ACP Group signed a treaty, the Cotonou Agreement, in Benin in 2000 with one of its traditional partners, the EU. This treaty is due to expire in 2020, however, and the EU has not yet confirmed its commitment to renew the agreement. The ACP, meanwhile, has begun to flirt with other potential partners, including China and the other BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia and India). Whichever partnerships the ACP considers, the ACP-EU relationship is at a crossroads. More than ever, the ACP seems to be in a position to choose a path that will strengthen it as a group and will enable it to become an even more relevant and viable force in the global arena.

ACP, Europe and the new global order

In a seventies-style building in Brussels, just outside the neighbourhood where EU institutions are housed, dozens of colourfully dressed ambassadors meet regularly at a table some 30 metres long. The ACP diplomats discuss trade agreements with the EU. Some speak in English, some in French. Interpreters in soundproof boxes provide simultaneous translations.

The diplomats discuss commodities such as sugar, coffee, cotton and other goods, worth billions of euros in trade. Their talks affect the livelihoods of 1.3 billion people: 792 million in ACP countries and 501.1 million in the EU member states.1

For years, Europe has regarded Africa as its back garden. Colonial powers went in and took Africa’s resources. In postcolonial times, Europe and Africa negotiated trade deals for fuel, cotton, coffee and other goods. Now, Europe needs Africa more than ever, especially with a booming commodity market. But does Africa still need Europe?

Flashback

The geopolitical notion of a ‘Eurafrica’ gained new credence after the Second World War. The negotiators of the Treaty of Rome, which gave birth to the European Economic Community (EEC), tried to reconcile the idea of a customs union with the historical preferential links that existed between European countries and their overseas territories.

France gave its approval to proceed with the establishment of the EEC, provided that a European Development Fund was created and an association was established between former French colonies and the EEC. Germany and the Netherlands both were opposed to this proposal, but reluctantly agreed.

The Treaty of Rome, signed on 25 March 1957, established a free-trade area between the six founder members of the EEC – Germany, Belgium, France, Italy, Luxembourg and the Netherlands – and their overseas territories.

In 1963 in Yaoundé, Cameroon, the EU signed the first partnership agreement with 17 African states and Madagascar, which included preferential trade arrangements, such as duty-free access for specified African goods to the European market.

A larger group got a better deal when the United Kingdom joined the EEC in 1973 and the group of associated countries was enlarged to include some former British colonies. These wanted the same privileges as the Yaoundé countries. So a new convention was negotiated. Nigeria functioned as a broker during these negotiations. The EEC was under pressure from the 1970s oil crisis, and developing countries were demanding a fair and equitable new World Order. This enabled developing countries to secure significant concessions from their European counterparts in the Lame Convention, named after the city in Togo where negotiations took place.

Following the signing the of the Lame Convention, the group of 46 developing countries established the ACP as a separate group through the Georgetown Treaty, which was signed in February 1975 in Georgetown, Guyana. These 46 developing countries then became formally known as the ACP group of countries.

In 2000, the Cotonou ACP-EU Agreement was signed for a period of 20 years. The ACP group now has 79 member states, including 48 countries from sub-Saharan Africa, 16 from the Caribbean and 15 from the Pacific. The Cotonou Agreement included a clause that brought the ACP countries into negotiations on Economic Partnership Agreements. However, at the time, the ACP agreed to this only because the EU had offered an alternative; should an ACP state not wish to enter into an EPA, an alternative would be available to retain the prevailing preferences. The EU never quantified what this alternative would be and it was removed in the first review of the Continuo Agreement in 2005.

Much less than previously, according to Lord Meghnad Desai, emeritus professor at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He believes that the ACP needs to reduce its dependency. In light of ageing, strict immigration laws and a slow economic recovery in Europe, he points out that ‘within 10 years the EU will need the ACP.’

