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Dive into the research topics where Gracia Marín Durán is active.

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Featured researches published by Gracia Marín Durán.


International and Comparative Law Quarterly | 2018

Sheltering government support to "green" electricity: the european union and the world trade organization

Gracia Marín Durán

Since the Canada – Renewable Energy (2013) dispute at the World Trade Organization (WTO), the WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (SCM) has been the focal point of academic debate on the trade-environment interface, with a growing consensus that WTO subsidy rules need to be revisited with a view to securing ‘policy space’ for government support for renewable energy. This article explores whether, as suggested by some scholars, the European Union (EU)’s system of justifications for renewable energy aid could serve as a source of inspiration for the WTO. While this proposition may appear attractive at first sight, it is hardly conceivable, or even desirable, that the EUs approach to sheltering government support for renewable energy could be transposed to the WTO. This is because the two systems of subsidy control are fundamentally different in both substantive and procedural terms and, importantly, these differences reflect distinct objectives and political/institutional contexts. Nonetheless, this comparative analysis sheds light on where the key challenges lie for the WTO in ensuring that international trade rules and climate change mitigation objectives are mutually supportive. It is argued that the case for reviewing the SCM Agreement cannot be made by simply forging parallels with the EUs regulatory model, but needs to be carefully construed on the basis of a proper understanding of whether and how green policy space is actually constrained under the current WTO subsidy and trade remedy rules. However, this requires better information on existing WTO members’ practice in relation to renewable energy subsidies, as well as on their environmental effectiveness and possible trade-distortive impact. In this sense, the most valuable lesson that the WTO can draw from the EUs regulatory experience is the imperative of improving the transparency and knowledge-enhancing elements of its subsidy control system.


Archive | 2012

Environmental integration in the EU's external relations: beyond multilateral dimensions

Gracia Marín Durán; Elisa Morgera


Review of European Community and International Environmental Law | 2004

Enlargement and EU Development Policy: An Environmental Perspective

Elisa Morgera; Gracia Marín Durán


Archive | 2014

Article 37 – Environmental Protection

Elisa Morgera; Gracia Marín Durán


Journal of International Economic Law | 2018

Renewable Energy Subsidies and WTO Law: Time to Rethink the Case for Reform Beyond Canada – Renewable Energy/Fit Program

Ilaria Espa; Gracia Marín Durán


European Journal of International Law | 2017

Untangling the International Responsibility of the European Union and Its Member States in the World Trade Organization Post-Lisbon: A Competence/Remedy Model

Gracia Marín Durán


Journal of International Economic Law | 2016

Measures with Multiple Competing Purposes after EC – Seal Products : Avoiding a Conflict between GATT Article XX-Chapeau and Article 2.1 TBT Agreement

Gracia Marín Durán


In: Peers, S and Hervey, T and Kenner, J and Ward, A, (eds.) Commentary on the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights. (p. 983). Hart Publishing: UK. (2014) | 2014

Commentary to Article 37 – Environmental Protection

Elisa Morgera; Gracia Marín Durán


Archive | 2013

The Role of the EU in Shaping the Trade and Environment Regulatory Nexus: Multilateral and Regional Approaches

Gracia Marín Durán


Archive | 2012

The International Fair Trade Movement: Actors and regulatory approaches

Marise Cremona; Gracia Marín Durán

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