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CONVENTION ON BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
Distr. GENERAL
UNEP/CBD/COP/3/22
22 September 1996
ORIGINAL: ENGLISH
[ADVANCE COPY]
CONFERENCE OF THE PARTIES TO THE CONVENTION ON BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
Third meeting
Buenos Aires, Argentina
4 to 15 November 1996
Item 14.1 of the provisional agenda
Contents
1. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
1.1 Conference of the Parties Decision II/12
1.2 Relevant Provisions of the Convention
1.3 Related Work
1.4 Background on IPR Systems
2. THE IMPACT OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS (IPR) SYSTEMS ON THE ACHIEVEMENT OF THE CONVENTION'S OBJECTIVES
2.1 Impact of IPR Systems on Traditional Knowledge and Practices of Indigenous and Local Communities
2.2 Impact of IPR Systems as Indirect Incentives Affecting Conservation and Sustainable Use
2.3 Impact of IPR Systems on Benefit-Sharing Through Development of Technologies Using Genetic Resources
2.4 Impact of IPR Systems on Transfer of or Access to Technology and Scientific Information
2.5 Relationships Between IPR Systems and the Clearing-House
Mechanism
3. OPTIONS FOR FUTURE WORK UNDER THE CONVENTION
REFERENCES
NOTES
I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
1. As background for Provisional Agenda Item 14.1,
the consideration of the impact of intellectual property rights
(IPR), this paper provides a preliminary review of the impact
of intellectual property rights systems (IPR systems) on the conservation
and sustainable use of biological diversity and on the equitable
sharing of benefits from its uses, as requested by the second
Conference of the Parties (COP). As a preliminary study of an
area that is complex, technical and controversial, this paper
cannot possibly be exhaustive. Instead, it reviews the range of
viewpoints that have been expressed on the issue and provides
examples of recent policy proposals. The Secretariat, by describing
viewpoints or proposals, is not endorsing but simply reporting
on this issue area. Based on this preliminary review, the paper
also describes some options for future work under the Convention
on Biological Diversity.
1.2 Conference of the Parties Decision II/12
2. Decision II/12 of the second COP asks the Secretariat,
inter alia, to:
"[u]ndertake a preliminary study which analyses
the impact of intellectual property rights systems on the conservation
and sustainable use of biological diversity and the equitable
sharing of benefits derived from its use in order to gain a better
understanding of the implications of Article 16(5). The study
may focus on:
(i) exploring the relationship between intellectual
property rights and the preservation and maintenance of traditional
knowledge and practices of indigenous and local communities and
the possible role of intellectual property rights in encouraging
the equitable sharing of benefits arising from the use of such
knowledge and practices; and
(ii) inviting Governments and other relevant stakeholders
to submit case studies that address the role of intellectual property
rights in the technology transfer process, in particular the role
of intellectual property rights in the transfer of biotechnology".
1.2 Relevant Provisions of the Convention
3. Decision II/12 asks the Secretariat to review
the impact of IPR systems on the achievement of the Convention's
objectives, with a focus on the relationship to knowledge and
practices of indigenous and local communities. The COP indicated
that the study should help to gain a "better understanding
of the implications of Article 16(5)".
4. Article 16(5) provides that the Parties, "recognizing
that patents and other intellectual property rights may have an
influence on the implementation of this Convention, shall cooperate
in this regard subject to national legislation and international
law in order to ensure that such rights are supportive of and
do not run counter to its objectives". The use of the term
"may" implies that the negotiators could not agree on
whether IPR have a positive effect, a negative effect, or a negligible
effect on technology transfer or on the achievement of the Convention's
objectives generally. This, in fact, can be seen as a textual
basis for the present study.
5. The placement of paragraph 5 in Article 16 implies
that if IPR have an impact on the Convention's objectives, this
is most likely to occur in the context of technology transfer,
rather than in the context of conservation and sustainable use.
The paragraph's language is, however, quite broad, implying the
potential for influence on any of the Convention's objectives
or provisions. It also implies the possibility that Parties will
need to take steps cooperatively to manage the influence of IPR
to ensure that it is positive rather than negative.
6. Another instance in which IPR may relate to the
Convention's implementation is Article 8(j), which requires each
Party, as far as possible and as appropriate and subject to its
national legislation, to "respect, preserve and maintain
knowledge, innovations and practices of indigenous and local communities
embodying traditional lifestyles relevant for the conservation
and sustainable use of biological diversity and promote their
wider application with the approval and involvement of the holders
of such knowledge, innovations and practices and encourage the
equitable sharing of the benefits arising from the utilization
of such knowledge, innovations and practices". The relationship
of existing or modified IPR to the implementation of Article 8(j)
is integrally related with the subject of this paper.