Indeed, some argue that this time has already arrived. According to the Africa-Europe Faith and Justice Network, ‘the EU has to rely on the import of several critical raw materials from third countries. In fact the EU is the world’s largest importer of natural resources, accounting for 23% of the global imports of natural resources. The EU’s import dependency rate for minerals ranges from 46% for chromium, 54% for copper ore, 95% for bauxite to 100% for materials such as cobalt, platinum, titanium and vanadium.’2

The network also points out South Africa’s highly sensitive position as ‘the world’s largest supplier of two of the raw materials which are considered by the EU as particularly critical – rhodium and platinum – and [South Africa] has already been identified by the EU as one of the countries which apply trade restrictions on raw materials. Were South Africa to sign an Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) that includes a chapter on investments, it would no longer be able to give preference to historically disadvantaged people. As the former World Bank Chief Economist and Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz said “If you’re from a developing country, try to make sure that your government doesn’t sign a bilateral investment treaty.”‘3

The growing competition over raw materials may open the door for the ACP to play a greater role in global governance one day. The EU has already tried to divide the ACP several times in the past, so the ACP might turn to other countries, such as China, for support. China is one of the main trading partners and largest investors in Africa now, and has been strengthening its relations with many of the continent’s states. For now, the ACP still considers Europe family. ‘But actions speak louder than words,’ warns Anil Sooklal, South African ambassador to the EU. ‘It is no use considering the EU as family, if we don’t act as partners.’

For some, free trade is the answer to the ACP’s problems. It can eradicate poverty, according to Desai. He sees the WTO as the only global institution where all states are equal. ‘No permanent members, no veto powers. And free trade is necessary for every country to develop,’ he told ambassadors from ACP countries at a presentation in Brussels in June 2011.

‘Development doesn’t come from granting special status. It doesn’t come from requesting your money back from former colonial powers. Development comes from hard work, high savings and free trade.’ Desai favours realpolitik over idealism, and emphasizes that the participation of all countries in decision-making processes of all countries is an essential condition for global governance.

Free trade was the idea that underpinned the EU’s proposal to the ACP in 1998 that eventually led to the agreement in the Cotonou Agreement to negotiate EPAs. Stiglitz warned against bilateral investment agreements, such as the EPAs; does this also warrant a closer look at the EPAs and which countries or blocs benefited from these? And what is the EU’s stance on the matter?

Shaky ground

The EU has been negotiating trade deals with the ACP since the latter was founded in 1975. In 2000, the parties even agreed to abolish non-reciprocal trade preferences after a transition period of ACP-EU trade cooperation. The Cotonou Agreement is a unique partnership, which is legally binding and based on equality and mutual respect. However, this form of cooperation between the EU and the ACP is now on shaky ground. ACP diplomats are rightly concerned. The EU’s interest in cooperating with the ACP seems to be waning, and the question is whether the EU intends to prolong it after 2020.

The European External Action Service (EEAS), launched in December 2010 and headed by Baroness Catherine Ashton, does not have an ACP division. To make things worse, the ACP is not mentioned any more in the EU Lisbon Treaty (see box on Lisbon Treaty), which was meant to herald a new era in external relations and development cooperation in the EU. The EEAS’s administrative set-up does not recognize the special status of the European Development Fund (EDF), which funds ACP-EU cooperation.

The Lisbon Treaty

The Lisbon Treaty has strengthened the EU’s resolve to eradicate poverty. Article 208 states that the primary objective of development cooperation is to eradicate poverty. It also states that all EU policies that impact on developing countries should take the objective of development cooperation into account.

The Lisbon Treaty also calls on its members to follow a principle of ‘consistency’. EU policies should be aligned with each other and pursue the same policy objectives. The increased scope of the EU in the Common Foreign Security and Defence Policy (CFSDP) enhances the possibility for an increased political approach to external EU relations. A common policy on diplomacy has been added to the functions of the EU’s common external policy.

