After six days of hectic negotiations, the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Sunday released a revised draft ministerial text for consideration by its 150 members that largely addresses India's concerns of free and fair trade.

The draft calls for the elimination of all forms of export doles by the end of 2013, with a substantial part realised in the first half of the implementation period, and addresses the concerns of poor countries in industrial tariffs.

The revised draft will now be considered for adoption at the closing session of the sixth ministerial meeting Sunday evening to eventually set the modalities to conclude the current round of multilateral trade negotiations.

The current round of talks started in the Qatar capital - hence called the Doha Development Round - in 2001 and has seen a slew of failures since then at the ministerial conferences.

The draft seeks to draw the work programme on how to conclude the Doha Round.

The only area that has been left ambiguous relates to the issue of cotton where the issue of trade distorting domestic subsidies for the commodity is in square brackets - which mean it is still a matter of debate.

The revised text was released after a group of around 30 ministers, including Indian Commerce Minister Kamal Nath, tried to sort out their differences in a marathon meetings since Saturday night that extended till 8:30 a.m. Sunday morning.

The ministerial meeting here since Tuesday sought to address three major disputed areas in global trade - agriculture, industrial tariffs and services.