7. Also relevant is Article 11, which requires Parties
to create economically and socially sound incentives for the conservation
and sustainable use of the components of biological diversity,
as far as possible and as appropriate. Existing or modified IPR,
in the appropriate legal and institutional context, could provide
such incentives.
8. Article 12(c) requires that Parties promote and
cooperate in the use of scientific advances in biological-diversity
research in developing methods for the conservation and sustainable
use of biological resources, taking into account the special needs
of developing countries and in keeping with the provisions of
Articles 16, 18 and 20. These activities could raise concerns
regarding IPR protection of information provided to or accumulated
by researchers.
9. Another example is Article 15, which establishes
principles for the access to and sharing of the benefits of genetic
resources. Identifying and allocating IPR will be an important
part of controlling access to genetic resources and facilitating
the fair and equitable sharing of benefits.
10. Intellectual property rights are likely to be
relevant to the implementation of Article 17, which requires Parties
to facilitate the exchange of relevant technical and scientific
information, including indigenous and traditional knowledge both
as such and in combination with technologies transferred under
Article 16. This Article implicitly acknowledges that indigenous
and traditional knowledge and practices are valuable for implementing
the Convention, as are the biotechnologies and other high technologies
contemplated in Article 16.
11. Article 18, requiring that Parties promote international
scientific and technical cooperation, is relevant in that information
exchanged or developed through such cooperation may be the subject
of IPR. In particular, paragraph 4 states that Parties shall develop
methods of cooperation for the development and use of technologies,
including indigenous and traditional technologies, in pursuance
of the Convention's objectives. Questions regarding the application
of existing IPR or modifications to IPR could also arise in the
work of the clearing-house mechanism on technical and scientific
cooperation provided for under paragraph 3 of this Article.
12. Article 19 requires Parties to take measures
to provide for the effective participation in biotechnological
research of other Parties providing genetic resources that are
used in such research, especially developing-country Parties.
It also requires them to take all practicable measures to promote
priority access for Parties, especially those that are developing
countries, to the results and benefits from biotechnologies based
upon genetic resources provided by those Parties. Intellectual
property rights will play a fundamental role in the implementation
of this requirement.
13. Finally, Article 20 requires each Party to provide
according to its capabilities financial support and incentives
for national implementation. To the extent that IPR create or
can create financial incentives for implementation measures, they
can contribute to implementation of this obligation.
1.3 Related Work
14. Intellectual property rights are linked in important
ways to many provisions of the Convention. In part this stems
from the underlying fact that much of the Convention focuses on
the value of biological diversity as a source of genetic resources.
Genetic resources are valuable as sources of information, genetic
and chemical, that is valuable to humanity in many ways (Downes
1996; Swanson 1996a; Swanson 1996b). For example, this biological
diversity information, when combined with research and development,
can serve as a source of new products. In addition, the Convention
places a heavy emphasis on the transfer, exchange, protection
and use of other kinds of valuable information relating to conservation,
sustainable use and benefit sharing, including information about
technologies ranging from biotechnology to indigenous technologies,
traditional knowledge and innovations of indigenous and local
communities, and scientific and technical information. Intellectual
property rights systems are perhaps the principal legal mechanisms
used in many societies to encourage the creation and dissemination
of valuable new information. Thus, it is almost inevitable that
IPR will play a role in the Convention's implementation. This
paper can cover only a limited part of the many important and
complex interconnections.
1.3.1 Provisional agenda
of the third meeting of the COP
15. A number of other items on the provisional agenda
of the third meeting of the COP relate to the subject of this
paper. Foremost is the consideration of a possible input into
the discussions that are taking place in the Committee on Trade
and Environment of the World Trade Organization (WTO) regarding
the relationship between the Convention on Biological Diversity
and the 1994 Agreement on Trade-Related Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPs Agreement) signed at the close of the Uruguay Round
of negotiations under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT) (Item 14.2 on the provisional agenda).
16. There are also many important links with the
implementation of Article 8(j) regarding the knowledge, innovations
and practices of indigenous and local communities (Item 11.1 of
the provisional agenda). Another closely related agenda item is
the consideration of the compilation of information and experiences
shared on the implementation of Article 11 (Item 15.1). The issue
of IPR and their impact on the Convention's objectives also arises
in the context of other agenda items, such as the consideration
of agricultural biological diversity (Item 9.1) and the future
work programme for terrestrial biological diversity (Item 10.3).