The Lisbon Treaty puts the responsibility of the EU’s entire foreign policy in the hands of a High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy (EUHR). This powerful representative, currently Baroness Catherine Ashton, heads the diplomatic staff and the European External Action Service (EEAS). She coordinates the interplay between the intergovernmental EU Common Foreign and Security Policy and the European Security and Defence Policy with the European Commission’s external action areas to address the global challenges using an increasingly common EU approach.

These changes will also allow the delegations (or embassies) to play an increasingly leading role in representing the EU in the full range of its competencies. They will also bolster the role of EU ambassadors in political dialogue.

Responsibilities have been divvied up between the EUHR and the four commissioners traditionally responsible for relations with developing countries: the development commissioner (Andris Piebalgs), the enlargement and European neighbourhood policy commissioner (Ŝtefan Füle), the commissioner for international cooperation, humanitarian aid and crisis response (Kristalina Georgieva) and the trade commissioner (Karel De Gucht). Negotiations between the high representative, the council, the commission and the parliament in June 2010 produced an agreed wording to key documents that recognized the ‘responsibility’ of the development and humanitarian commissioners for aid instruments, even though proposals for any change will be submitted jointly with the EEAS.

The relationship between the ACP and the EU is under pressure, however, not only from the cumbersome EPA negotiations and the one-sidedness of the political dialogue and human rights, but also because of the Lisbon Treaty – or rather what’s not in the Lisbon Treaty.

The Lisbon Treaty no longer mentions the ACP and the EDF. The EU intended to present a new external policy that breaks from history and recognizes the new global realities. But this has puzzled the ACP, which became apparent at the event celebrating the 36th anniversary of the Georgetown Agreement.

The negotiations on EPAs, moreover, have been cumbersome since the Cotonou Agreement was signed. The EU and ACP had agreed in 2000 to discuss more free trade. The idea was to conclude bilateral agreements between the EU and the ACP countries. But the expected effects of the proposed liberalization on ACP countries appeared negative for many of the developing countries. Moreover, the architecture of the negotiations was also too difficult: the EU chose to negotiate between or with regional groups of ACP states, but these groups differed internally. The EPA negotiations came to a slow-down in 2009.

‘Some of the most important issues that concern the ACP,’ according to ambassador Sooklal, ‘are the EDF process and EEAS’ new structure. These are signals to the group saying that Europe is not giving them the same level of attention as previously.’ The EU’s problem is that it feels locked in its historic relations with the ACP, whereas what it really wants is to remodel its international cooperation framework so that it is pertinent to today’s problems. The EU lacks the imagination needed to recognize the potential its partnership with the ACP has in today’s world.

It is no surprise, then, that ACP diplomats are puzzled that their group is not mentioned in the Lisbon Treaty. Zimbabwe’s new ambassador to the EU, Mary Margaret Muchada, compares the situation to a personal relationship. ‘If your boyfriend keeps mum about the relationship after 2020 and doesn’t mention us in the treaty, no wonder we are looking for new boyfriends,’ she says, explicitly naming China as Europe’s competitor.

The ACP countries, meanwhile, are warning the EU that negotiating and ratifying new agreements are likely to take years. It is therefore essential that a swift decision is made on when to start negotiations. In addition, the ACP will not, and should not, depend on the EU to take the initiative to decide where the partnership will go next.

Breaking up is hard to do

The secretary-general of the ACP secretariat in Brussels, Mohamed Ibn Chambas, does not foresee a breakup with Europe, however. ‘It’s more like a traditional relationship,’ he says. ‘We make new friends, while keeping the old. That is what it is. Value in diversity.’ Chambas says the relationship with Europe needs to be reoriented, and stresses the importance of ‘aid by trade’. ‘Look at Africa not as charity,’ he advises, ‘but as an investment. We can grow with more infrastructure, better port facilities. Not just aid.’

One must not rule out the possibility that major multinationals will relocate their production facilities to Africa in the future, says Chambas. ‘Why not attract industry from China? There are some jobs nobody wants to do. If China moves up, Africa will be the new frontier.’

