Israel

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The EFTA States signed a Free Trade Agreement with Israel in Geneva, Switzerland, on 17 September 1992. The Agreement entered into force on 1 January 1993. Modernised and expanded bilateral agricultural agreements were signed in Geneva on 22 November 2018. These new agreements entered into force on 1 August 2021 and replace the existing ones. Information on the new agreements can be found further down this page.

Key facts

Population Date of Signature of the Agreement Date of Entry Into Force Imports to EFTA States Exports from EFTA States

Information about agreement

Summary

The Agreement covers trade in industrial products as well as fish and marine products. In addition, bilateral agricultural agreements between the individual EFTA States (Iceland, Norway and Switzerland) and Israel have been concluded which form part of the instruments creating the free trade area.

Among the objectives of the Agreement (Article 1) is the progressive liberalisation of trade in goods in conformity with Article XXIV of the GATT. As of 1 January 1993, virtually all customs duties on trade in industrial goods and fish and other marine products were eliminated. The Agreement includes provisions relating to the elimination of customs duties and other trade barriers as well as other trade-related disciplines such as rules of competition, protection of intellectual property, public procurement, state monopolies, state aid, and payments and transfers. Under the Agreement a Joint Committee is established which supervises the Agreement.

Content of the Free Trade Agreement

The Agreement consists of 37 Articles, eight Annexes, four Protocols and a Record of Understanding. The Agreement covers the following main subjects:

Trade in Goods

The Agreement provides for effective market access for industrial goods in terms of tariffs and rules of origin, creating EFTA and EU parity for EFTA exports to Israel. As from entry into force all industrial goods originating in the EFTA States or Israel enjoy duty free access (Article 4).

Fish and marine products

The Agreement covers trade in all fish and other marine products (Article 2 and Annex II). The EFTA States and Israel grant duty free access on virtually all imports of fish products.

Trade in agricultural products is covered in three bilateral agricultural agreements negotiated between the respective EFTA State (Iceland, Norway and Switzerland) and Israel. These agreements form part of the instruments establishing the free trade area and are subject to the relevant disciplines for trade in goods in the main agreement. They provide for substantial concessions on both sides, while taking into account the respective sensitivities.

Rules of Origin

The rules of origin for industrial goods (Protocol B) concerning the definition of the concept of originating products and the methods for administrative co-operation, are based on the current pan-European model, maintaining the general structure and the substance of the European standard rules. The specific list rules (Annex II to Protocol B) are also based on the current pan-European model.

Protection of Intellectual Property (IPR)

The provisions on protection of intellectual property rights (Article 15 and Annex V) covers, inter alia, patents, trademarks and copyright and geographical indications. The level of protection in certain areas goes beyond what is stipulated under the WTO Agreement on Trade Related aspects of Intellectual Property, taking into account the principles of most favoured nation treatment and of national treatment.

Government Procurement

The Article on public procurement (Article 14) contains a review clause with a view to further liberalisation of the public procurement markets in the Partner countries.

Competition

Regarding competition (Article 17), the agreement includes provisions on co-operation and exchange of information with the aim of ensuring and facilitating the enforcement of the Parties' respective competition laws.

Institutional Provisions

A Joint Committee comprising the EFTA States and Israel supervises the implementation of the free trade agreement (Articles 26 and 27).

Dispute Settlement

Consultations are the fundamental mechanism of dispute settlement between the FTA partners. The agreement implies that the Parties are to endeavour to solve any differences between them on the interpretation and application of the agreement by direct consultations, and, if need be, through consultations in the Joint Committee. For cases where the consultations do not led to a satisfactory solution, the Parties may revert to arbitration (Article 25bis). Annex VIII (Annex VIII) governs the constitution and functioning of the tribunal.