17. Also relevant is Item 12.1 on the provisional
agenda, providing for consideration of the compilation of views
of the Parties on possible options for implementing Article 15
by developing national legislative, administrative or policy measures.
Item 13.1, the consideration of ways to promote and facilitate
the access to and transfer of technology pursuant to Articles
16 and 18 is also relevant. Finally, Item 5, the report on the
assessment and review of the operation of the clearing-house mechanism
(CHM) may involve discussing IPR issues that arise in the collection,
organisation and distribution of data in and through the CHM.
1.3.2 Proposed agenda
of the fourth meeting of the COP
18. It is also worth noting that the medium-term
programme of work approved by COP II proposes that benefit-sharing
be an item on the agenda for the fourth meeting of the COP. Item
7.4 on the work programme, "Consideration of matters related
to benefit-sharing", includes two sub-items: (a) "[t]o
consider measures to promote and advance the distribution of benefits
from biotechnology in accordance with Article 19"; and (b)
to consider benefit-sharing in light of the outcome of discussions
at the third meeting of the COP on "ways to promote and facilitate
access to and transfer and development of technology, as envisaged
by Articles 16 and 18 of the Convention". Intellectual property
rights will clearly be an important part of that discussion, and
the COP may find it useful to make connections between this agenda
item and that future discussion.
1.3.3 Other background
papers and resources
19. Aside from the papers prepared by the Secretariat
for the agenda items mentioned above, other papers of particular
relevance include: Traditional Related Knowledge and the Convention
on Biological Diversity, prepared by the Secretariat for the
Inter-Governmental Panel on Forests established by the UN Commission
on Sustainable Development (UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/2Inf. 3); Farmers'
Rights and Rights of Similar Groups: The rights of indigenous
and local communities embodying traditional lifestyles: experience
and potential for implementation of Article 8(j) of the Convention
on Biological Diversity (UNEP/CBD/IC/2/14), prepared by the
Interim Secretariat for the second meeting of the Inter-Governmental
Committee on the Convention on Biological Diversity; and Intellectual
Property Rights and Transfer of Technologies Which Make Use of
Genetic Resources (UNEP/CBD/COP/2/17), which was prepared
by the Secretariat for the second meeting of the COP at the request
of the first meeting of the COP.
20. To assist the Convention on Biological Diversity Secretariat in the preparation of its study of the relationship between the TRIPs Agreement and the Convention, the WTO Secretariat released two previously restricted background papers that it prepared for meetings of the WTO Committee on Trade and Environment. These WTO documents are being made available to the COP as UNEP/CBD/COP/3/Inf.9 (Environment and TRIPs) and UNEP/CBD/COP/3/Inf.10 (Factors Affecting Transfer of Environmentally-Sound Technology).
1.4 Background on IPR Systems
21. Intellectual property rights consist of special
kinds of property rights. Like other property rights, IPR award
the owner the right to exclusive use that is, the right to exclude
others from access to the resource. Intellectual property rights
are distinctive, however, in that they create property rights
over an intangible resource, consisting of certain types
of information created by human beings. They are also distinctive
in that they are limited in important ways. For example, most
IPR are limited in duration, by definition patents, for example,
typically expire after twenty years. In essence, IPR award an
individual a limited right of exclusivity as a reward (and thus
an incentive) for his or her contribution to society through innovation
and creativity, and as an incentive for the open distribution
of information.
22. Basic categories of IPR found in many systems
include patents, plant breeders' rights (PBRs), trade secrets,
copyrights, and trademarks. IPR systems have evolved over time;
for example, a special category of IPR was developed in recent
years to protect the design of integrated circuits. The most relevant
IPR categories for the purposes of this discussion are patents
and PBRs, although trademarks and trade secrets also have some
relevance.
23. Patents provide the inventor of a useful technology
such as a mechanical or chemical product or process with the exclusive
right to reproduce or use the patented invention for a limited
period, typically twenty years from the date the patent application
is filed. Patents traditionally give the inventor rights only
over a specific, incremental invention. The patent-holder has
no rights over the use of previous related but distinct inventions,
or over the use of biological materials or other materials as
they occur naturally that are used in the invention. The patent-holder
can control subsequent related but distinct inventions only to
the extent that they make use of or develop the patented invention.