In the meantime, more and more African producers are trying to export finished goods instead of commodities. There is more profit selling high-fashion designer dresses made of cotton, than just selling bales of cotton. But some EU rules bar these finished products. ‘Europe is making it difficult for us to export,’ says Muchada. ‘That is certainly a problem for some of our organic farming products, like fruit pulp for ice cream.’

So, what is the future, if any, of ACP-EU cooperation? ACP ministers have been deliberating on how to strengthen the group’s unity and solidarity. In 2014, the presidents and other rulers of ACP countries will meet and decide on their future position. After that, they propose to meet jointly with the heads of states of the EU member states at a summit to agree on the shape of the ACP-EU partnership.

A crucial decision will need to be taken on the future of the Cotonou Agreement now that the EU is preparing to negotiate the union’s budget for the next seven years (the next Multiannual Financing Framework). This budget concerns hundreds of billions of euros. If the agreement is not continued, the EDF’s financial support would eventually be integrated into the EU’s overall budget (see ‘Separate or integrate’ box).

So far, the EU has not indicated what will happen when the ACP-EU partnership formally ends in 2020. This is something that makes ACP countries nervous. Ambassador Sooklal suggests that the ACP looks beyond Europe. ‘The ACP is trying to be proactive in this situation, trying to make the group more relevant. It is thinking as well how to strengthen its relations with its new partners because the ACP should not just see itself in the context of post-2020. There is a very large world that needs to interact with the group and a lot of other players to make and keep good relations with.’

Separate or integrate?

The European Development Fund (EDF) has always remained outside the European Union’s (EU) regular budget. In 2003, the European Parliament wanted to integrate the EDF into the new Multiannual Financial Perspectives, now called the Multiannual Financial Framework. This framework is the EU’s budget, agreed upon for a period of seven years.

The European Commission supported the proposal to include the EDF in the EU’s long-term budget in 2003. France, the EDF’s original main architect, supported the proposal. A report presenting the French government’s change of position described a separate arrangement as being outdated.

But then the United Kingdom presented its case for retaining the status quo, arguing that the EDF was more oriented towards poverty eradication. At the time the UK further argued that the EU’s legal framework should guarantee that the entire EU development budget focus on poverty. This condition set by the UK was satisfied with the Lisbon Treaty clarification on the scope of EU development cooperation.

New negotiations are now underway about the next Multiannual Financial Framework, and the UK’s original concerns have been addressed. However, European institutions are not expected to propose incorporating the EDF into the regular budget. And so the EDF is likely to remain a separate fund at least until 2020.

The ACP-EU partnership has hardly helped developing countries to grow over the past two decades. The ACP’s share in world trade even diminished during this period, says Patricia Francis, executive director of the International Trade Centre (ITC). Every day, people worldwide use sugar, drink coffee, buy cotton clothes or even fill their tanks with fuel originating in Africa, the Caribbean or the Pacific. But producers in ACP countries have hardly added value to the products they sell in the last few decades.

Strained relationship

The EU used to be able to count on the ACP vote in international negotiations, but no longer. Why is this the case? Did negotiations between the ACP and the EU on the EPAs mortgage the relationship that once used to be so evident?

The Cotonou Agreement was meant to help trade between the EU and the ACP. The two blocs decided to conclude a new trade regime, the EPAs, intended to establish reciprocal free trade agreements between the EU and ACP sub-regions. The EU emphasized the need for compliance with the WTO, requiring the liberalization of at least 80% of ACP trade (by tariff lines and trade volume) in order to be ‘WTO-compatible’.

The EPA negotiations turned out to be very difficult. In fact, they alienated some ACP countries from the EU, while the intention had been to strengthen the relationship. In the end, the ACP remained a substantially united bloc of countries – out of the group’s 79 countries only 25 signed the agreements, mostly small Caribbean states.

