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Pacific trade ministers to meet again Sunday after latest impasse

Protestors call for the rejection of the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal under negotiation in Atlanta, Georgia on October 1, 2015

Trade ministers of 12 Pacific Rim countries failed again to conclude a deal on a huge free-trade area and will meet one more time Sunday in hopes of reaching agreement.

The ministers began meeting late Saturday with hopes of a breakthrough, but the talks in Atlanta broke up after only about 15 minutes, with little progress.

"The main issues are still biologics and the dairy trade, between the US and Canada and New Zealand. The automotive issues are mostly settled," said an Asian official after the meeting.

Officials said that Sunday will be the last chance for a deal during this round, with Japan's economy minister Akira Amari due back in Tokyo for a cabinet reshuffle and others headed to Istanbul for a G20 meeting Monday.

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The ministers have been meeting since Wednesday and have been stuck for most of the time on the same two problems: US demands for longer patent protections than generally accepted for biologics, medicines derived from living materials.

The other major sticking point is a push by New Zealand and the United States to open up the Canadian and Japanese markets to more imports of dairy products.