It is important to recognise that a patent does not give the holder
absolute rights to control the information needed to apply the
invention. On the contrary, the holder must disclose that information
to the public in order to obtain the patent, and the public is
free to exchange and use that information except for the purpose
of applying the invention. Additionally, many IPR systems provide
for a "research exemption" that allows use of the patent
for certain experimental purposes (WIPO 1990:4).
24. Plant breeders' rights are a system of patent-like
rights specifically designed to provide breeders with the exclusive
right to sell commercially a new variety that is novel, uniform
and distinctive. PBRs frequently provide for certain exceptions
to exclusive rights: the farmer's privilege, and the research
exemption or breeders' privilege. Under the farmer's privilege,
a farmer has the right to keep a part of the crop grown from PBR-protected
seed and use it as seed for the next crop. The breeder's privilege
authorises others to use a protected variety freely in research
on or the development of new varieties.
25. A trade secret consists of information that is
commercially valuable and whose holder makes reasonable efforts
to keep it secret. In a number of jurisdictions, the holder may
recover damages from another who wrongfully appropriates and uses
the secret. There is no limit on the duration of a trade secret,
as long as the other requirements are met. Trademarks are discussed
in paragraph 51.
26. The principal underlying rationale for IPR systems
is that they serve an important function by creating incentives
for investment in the development of innovations. Intellectual
property rights such as patents and copyrights also create incentives
for the open disclosure of valuable information about inventions
and artistic creations.
27. Intellectual property rights are limited in scope
because of the recognised need to balance the scope of such rights
of exclusivity with the principle of free exchange and use of
information in order to achieve a mix of social goals. Such goals
include encouraging useful innovation; strengthening technological
infrastructure and the capacity for technological research and
development; freedom of discourse on social, cultural, scientific
and political matters; and the equitable distribution of economic
benefits.
28. This balance is struck in a number of specific
ways. For example, IPR systems generally allow for the protection
of technological and artistic innovation, but not of scientific
knowledge about natural phenomena; this distinction applies to
both formal and informal knowledge. Another example is that the
duration of IPR tends to be strictly limited (trademarks and trade
secrets are exceptions), as already noted. Inventors, creators
or plant breeders must relinquish their exclusive rights at the
end of a period of time defined by law.
29. The preferred balance among these principles
changes over time for each society, and may differ from one society
to another. For example, national IPR systems differ in whether
they recognise patents on genetically modified animals or plants.
Early international agreements on IPR, such as the 1883 Paris
Convention on Industrial Property, created relatively few international
standards. With the growth of international trade, including trade
in products subject to IPR, has come pressure for harmonising
and strengthening IPR systems, especially from some developed
countries with strong high-technology sectors. A number of countries
have adopted more detailed standards for protecting plant varieties
pursuant to the International Union for the Protection of New
Varieties (UPOV). Most recently, the Uruguay Round of negotiations
under the GATT produced the TRIPs Agreement, which commits all
members of the WTO to adopting and enforcing minimum levels of
protection for IPR.
THE IMPACTS OF IPR SYSTEMS ON THE ACHIEVEMENT
OF THE CONVENTION'S OBJECTIVES
30. This paper reviews examples of interactions between
IPR systems and the Convention's objectives within five general
categories of issues. They are:
(a) impacts on the traditional knowledge and practices
of indigenous and local communities, which the COP identified
as a focus for this study;
(b) impacts of IPR systems as indirect incentives
affecting conservation and sustainable use;
(c) impacts of IPR systems on benefit-sharing through
the development of technologies using genetic resources;
(d) impacts of IPR systems on the transfer of or
access to technology and scientific information; and
(e) relationships between IPR systems and the clearing-house
mechanism (CHM).
Impacts of IPR Systems on the Traditional Knowledge
and Practices of Indigenous and Local Communities
31. The Convention on Biological Diversity recognises
that the knowledge and practices of indigenous and local communities
that embody traditional lifestyles relevant for conservation and
sustainable use are important for achieving its objectives. This
is because such knowledge and practices contain insights into
biological resources and ecosystems, which can and should be a
base for sustainable management and conservation systems for biological
diversity and associated biological resources, along with scientific
research (Berkes, Folke and Gadgil 1995). Communities' knowledge
and practices are also potentially valuable as sources for the
development of products in pharmaceutical, agricultural, industrial,
food and other sectors (Balick 1994; Cox 1994; Farnsworth 1994;
King 1996). It is important to note that such knowledge and practices
are not themselves static, although they are based in traditional
ways of life: thus, the Convention speaks of indigenous and local
communities' "innovations" as well as their "knowledge"
and "practices".