From the beginning, the tone of the negotiations was difficult, and the EU was perceived as trying to bully the ACP into agreement. Former EU development commissioner Louis Michel bluntly told the ACP countries: ‘When you open the market, you will benefit unless you think that global self-sufficiency allows you to survive. If this challenge isn’t met then perhaps one should continue to be involved in charity work … There is no plan B.’4

In May 2010 Hage Geingob, Minister of Trade and Industry made an appeal in Namibia’s National Assembly, ‘I call on our friends in Europe not to abandon us and to work with us towards a lasting solution. After all, the EPA is about partnership towards the shared goals of poverty alleviation and economic development. Let’s not use bully tactics or old colonial arrogance. Let’s be partners who are equal in sovereignty.’5

In the negotiations with Namibia, the commissioner of trade, De Gulch, subsequently promised ‘to back off on EPAs’ after the concerns that had been raised. Nevertheless, in January 2011, the ACP Council of Ministers still complained that ‘EC negotiators have continued to exert severe pressure on ACP States to sign up to agreements that do not fully reflect their concerns.’ 6

Many commentators and researchers have argued that the EU had emphasized free trade more than necessary in order to gain greater access to ACP markets, including in the areas of investment, services and government procurement, areas of considerable interest to European companies. Critics have claimed that the vulnerable ACP economies have been asked to liberalize much more than the EU, and that this contradicts the WTO regime, which is based on the principle of preferential treatment for weaker economies. In 2001, the ACP opened an office in Geneva, illustrating the relevance of defending the interests of the group in the WTO.

The European Commission has always defended the EPAs for their ‘development ‘orientation. European trade commissioner, Karel De Gucht pointed out that ‘EPAs will help make ACP countries more competitive by lowering import costs and providing access to affordable quality services. They will help create a transparent and predictable business environment and help ACP countries to attract the investment they so desperately need. And they will promote regional integration and create bigger markets – we in Europe know how important that is!’7

Difficult EPA negotiations

ACP countries have doubted whether the EPAs would serve their interests. The problems raised repeatedly throughout the last decade concern three main areas: preferential access, trade liberalization and the implications of the Lisbon Treaty for EU foreign policy.

First, the accessibility of European products in ACP countries would harm domestic producers in a range of sectors. With regard to exports to the EU, the ACP would have few direct and immediate gains: most ACP countries export mainly minerals and natural resources (petroleum, gold, diamonds and copper) and unprocessed agricultural commodities (coffee and cotton).

So while some conclude that EU imports would not compete with domestic products, others argue that the resulting EU domination of ACP markets would diminish opportunities for the development of ACP domestic industries in these areas. Marc Maes of the Belgian development organization 11.11.11 agrees with the concerns raised by the ACP countries: ‘We disagree strongly that ACP countries have to open their markets to European products as a condition for regional integration.’

A second concern the ACP has regarding trade liberalization is the cutting of import tariffs on EU products. ACP countries would lose a huge amount of tariff revenue, which would undermine ACP public budgets. In response, the European Commission tried to propose measures to address the concerns of ACP countries. Europe promised to grant additional finance for ‘aid for trade’. However, this idea has not really been put into practice. EU and ACP countries were unable to agree on the kind of partners to be supported through aid for trade.

The negotiations were also difficult for another reason. The EU required the ACP group to negotiate in regional groupings. This undermined the negotiation capacity of the group as a whole. The proposed regions were cutting across existing attempts to promote regionalization with a view to promote trade. Therefore many of the groups lacked the institutions to effectively handle such negotiations. These countries do not always share the same interests either. Some are competitors in terms of their access to the EU, and some even have border conflicts.

To complicate matters, the regional groups included both Least Developed Countries (LDCs) and non-LDCs, each of which had different interests. The LDCs enjoy a preferential scheme with special benefits (the so-called ‘Everything but Arms’ initiative, a 2001 EU Council of Ministers regulation that granted duty-free access to imports of all products from LDCs, except arms and ammunitions), while non-LDCs states do not. This has not facilitated a common approach among the regional groups.

