Public materials and history of negotiations

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The European Union Free Trade Agreement Legislation Amendment Bill

The European Union Free Trade Agreement Legislation Amendment Act 2024 received Royal assent on 25 March 2024. The Act enables New Zealand to implement its obligations under the FTA and is necessary to bring the FTA into force. The Act will commence on the same date that the NZ-EU FTA enters into force.

Timeline of negotiations

  • June 2018: Negotiations formally launched
  • July 2018: First round of negotiations, Brussels
  • October 2018: Second round of negotiations, Wellington
  • February 2019: Third round of negotiations, Brussels
  • May 2019: Fourth round of negotiations, Wellington
  • July 2019: Fifth round of negotiations, Brussels
  • December 2019: Sixth round of negotiations, Wellington
  • March-April 2020: Seventh round of negotiations (conducted virtually)
  • June 2020: Eighth round of negotiations (conducted virtually)
  • November 2020: Ninth round of negotiations (conducted virtually)
  • March 2021: Tenth round of negotiations (conducted virtually)
  • June-July 2021: Eleventh round of negotiations (conducted virtually)
  • March 2022: Twelfth round of negotiations (conducted virtually)

Negotiating rounds

OIAs

We have released under the Official Information Act (OIA) a number of text proposals tabled by New Zealand during the EU-New Zealand free trade agreement (NZ-EU FTA) negotiations.

OIA released New Zealand text proposals in NZ-EU FTA.

These documents are:

  • Good Regulatory Practice and Regulatory Cooperation;
  • Sanitary and Phytosanitary measures;
  • Treaty of Waitangi exception; and
  • Competition and Consumer Protection.

Please note that the Competition and Consumer Protection text contains comments on a previously agreed EU text (which was part of its final agreement with Chile). New Zealand's initial negotiating proposal was the text set out in black and red only.

The NZ-EU FTA Subsidies negotiating text was withheld under section 9(2)(j) of the Official Information Act 1982(external link), to avoid prejudice to other negotiations. We will keep the question of its public release under review.

In other chapter areas, negotiations were based on texts tabled by the EU. Initial negotiating texts can be viewed on the EU Commission's website(external link).

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