32. Some commentators argue that existing IPR systems
can create direct or indirect incentives for continued investment
by indigenous and local communities in maintaining traditional
knowledge and practices, at least if they are combined with benefit-sharing
arrangements entered into under the Convention. On the other hand,
there are assertions that "existing protection mechanisms
are insufficient for the protection of Indigenous Peoples Intellectual
and Cultural Property Rights" (Mataatua Declaration 1993).
There are claims that existing IPR systems encourage the erosion
of such knowledge and practices, in part on the ground that there
are inherent conflicts between IPR systems and knowledge systems
that are "collective and intergenerational" (COICA 1994;
see also Four Directions Council 1996). There is concern that
IPR systems encourage the appropriation of such knowledge for
commercial use without the fair sharing of benefits, or that they
violate indigenous cultural precepts by encouraging the commodification
of such knowledge (Ibid.).
33. A related concern is that the scope of IPR over
some types of inventions in the formal sector, such as over biotechnology
and plant varieties, has expanded in recent years. There are fears
that this trend exacerbates an imbalance between the protection
of formal knowledge developed by corporate researchers as against
informal knowledge developed in indigenous and local communities.
Examples include a grant of a patent on all forms of genetically
engineered cotton, and a similar patent on genetically engineered
soybeans, as well as patent applications for applications of human
gene fragments (The Crucible Group 1994: 9-10, 20). Such trends
toward more expansive IPR claims have raised controversy among
researchers in these fields as well as concerns among the public
and also citizens' groups in many countries (e.g., Plowman 1993;
see also Bellagio Declaration 1993).
34. It appears, however, that there has been little objective analysis of specific instances involving actual or potential impacts of IPR on the traditional knowledge or practices of indigenous or local communities. Nevertheless, there appears to be preliminary agreement on a few basic factual points. First, IPR systems do not generally confer rights to countries or indigenous and local communities, or any other juridical or natural person, over naturally occurring genetic resources that originate within their territory or jurisdiction. Rather, such systems will confer protection over genetic resources altered by humans only to the extent that they have been altered by a sufficiently inventive and novel step within the terms of IPR systems. Similarly, IPR systems are not likely to confer rights on indigenous and local communities for their knowledge of natural attributes or conditions, just as they do not generally confer proprietary rights to scientists or researchers in industrialised countries or elsewhere for knowledge, whether existing or new, of natural phenomena (see, e.g., Mays, et al. 1996).
35. There are a range of perspectives regarding future
approaches. Many indigenous organisations oppose per se the
commodification of knowledge or biological resources developed
or maintained by their cultures and advocate curtailment of IPR
on inventions derived in part from traditional knowledge or biological
materials found in their territories (see COICA 1994). In contrast,
other groups argue that IPR systems need to be modified to enable
indigenous and local communities or individuals within them to
claim IPR over their knowledge, or over innovations and practices,
that relate to the sustainable use of biological diversity.
36. Some commentators, rather than argue for systematic
reforms, proposed that indigenous and local communities and/or
individuals within those communities can and should apply for
and obtain control under existing IPR over use of their innovations
(Gupta 1992). Support for this approach might include increased
financial and technical support from governments or international
agencies for indigenous and local communities to work within the
existing system. Similarly, there have been proposals to use measures
under existing IPR systems to ensure that inventions derived from
traditional knowledge remain in the public domain where they are
essentially the same as existing products or processes already
known in indigenous or local communities.
37. Some commentators have stressed that consideration
must be given to other mechanisms in addition to IPR systems,
because IPR measures may not prove the most effective mechanism
available for protecting traditional knowledge. For example, there
have been calls for new standards of practice for academic and
commercial citation. These might involve, for instance, disclosure
in academic and other publications of the names of the individual
and community from which a researcher obtained information about
informal knowledge, innovations or practices. They could also
involve ethical standards that require procedures to ensure prior
informed consent before gaining access to or publishing such knowledge;
this could entail measures to ensure respect for concerns found
in many cultures about keeping certain types of knowledge secret.
38. Other proposals involve the creation of new IPR,
sometimes termed sui generis systems, for traditional knowledge
of indigenous or local communities (UNEP/CBD/COP/3/19, Posey and
Dutfield 1996). Such proposals raise numerous issues, such
as the duration of rights and the legal identity of rights-holders.