So the aim of the EPAs – to foster regional integration – may in actual fact complicate matters. The EPAs have highlighted the complexities of regional trade integration and created tensions within potential regional trading groups, making it difficult to move forward. It is no wonder, then, that negotiations were not successful. In fact, they dragged on and on, and the timetable for the negotiations turned out to be too tight.

In 2007, a solution was provided in the form of interim EPAs, which were signed by a number of countries. To date, only 36 ACP countries have concluded an interim or alternative arrangement, and only 25 have confirmed their commitment by signing the agreement. Of these 36 countries, 15 are in the Caribbean. This region concluded a trade agreement containing a number of positive elements for the region as well as for the EU. The agreement was important to the EU as it demonstrated that the EPAs were feasible. Moreover, as the first region to sign the agreement, the Caribbean received concessions. This resulted in an acceptable agreement for the 15 Caribbean countries.

The negotiation process has essentially been slowed down since 2009, and little progress has been made since. Although meetings are still taking place, a positive outcome is not generally expected. The EPAs seem to have failed in Africa and the Pacific because there is little if any incentive to sign full EPAs. Some ACP countries are now opting for the ‘Everything but Arms’ preferences available for the poorest LDCs, while others are opting for general preference arrangements.8 The EPA negotiations, seen as being driven by EU interests, have strained the relationship between the EU and the ACP.

EU self-interest

The new organization of EU institutions also puzzled ACP diplomats. The newly established EEAS no longer includes a department that liaises with the ACP. This is the third problem, namely that a number of changes introduced in the Lisbon Treaty will lead to an external EU policy that is centred around the EU’s interests or those of individual member states.

Before 2010, EU officials dealing with ACP countries reported only to their bosses responsible for development or trade. Today, the policies are far broader and also much more politically motivated. Diplomats with other interests are now looking over the shoulder of EU officials dealing with ACP countries, or are even telling them what to do. The policy plans for developing countries are now drawn up by the EEAS, the EU’s new coordinating foreign service.

It may well be that the diplomats talking in the ear of an EU negotiator for the ACP-EU partnership are mainly serving the interest of their own member states instead of the EU. France, the United Kingdom and a few other large member states in the EU supply a substantial number of the diplomats in the EEAS.

Given the member states’ involvement in EU external policy, there has been a lot of wheeling and dealing to negotiate which EU member state ‘gets which country’ in the ACP and other regions. It follows that the EU’s external relations will become more politicized and increasingly influenced by the politics in and between member states, especially the largest ones. The EU might, therefore, send French ambassadors to former French colonies, where France still has significant economic interests, or British ambassadors to former British colonies.

The European negotiators also have to defend outcomes more often in European Parliament. The entire Common Commercial Policy – such as trade in services, foreign direct investment and intellectual property rights – which is under exclusive EU competence, is mostly subject to what is called a co-decision procedure between the European Parliament and EU member states. Both have to agree with the proposed policies. This means that more political actors are involved in making deals, so that negotiations become more complex and political, and more democratic scrutiny can be exercised. All of this means that the ACPs engagement with the EU will therefore also require a more explicit political strategy.

So like it or not, the new European political position on the ACP will be highly focused on more trade liberalization. The negotiators have no choice, because this new Lisbon Treaty, previously referred to as the European Constitution, explicitly promotes free trade. It states that the aim of the EU’s external action is to ‘encourage the integration of all countries into the world economy, including through the progressive abolition of restrictions on international trade’. Considering that the EU already had a hard time agreeing on rather liberal EPAs with ACP countries, further liberalization may give negotiators on both sides of the table headaches again.

Future scenarios

If no action is taken to prevent it, the ACP-EU Cotonou agreement will end in 2020. Then what? There are several potential scenarios or combinations of scenarios.

