International affairs

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Consumer groups outline recommendations for Brexit talks
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Available in English, French
With the Brexit talks about to start, EU consumer groups have outlined how the interests of EU and UK consumers should be protected during the negotiations. The European Consumer Organisation and its members want any decisions related to the United Kingdom’s exit from the EU, and its subsequent relationship, to be assessed against the impact on consumers.
European Parliament fails to give consumers legal clarity on EU-Canada trade agreement (CETA)
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Available in English
Today, the European Parliament voted 419–258 to reject a motion asking the European Court of Justice (ECJ) for an opinion on the legality of the EU-Canada trade agreement (CETA). The European Consumer Organisation (BEUC) is disappointed in the lack of parliamentary support for a legal check that could increase consumer trust in global trade treaties.

Our International Affairs team works to protect Europeans in a global market. 

EU consumer policy is decided through a clear legislative process. The bloc’s external relations with third countries can affect this process and the daily lives of consumers. We therefore follow these relations and urge international engagement to include civil society and be transparent. 

Practically this means we scrutinise EU trade negotiations, ranging from ‘bilateral’ ones (with Australia, for instance) to talks about global e-commerce happening at the World Trade Organization. We remind decision-makers that trade should benefit Europeans, without negatively impacting consumer-related regulations in the EU (whether data privacy, chemical laws, food safety, etc.). 

We also look at external policy beyond ‘trade’, such as dialogues between EU and third-country regulators. The EU-US cooperation agenda is an example of this. BEUC supports such exchanges if they are voluntary and used to improve EU decision-making, address common issues, or take joint actions. 

Finally, we flag consumer concerns to decision-makers: think about issues with sending or receiving parcels from the UK since its EU exit, or dangerous products that are marketed to Europeans from outside the EU. This means we keep an eye on other policy areas, such as customs.

To make an international impact, we work with US civil society through the Trans-Atlantic Consumer Dialogue (TACD), and the global Consumers International network of more than 200 organisations.