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WTO talks end in deadlock after Brazil blocks deal over e-commerce duties

Olivia Le Poidevin (Reuters)
Yaounde
Mon, March 30, 2026 Published on Mar. 30, 2026 Published on 2026-03-30T09:14:25+07:00

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World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala speaks during the WTO ministerial conference in Yaounde on March 26, 2026. World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala speaks during the WTO ministerial conference in Yaounde on March 26, 2026. (AFP/-)

W

orld Trade Organization talks ended deadlocked on Monday as Brazil blocked a bid by the United States and other countries to secure an extension to a moratorium on customs duties for electronic transmissions like digital downloads, diplomats said.

The talks at a WTO meeting in Cameroon were seeking to bridge differences over extending the e-commerce moratorium, and agree to a plan for broader reform of the organization.

Ministers there had been trying to extend the moratorium, which is due to expire this month, by four years plus an additional buffer year to 2031, diplomats said.

Talks would now continue in Geneva after the impasse on prolonging the moratorium, said the WTO conference chair Luc Magloire Mbarga Atangana.

In what is seen as a test for the WTO's relevance, after a year of trade turmoil and major disruptions due to the Iran war, diplomats said ministers got stuck on extending the moratorium beyond more than two years following objections from Brazil.

US wanted permanent extension

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Diplomats had been working throughout Sunday to close the gaps between Brazil, which had originally sought a two-year extension, and the US, which wanted a permanent extension, by drafting a proposed document of a four-year extension with a one-year sunset buffer, concluding in 2031.

Brazil later proposed a four-year extension, with a review clause half way through, however, that was not supported, two diplomats told Reuters.

A US official said Brazil had opposed a "near-consensus document."

"It's not US vs Brazil. It's Brazil and Turkey v 164 members," said a US official.

"The US wanted the sky," a Brazilian diplomat told Reuters, adding that Brazil wanted to remain prudent in renewing the moratorium by two years, like in previous ministerial conferences.

"In four or five years' time, no one will be able to predict what e-commerce will be about, and this has an influence on a number of countries' policies," they added

Another diplomat said that US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer made delegates "uncomfortable" as he suggested there "would be consequences," if the US did not get a long-term extension to the moratorium.

Business leaders say an extension is vital to guarantee predictability, fearing duties could otherwise be introduced. It is also seen as key to securing US support for the WTO.

Draft reform plan takes shape

After initial resistance from some WTO members, a new draft of the reform roadmap, seen by Reuters, that provides a timeline for progress and sets out the key issues to address was close to being agreed, three diplomats said.

Those include improving decision-making in a consensus-based system that has long been stymied by a few countries, and the trade benefits extended to developing countries.

A declaration on reform will also be sent to Geneva for further discussion, the WTO conference chair said.

The reform debate comes amid efforts to rework WTO rules to render subsidy use more transparent and make decision-taking easier. The US and European Union argue China in particular has taken advantage of current rules to their detriment.

Bringing into WTO rules a deal reached by a subset of members aimed at boosting investment in developing countries also remains blocked by India.

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