Title: Bioprospection
1- Bioprospection from economics of contracts to
reflexive governance
Tom Dedeurwaerdere  Centre for Philosophy of
Law www.cpdr.ucl.ac.be
Research funded through Belgian Federal
Government (IAPV) European Union
(FP5-IHP-KA1-2001-1) National Foundation for
Scientific Research, Belgium (FNRS)
2Bioprospection and reflexive governance
Tom Dedeurwaerdere
Theme  Economic tools for biodiversity
conservation Â
3Bioprospection and reflexive governance
Tom Dedeurwaerdere
- Context
- Â
- From the definition of an ethics of sustainable
development to the Rio Convention 1992 - Â
- Ronald Engel, Ethics Working Group, IUCN, 1986
- Â
- 5 criteria of an ethics of sustainable
development - Â
- Integration of conservation and development
- satisfaction of basic human needs
- achievement of equity and social justice
- provision for self-determination and cultural
diversity - maintenance of ecological integrity
- Rio Convention 1992
- Â
- The objectives of the convention
- The conservation of biological diversity
4Bioprospection and reflexive governance
Tom Dedeurwaerdere
The economic basis of the sustainable use idea
environmental services provided by biodiversity
(Source Robert Barbault, 2003)
- Biodiversity and medecine
- Â
- 80 of the population of the planet
regularly has recourse to traditional medicine
based on plants (WHO) - 40 of the used medicaments have as their
active component a natural substance, which is
extracted in 75 of the cases of a plant - 1 / 125 of the studied natural plants give
rise to a major medical substance, only 1 / 10000
in the case of tested synthetic molecules
through random screening - Â
- Problems
- Â
- Potential profits are significantly lower
with natural products than with synthetically
made products, because natural products cant be
patented as a result pharmaceutical companies
continue to rely massively on random screening - If we suppose that 1 species of tree
currently disappears a day, the one can evaluate
the loss of medical plants at 3 or 4 a year,
which is a potential loss of a market of 600
million dollar a year
5Bioprospection and reflexive governance
Tom Dedeurwaerdere
- Other
- timber, tourism, water purification
-
- The issue at stake
- How to define access and use of these
environmental services in order to promote an
ethics of sustainable development ?
6Bioprospection and reflexive governance
Tom Dedeurwaerdere
Bio-prospection as an example of sustainable use
of biodiversity
- The market and contractual approach to
Bio-prospection - Â
- 1.1. Regulation through Access and Benefit
Sharing Agreements - Â
- Definition Access and Benefit-Sharing
Agreements are bilateral contractual
arrangements between ecologically-rich states or
communities and private corporations and are
based on the principles of prior informed
consent and equitable sharing of the benefits - Â
- Example Merck-InBio / ICBG
- Â
- 1.2. Problems incompleteness of the contracts
- Â
- Uncertainty of the benefits
- Definition of property rights controversial
- Controversy on the level of scientific assessment
of biodiversity - Â
- So low confidence, opportunistic behaviour
7Bioprospection and reflexive governance
Tom Dedeurwaerdere
- Propositions for amelioration from
new-institutional and evolutionary economics - 2. 1. Reducing opportunistic behaviour
through an appropriate institutional environment - (Oliver Williamson, Douglas North)
Governance attributes
Incentive Intensity
Administrative Control
Contract Law Regime
Governance Structures
(Direct incentives)
(Indirect incentives)
(Indirect incentives)
Spot Market
0
Hybrid
Hierarchy
0
0
- Example of Merck-InBIO (Costa Rica)
- Â
- (-) low direct financial incentives
- (-) high transaction costs establishing
the InBIO research agency - () helps building dynamics of confidence
and reputation, within a nexus of agreements
bio- prospecting, dept-for nature swaps, reform
of park agency in conformity with UNESCOs man
and biosphere program - () centralisation of information
(InBIO), which facilitates definition of the
contractual relation
8Bioprospection and reflexive governance
Tom Dedeurwaerdere
2. 2. Taking into account a plurality of action
logics
Bioprospecting contracts (market dynamics)
Learning in the institutional environment
- Plurality of social dynamicsÂ
- Â
- Cooperative behavior Genetic Recognition
Fund, Seed exchange between farmers - Public policies agricultural research
institutions, etc.
9Bioprospection and reflexive governance
Tom Dedeurwaerdere
- Evaluation of its contribution to sustainable
development - The missing link
- Â
- Connecting the decision mechanism of the economic
and political actors and the evaluation of the
contribution of the bio-prospection practices to
sustainable development - Â
- Connection evaluation mechanisms to the double
improvement proposed by economics - Â
- On the level of learning
- Â
- Functionalist learning evolution to a common
representation between the different interest
groups
Reflexive learning reconstruction of ones own
representations in a public space where
collective identities can emerge e.g. social
policy program IUCN 1992-1998
10Bioprospection and reflexive governance
Tom Dedeurwaerdere
- On the level of the selection processes
- Â
- Selection process translation of issues of
sustainable development in terms of current
social logics (economic,
scientific, etc.) - Â
- Selection of the selected issues normative
ambitions of indicator studies, stake of
future generations in the valuation of
biodiversity - e.g. threshold studies for irreversible
damage to ecosystems