
Member countries of the World Trade Organization (WTO) have submitted a new round of negotiating proposals on food and agriculture as preparations intensify for the 14th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14), scheduled to take place in Yaoundé, Cameroon. The submissions reflect renewed efforts to address long-standing and politically sensitive trade issues linked to food security, farm support, and market access.
The proposals span a wide range of topics, highlighting differing priorities between developed and developing economies. A central theme is food security, with several members calling for greater flexibility for public stockholding programmes used by governments to procure food from farmers and distribute it to vulnerable populations. Developing countries, in particular, have argued that existing WTO rules do not adequately reflect their food security needs or current price realities.
Another major focus area is domestic support for agriculture. Some proposals seek tighter disciplines on trade-distorting subsidies, especially those provided by major agricultural exporters, while others stress the need to preserve policy space for developing and least-developed countries. The debate over how to rebalance subsidy rules remains one of the most contentious elements of the agriculture negotiations.
Market access issues also feature prominently in the new submissions. Members have raised concerns over high tariffs, tariff escalation, and non-tariff measures that restrict agricultural trade. Proposals include calls for improved transparency and more predictable access to markets, alongside safeguards to protect sensitive sectors and smallholder farmers.
Export restrictions have emerged as another critical issue, particularly in light of recent global food price volatility. Several members are advocating for clearer rules or stronger disciplines to limit the use of export bans and restrictions on food commodities, arguing that such measures can exacerbate global supply shortages and price spikes.
The upcoming MC14 negotiations in Yaoundé are seen as a key opportunity to restore momentum in WTO agriculture talks, which have faced repeated stalemates in recent years. However, trade officials caution that bridging the wide gap between members’ positions will require significant political compromise.
As global agriculture faces mounting pressure from climate change, geopolitical tensions, and economic uncertainty, the outcome of these negotiations could have far-reaching implications for global food systems. The new proposals signal both the complexity of the challenges ahead and a shared recognition among WTO members that multilateral solutions remain essential for addressing food security and agricultural trade in a more fragmented world.














