Bravo to Greenpeace. The TPP over the other side of the world was negotiated in exactly the same way - utter secrecy. I am still left wondering who or what demanded this secrecy: presumably the US. The government here in NZ made absolutely no comment except to sneer at people raising concerns about this secrecy as "anti-trade". Oh, and we got $20M spent on a daft flag referendum. There has still been just about no real public discussion about the text, which was only released a few weeks before ratification, hence no chance for public debate. Most people here have given up demanding answers on what it means. For all we know, in the next few years we will be told to lower animal standards, pay more for medicine, dismantle our creaking health system, limit our tax take, all ^"because TTP">.
Despite being an important agricultural producer, we already get cheap American meat and fruit on our shelves. It's awful, tasteless stuff. I don't touch it, not least because of the abonimable way their animals get treated. I'd be dismayed off if our local produce went the same way.
The EU and the US would have done precisely the same had it not been for Greenpeace. But before anyone blames the EU, I also believe every single government would have done the same had TTIP been negotiated with individual member states. It is usual for trade deals to be negotiated in secret, but trade deals of this scope are unprecedented.