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WTO members bypass opposition to introduce world's first baseline digital trade rules

In recent years, efforts by a group of countries to fold the E-Commerce Agreement into the WTO rulebook were twice blocked by dissenting members
March 28, 2026 / 21:55 IST
Delegates sit during the opening of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) 14th ministerial meeting in Yaounde, Cameroon, March 26, 2026. Reuters
Snapshot AI
  • 66 WTO members to activate new digital trade rules
  • India and some others blocked full WTO adoption of the agreement
  • US has not joined the deal; its position is under review

A group of World Trade Organization members agreed on Saturday to sidestep adoption hurdles for the world's first baseline on digital trade rules, opting to bring the agreement into force among consenting participants, the WTO said.

In recent years, efforts by a group of countries to fold the E-Commerce Agreement into the WTO rulebook were twice blocked by dissenting members. The pact aims to foster an open environment for digital trade.

The push to accelerate entry into force, among members who represent 70% of global trade, stems from mounting frustration over those obstructions, a senior diplomat told Reuters. Under WTO rules, plurilateral agreements among subsets of members require consensus.

At the 14th WTO Ministerial Conference in Cameroon, 66 members settled on an interim arrangement to activate the deal within their countries while pursuing broader incorporation into the WTO framework.

Japan's State Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry, Yamada Kenji, hailed it as a "historic step" toward global digital trade rules.

UK Business and Trade Secretary Peter Kyle also hailed the move.

"As the first global digital trade deal, this will make trade cheaper, faster and more secure for businesses around the world," Kyle said.

India has been one of the main countries blocking a deal, arguing that trade agreements should be adopted multilaterally by consensus.

"The agreement is a strong message to India, and some others, that if you use consensus to block any reform process or advancements forward, we will proceed anyway," a senior European diplomat said.

India is currently blocking a separate plurilateral WTO agreement being discussed in Cameroon ​aimed at boosting investment in developing countries, two senior diplomats said.

India has so far opposed the International Facilitation for Development Agreement for fear that its negotiating power may be diluted.

The United States is not among the 66 countries to sign up for the agreement, with the issue currently under review by the U.S. administration.

The agreement is separate from an e-commerce moratorium which bans customs duties being placed on digital downloads and streaming, which is currently the subject of a political deadlock between the U.S. and India at the WTO meeting in Cameroon.

Reuters

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