Brussels, 13/03/2006 (Agence Europe) - There was no great progress made at the meeting in London last Friday and Saturday of Trade Ministers from WTO's major trading powers, the G-6 (European Union, United States, Brazil, India, Australia and Japan). “I can imagine the general content of a future agreement, but I haven't seen, and am not seeing, what is going to trigger it” to break the deadlock in the Doha Round negotiations, said Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim after the meeting. The “Six” broke up without any major breakthrough, agreed Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson, welcoming nonetheless progress made in a number of areas. Time is growing short since, to complete the round before the end of the year, all 149 WTO members must come to a partial agreement before 30 April, when conditions (figures and other arrangements) in agriculture and manufactured goods (NAMA) have to be decided on. US Trade representative Rob Portman said that progress had been made because figures had been available. Developed over the last few weeks, costed simulations on 1200 products to study the effect of lowering customs duties in the trade of a dozen key countries were indeed used in the London discussions. Mr Portman suggested that the G-6 meet again in New York in early April.