sustainable use of its components, and ... Look at how national legislation conforms to international obligations, ie. OAU Model Law ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation
Title: Intellectual Property Rights and Biodiversity
1 Intellectual Property Rights and Biodiversity
Fernando Latorre
FIELD
2 Overlapping International Agreements 2 of 14 3 CBD
Objectives (Art. 1)
conservation of biological diversity,
sustainable use of its components, and
fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising from the utilization of genetic resources.
Principle (Art. 3)
Sovereign right of States to exploit their natural resources.
3 of 14 4 CBD (2)
Art. 15 access to be determined by national goverments, subject to prior informed consent (PIC) and on mutually agreed terms (MAT) including benefit sharing provisions (BS).
Art. 8(j) calls on Parties to, subject to their national legislation, maintain knowledge, innovations and practices of indigenous and local communities, promote their application with their approval and involvement, and encourage benefit sharing.
4 of 14 5 CBD (3)
Interface with TRIPS
Article 16.5 IPRs subject to national legislation should not run counter to the objectives of the CBD.
TRIPS provisions comprise to a certain extent components of biological diversity (Art. 27.3(b)
TRIPS sets general framework for protection of IPRs while CBD covers IPRs for conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.
IPRs derived from use of genetic resources (Art. 15 CBD) MAT, PIC and BS.
5 of 14 6 FAO - ITPGRFA
Origin
IT results from revision of 1983 IU to be brought into harmony with CBD.
Under IT, PGRFA are no longer the common heritage of mankind but subject to the sovereign right of States over their natural resources (Art. 10.1).
Objective (Art. 1.1)
conservation sustainable use of PGRFA.
fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising out of their use for sustainable agriculture and food security.
Rationale food security and interdependence of countries on PGRFA.
6 of 14 7 ITPGRFA (2)
Multilateral System to facilitate access to PGRFA and to share the benefits from its utilization (Art. 10.2).
MS covers 35 crops and 29 forages - Annex I.
Access only for research, breeding and training. Not chemical, pharmaceutical nor non-food/feed industrial use (Art. 12.3(a)).
Subject to Material Transfer Agreement.
No IPRs that limit the facilitated access to the PGRFA/genetic parts/components, in the form received from the MS (Art.12.3(d))
7 of 14 8 ITPGRFA (3)
Benefit Sharing Mechanisms
exchange of information, access to and transfer of technology, capacity-building and sharing of benefits from commercialisation.
Share of benefits
from commercialisation products incorporating material accessed from MS paid into mechanism to be established by the Governing Body (Art. 13.2(d)(ii)).
8 of 14 9 ITPGRFA (4)
Article 9 - Farmers Rights
It acknowledges the rights of farmers to save, use, exchange and sell farm-saved seed/propagating material.
(More restrictive under UPOV - no right to sell)
But leaves its implementation to national governments.
9 of 14 10 UPOV 1991
plant variety protection (PVP or Plant Breeders Rights) to encourage development of new varieties .
UPOV 1991 Act is being promoted by TRIPs as the efficient sui generis system under Art. 27.3(b) of TRIPS.
10 of 14 11 UPOV 1991 (2)
PBRs confer exclusive rights to produce and reproduce material, offering it for sale, its sale, export, import and storage (Art. 14.1).
Eligibility - plant variety must be new, distinct, uniform and stable. No further or different conditions are allowed (Art. 5.2).
11 of 14 12 UPOV 1991 (3)
Exemptions - PBRs may be restricted
to permit farmers to use for propagating, on their own holdings, the product of the harvest obtained by planting, on their own holdings, the protected variety (Art. 15.2). - ie. the Farmers right or privilege.NBnot sale/offer for sale.
to acts done privately for non-commercial purposes or acts for experimental purposes or acts for breeding other varieties - ie. Breeders exemption (Art. 15.1) .
12 of 14 13 Linkages TRIPS CBD ITPGRFA UPOV
WIPO? 13 of 14 14 What next?
Possible next steps
Prepare options for national implementation.
Look at how national legislation conforms to international obligations, ie. OAU Model Law
Continue to study interlinkages with other organisations, mainly WIPO.
Provide support for participation in specific meetings/organisations/forums.