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TWN Info Service on Intellectual
Property Issues (Mar08/07)
19 March 2008
Third World Network
TRIPS: MAJORITY OF WTO MEMBERS NOW SUPPORT DISCLOSURE PROPOSAL
Published in SUNS #6436 dated 17 March 2008
Martin Khor, Geneva, 14 March 2008
A majority of WTO members are now supporting the proposal to amend the
WTO's TRIPS agreement so as to include a disclosure requirement for
patent applications relating to genetic resources and traditional knowledge.
The ACP Group is the latest to have formally indicated (in a notice
of 22 January) that their members are joining the list of co-sponsors
of the proposal (WT/GC/W/564/Rev. 2) that was originally made by India,
Brazil, Peru and other countries.
Last year, the Africa Group and the LDC Group also officially informed
the Council that they were co-sponsoring the proposal.
Developing-country diplomatic sources said that there are now almost
80 countries that are officially supporting the disclosure proposal.
The main advocates of the disclosure proposal (including India and Brazil) reiterated their position
at a regular TRIPS Council meeting at the WTO on Thursday (13 March).
They also maintained that the issue should be included in the expected
forthcoming negotiations in the "horizontal process", which
is the next stage of the Doha Round.
In this horizontal process, agriculture and NAMA are to be negotiated
together; and some members are also advocating that services and rules
be discussed within or alongside this process; while the EU is advocating
that geographical indications be also included, and India (supported
by some developing countries) also want the disclosure issue to figure
in this process.
WTO members believe that the best hope for their issue to be seriously
considered for a decision is to be part of the package in the horizontal
process.
India
asked that the discussion on this issue should now move to a text-based
negotiation. The developing countries have already submitted a draft
of such a text.
However, developed countries at the TRIPS Council meeting also maintained
their position, which is to oppose an amendment to the TRIPS Agreement,
which they said would not solve the problems.
The developing-country proposal is for an amendment to the TRIPS Agreement
so that it would be mandatory for countries to have in their national
patent laws a requirement for patent applicants to disclose the countries
of origin of biological materials and traditional knowledge used in
their inventions, as well as evidence of prior informed consent and
benefit sharing arrangements with the countries of origin and relevant
local communities.
The disclosure proposal was discussed under the agenda items of the
review of Article 27.3 (b) of TRIPS, the relation between the TRIPS
agreement and the Convention on Biological Diversity, and the protection
of traditional knowledge and folklore. It is also being negotiated under
the "implementation issues" of the Doha
negotiations.
Among the advocates, India
made the most detailed statement. It said that the Doha Round is a Development
Round and its results would not be complete if it fell short of correcting
the imbalance in the TRIPS agreement caused by its failure to protect
genetic resources and traditional knowledge. For India, an outcome on this issue is
an essential element of any "development package" that emerges
from the Round.
"The growing support base for the proposal, including co-sponsorship
by the African Group, the LDC Group and the ACP Group has taken the
co-sponsoring countries beyond the majority membership mark," said
India. These are
sufficient indications that text-based negotiations on the basis of
the submission made in IP/C/W/474 must begin soon.
In this context, said India,
the proponents of the Disclosure Proposal have already submitted a text
proposal on TRIPS and CBD for inclusion in the horizontal modalities
decision. The work in the TRIPS Council should complement the work on
this issue in the negotiating process.
India
added that Doha Mandate provides that negotiations on outstanding implementation
issues shall be an integral part of the Work Programme. The relationship
between the TRIPS Agreement and CBD is a critical implementation issue
for developing countries. The objectives of the Disclosure Proposal
(IP/C/W/474), of which India
is a key proponent, are shared by all Members.
India
stressed that there is general agreement among members on preventing
bio-piracy, erroneously granted patents and enhancing mutual supportiveness
between the TRIPS Agreement and the CBD.
The Disclosure Proposal seeks to meet these objectives through amendment
of the TRIPS Agreement to include mandatory disclosure requirements,
prior informed consent and access and benefit sharing, thus meeting
the three core concerns of the CBD. This would also make the patent
system transparent and credible, said India. Obviously,
to be effective, it calls for legal consequences for non-compliance.
Added India:
"The failure of the TRIPS Agreement to extend protection to genetic
resources and traditional knowledge, which developing country Members
enjoy in abundance, is one of the factors leading to an imbalance in
the TRIPS Agreement and in the multilateral trading system as a whole.
"Under the TRIPS Agreement, countries have no obligation to examine
whether there is misappropriation of genetic resources and traditional
knowledge in patent applications. Misappropriation of genetic resources
and traditional knowledge and bio-piracy are issues with an international
dimension and therefore need international obligations to be addressed
in a satisfactory way.
"While national access and benefit sharing systems and databases
on genetic resources can help, to some extent, in preventing bio-piracy,
they are far from solving the problem."
India said the two
submissions made by Peru
in previous meetings highlight some of the main problems faced by mega-diverse
countries -- trans-boundary use of genetic resources, bio-piracy and
erroneously granted patents. Without adequate and effective protection
of genetic resources and TK at the international level, the problem
will continue.
India
also expressed appreciation of the proposals made by some developed
countries which come very close to the Disclosure Proposal.
According to trade officials, Japan,
South Korea, the
US, Australia,
New Zealand
and others continued to argue that amending the TRIPS Agreement would
not solve the problems of bio-piracy and erroneous patenting.
Another issue discussed at the meeting was technical assistance.
Sierra Leone and
Uganda identified
priority needs to assist them to meet the obligations they will face
when they apply the TRIPS Agreement. It was agreed that this will be
discussed in greater depth in consultations in the same week as the
next Council meeting, in June.
The two countries face the new deadline for LDCs to implement TRIPS
by 1 July 2013, under a decision in 2005 to extend the TRIPS implementation
deadline for LDCs.
The meeting also heard Vietnam
(which joined the WTO in January 2007) explaining its intellectual property
laws under the "review of legislation", which all members
applying the TRIPS Agreement have to go through. Members will submit
questions, which Vietnam will reply
to in the next meeting.
The meeting also saw continued disagreement on whether the Secretariat
of the Convention on Biological Diversity should be an observer in the
Council, even if invited ad hoc meeting-by-meeting. The chairperson
said there was flexibility from one member previously opposing this,
but continued objection from another.
At the end of the meeting, the Chair of the Council, Ambassador Yonov
Agah of Nigeria, handed the chairmanship over to Ambassador
Gail Marie Mathurin of Jamaica.
The next meetings of the Council will be on 17-18 June and 28-29 October.
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