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  • Turkey And EU In Trade Row Over Boron

    TURKEY AND EU IN TRADE ROW OVER BORON
    By John C. K. Daly

    Eurasia Daily Monitor
    Nov 13 2008
    DC

    In Turkey's convoluted "long march" toward European Union membership,
    Ankara has exhibited immense patience during the accession process,
    which began 21 years ago, when on April 14, 1987, Turkey applied to
    join the EU, having been an associate member of the European Union
    and its predecessors since 1963. Now an EU decision on a Turkish
    mineralogical export has threatened to roil the economic waters
    still further.

    The mineral in question is boron, of which Turkey has an estimated
    72 percent of the world's estimated reserves of 3 to 4 billion tons
    (Anadolu Ajansi, November 9). While boron and its allotropes and
    compounds, from boric acid to sodium tetraborate, have extensive
    industrial uses, including boron fibers used to reinforce metallic
    elements in military aircraft fuselages, their primary use, an
    estimated 95 percent, is in the production of glass, ceramics,
    cosmetics, and detergents.

    Annual global consumption, including in Turkey, is 4 million tons. In
    2008 Turkey expects boron exports to bring in $500 to $600 million,
    of which $130 to $140 million will be exported to the EU (Anadolu
    Ajansi, November 9).

    The EU legislation that has Ankara so concerned had its genesis in
    2002, when the Swedish government decided to classify borates as toxic
    to the human reproductive system. In February 2007 the EU Working
    Group on the Classification and Labeling of Dangerous Substances
    subsequently recommended that the EU Commission adopt a similar
    definition under the terms of the working group's Directive 67/548/EEC
    Category 3. The EU Commission gave its assent to the recommendation
    in June, and on September 15 the Official Journal of the European
    Union published the decision, with the condition that it would
    take effect 20 days after publication (EBA memo on the regulatory
    framework for borates, European Borates Association, June 27,
    www.ceramfed.co.uk/Reach%2007/EBA%20Papers%20I ssued%20at%20REACH%20Workshop.pdf;
    Zaman, November 7).

    Since last year Turkey has voiced its objections several times to
    the World Trade Organization (WTO) and has offered to cooperate
    with the EU to resolve the issue, but nothing concrete has been
    accomplished. During a technical meeting in February with the EU,
    Turkey stated that it intended to raise the issue with the WTO's
    Dispute Settlement Body if the classification decision were approved.

    Turkish bureaucrats worry that if the EU decision becomes fully
    implemented, Turkey's boron exports to the EU could shrink by 50
    percent or more, meaning an annual loss of at least $65 million. Even
    more worrisome, Ankara believes that the decision will also have
    "secondary and psychological impacts" once other nations consider
    implementing the EU directive in their own national legislation. The
    directive stipulates that boron and its derivatives, containing more
    than 5.5 percent of boron, will be forced to carry a warning label
    and certain symbols such as a skull indicating the toxicity of the
    package's contents (Hurriyet, November 7).

    The decision comes as a blow to Turkey's mining industry, which
    dreamed of becoming a global boron hub, seeing a rapidly expanding
    global market. The general manager of NNT Nano Teknoloji A.S.,
    Mehmet Can Arvas, stated that boron could play an important role
    in reducing vehicular pollutants, saying, "Products manufactured
    using boron minerals decrease the amount of exhaust released by
    motor vehicles by 15 percent." He added optimistically, "If our
    company's boron products are used in vehicles all over the world,
    the hole in the ozone layer will narrow in 20 years" (Anadolu Ajansi,
    May 26). According to Arvas, boron could also play an important role
    in the world's move away from fossil fuels toward greener energy,
    with boron as an integral component in hydrogen-fuelled motor vehicles.

    Turkey has received support for its position from other boron exporting
    countries, including the United States, Malaysia, Australia, Argentina,
    Chile, Japan, and China, which have also contacted the relevant
    EU bodies voicing their concerns and asking that the boron issue
    be reconsidered. In April Turkish Minister of State Kursad Tuzmen
    expressed his concern about the impending EU legislation during
    discussions with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and U.S. trade
    representative Susan Schwab during a meeting of the American-Turkish
    Council in Washington D.C. He told them, "The EU wants to bring a
    definition that will restrict boron trade. Turkey will defend its
    rights on the matter within the framework of the rules of the World
    Trade Organization" (Anadolu Ajansi, April 20).

    Boron is regarded in Turkey as more than a useful element, even
    having strategic overtones; last year Ali Kulebi president of the
    Ankara-based Ulusal Guvenlik Stratejileri Arastirma Merkezi (National
    Security Strategies Research Center [TUSAM]) said, "21st century wars
    will also be for elements like boron, neptunium and uranium, which
    economic resources and modern technology will be in need of only when
    oil reserves are completely gone..." (Hurriyet, May 10, 2007).

    Perceptions about boron's strategic value have even infiltrated
    into popular culture. In 2004 a future military conflict between the
    United States and Turkey over the country's boron resources formed the
    basis of the wildly popular (and anti-American) novel, Metal Firtina
    ("Metal Storm"), in which the U.S. military launched Operation Sevres,
    named after the 1921 Treaty of Sevres, to partition Turkey between
    Greece and Armenia while encouraging the proclamation of a Kurdish
    state. The Turks prevail in the end with the help of the Russians and
    Europeans. While such fantasies rank up there with the more lurid James
    Bond films, the popularity of the novel should have given Washington
    officials pause.

    If the EU legislation is not rescinded, it will not mean the end of the
    Turkish boron industry. According to Eti Maden Enterprises director
    general Orhan Yilmaz, 63 nations worldwide purchase Turkish boron,
    including the United States, Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Britain,
    Canada, China, Egypt, India, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Italy, Russia,
    and Saudi Arabia (Anadolu Ajansi, November 9). It will, however,
    leave bruised feelings in Turkey, adding to the belief that the EU
    always treats Turkey by different, harsher standards.

    As Turkey and the United States are the world's largest producers of
    boron, Washington could engender gratitude in Turkey while protecting
    its own interests by dropping discreet hints into the "Eurocrats'"
    ears in Brussels that the new legislation might merit further review,
    being one of those rare occasions when the U.S. using its influence
    with the EU could also further its image in the Middle East by placing
    a much-needed band-aid on its bruised relations with its old ally.
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