First, the agreement could be extended. ACP states would keep their preferential status in EU trade in this scenario. One could argue that the ACP-EU Cotonou Agreement is still the best example of a comprehensive approach to cooperation. It is consistent and fully in compliance with the international normative framework, set out by the international human rights treaties on development that promote partnership with and ownership of developing countries. Moreover, it consciously seeks to implement this framework and is fully in compliance with the aid effectiveness agenda . It provides a model that underpins governance, cooperation and accountability. It provides an overarching legal framework that defines and informs all the cooperation, actions and agreements of the group and its members.

Second, the ACP group forms an alliance with BRIC countries. The ACP could look beyond Europe and link up with other regions in the world, such as the BRIC countries. In this scenario, the ACP and BRICs follow a strategy that would amplify the North-South divide and create an economic power group based on the G-77 – a group of ‘developing’ nations at the United Nations – with the BRICs as economic and financial motor. This scenario depends heavily on South-South cooperation and the EU’s disengagement with the ACP group.

Third, the ACP goes global. The increasing impact of globalization and interconnectedness requires new and stronger forms of global governance, in which the role of the ACP group can play an important role. This requires the group to expand its orientation, which would link the new forms of global governance to their citizens’ interests, based on the defining principles and values of the group.

As a group of countries that have worked together for a long time within a defined framework, the ACP countries can legitimately represent the interests of a sizeable proportion of the world’s smallest, less powerful and least developed countries.

Fourth, the Cotonou Agreement ends, but EU-ACP cooperation continues under a different guise. In this scenario, development cooperation between EU and ACP countries will probably continue despite the fact that the agreement is not renewed. Were the agreement to end, then this kind of aid would no longer be based on a comprehensive and mutually agreed framework. This would potentially undermine the ‘ownership’ of aid programmes in ACP countries and therefore undermine the ‘aid effectiveness’ of EU aid as stipulated in the Accra Agenda for Action. The next conference on aid effectiveness will take place in Busan in South Korea in 2011.

And finally, the Cotonou Agreement ends, but South-South cooperation is maintained. If the agreement were to end, the 79 ACP countries from Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific might encounter problems exporting to the EU. The EU, on the other hand, would stand to lose their access to raw materials and easy access to the growing markets of the APC bloc.

The ACP might then evolve into an organization that supports South-South cooperation, and negotiates trade agreements, organizes investments and builds relationships between the group’s own member states. This will help solidify the group’s power base, which will ultimately enable it to represent the world’s marginalized countries and give them a voice in global governance.

The ACP has a range of options in terms of future scenarios. And the EU, meanwhile, is facing a choice. Even if it is no longer interested in the ACP (which is already an unlikely assumption), the ACP has a range of possibilities to strengthen its position as a bloc, based on its own internal strengths. Specifically, the ACP Group could claim the position it should rightly have in global governance, as a bloc representing almost half of the world’s nations.

Footnotes

  1. For population statistics in these two groups of countries, see The Secretariat of ACP Member States and Eurostat.
  2. EPAs and the European Raw Materials Initiative. Available at: Africa Europe Faith and Justice Network (2011). Forum for Action, No 55.
  3. EPAs and the European Raw Materials Initiative. Available at: Africa Europe Faith and Justice Network (2011). Forum for Action, No 55.
  4. ‘No plan B’, says EU Commissioner Louis Michel. The Courier 2 (NS), September/October 2007.
  5. Ministerial Statement by Hon. Hage Geingob, MP Minister of Trade and Industry, Republic of Namibia
    Title: “An update on the EPA negotiations”, delivered in Parliament on 19 May 2010.
  6. Thomas Lazzeri, EPA News Update. Africa Europe Faith and Justice Network, January 2011.
  7. De Gucht, K. (2010) Aid 2 Trade, EU Trade Policy towards Developing Countries Conference, Brussels, 16 March 2010.
  8. However, these are not fully used by the ACP countries either. ITC figures suggest that this is not the case, because they are not producing goods in the relevant sectors.