Perhaps because of the complexity of such issues, no proposal
has advanced beyond a preliminary stage. Similar complexities
arise regarding the curtailment or limitation of IPR over inventions
derived in part from traditional knowledge or genetic resources
held by local or indigenous communities.
Impacts of IPR Systems as Indirect Incentives Affecting Conservation
and Sustainable Use
39. Another set of issues revolve around whether
IPR on innovations derived in part from genetic resources, biochemicals
and related biological resources can create indirect incentives
for the conservation and sustainable use of those resources. Genetic
resources contained in traditional varieties of domesticated crops,
naturally occurring relatives of domesticated crops, and modern
"improved" varieties, serve as resources for crop breeding
and for agricultural and other biotechnology. A significant proportion
of genetic resources, including traditional crop varieties as
well as modern varieties, are not natural raw material, but result
from human efforts in innovation and conservation. For traditional
varieties, this often represents a long-term investment over many
generations of informal innovation and stewardship, an investment
that continues today in many indigenous and local communities.
40. In addition, biological resources associated
with genetic diversity in plant, animal and microbial species
includes a diversity of chemicals found in various species that
serves as sources of pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, food additives
and industrial compounds. Plants and other biological resources
are highly significant as sources of herbal medicines for local
communities and national markets.
41. There is evidence that, as a general matter,
IPR systems create incentives for private investment in innovation,
producing new products that benefit society (e.g., Levin, et al.
1988; Mansfield 1993). While it is difficult to isolate impacts
of IPR from the effects of other policies, they appear to encourage
investment in certain industries such as crop breeding, that make
significant use of genetic resources and related biological resources
such as biochemicals (see Swanson 1996b, citing Perrin et al.
1983, Pray and Knudson 1994, and Huffman and Evenson 1993). Still,
the evidence is not conclusive and there may be some negative
impacts, for example on diffusion on technology, especially on
certain groups or regions (Butler 1996; Jaffe and van Wijk 1995;
Stallman and Schmid 1987).
42. Prior to the entry into force of the Convention
on Biological Diversity, it is unlikely that IPR systems provided
incentives in favour of conservation or sustainable use. Genetic
resources were usually considered a common heritage, and users
from other countries customarily returned no direct economic benefits
to the countries or communities that provided and/or conserved
the resources, although some international crop breeding programs
sought to develop and distribute crop varieties for use in the
developing countries that are the countries of origin for major
food crops. Generally, researchers whose inventions qualified
for IPR protection resided in developed countries, while the communities
that lived near genetic resources and associated biological resources
used in such inventions resided in developing countries and did
not generally participate in the "advanced" research
that led to IPR-protected inventions.
43. Such indigenous and local communities generally
did not receive significant compensation if traditional knowledge
or practices helped identify a naturally occurring compound that
led to the development of a commercially valuable pharmaceutical
or other product. Generally, traditional knowledge has not qualified
for IPR protection under current laws; the inventive step that
led to a commercial product suitable for patenting was considered
to be taken in a research laboratory, usually in a developed country.
44. It has been argued that IPR systems can operate
as an indirect incentive for conservation only if they are coupled
with some other legal mechanism that ensures the transfer of benefits
to the resource providers. With the advent of the Convention on
Biological Diversity, it has been argued that IPR systems can
create indirect economic incentives for conservation. Intellectual
property rights can encourage and reward the adding of value to
genetic resources used as "raw materials". They can
create indirect incentives, it is argued, when coupled with access
and benefit-sharing agreements pursuant to the Convention that
require the technology developers to transfer a share of the benefits
to the providers of the genetic resources or associated traditional
knowledge.
45. Others, however, suggest that IPR combined with
such contractual arrangements are unlikely to accomplish benefit-sharing,
and thus unlikely to create conservation incentives (Swanson 1996b).
They point out that genetic resources and traditional knowledge,
like innovations protectable by patents, have value because of
their informational content. When such information is easily transferred
and used, property rights analogous to patents will be needed
to control effectively their use and ensure benefit-sharing. The
reasoning is analogous to the rationale for granting IPR: a contract
places legal controls on the use of information only as against
those who sign the contract, whereas an intellectual property
right is much more effective, because it controls use by all others
within the jurisdictions where the IPR is legally recognised.
46. In contrast, others claim that IPR protection
creates "perverse incentives" that encourage the development
of technologies that displace biological diversity (such as the
monoculture of proprietary crop varieties) or threaten biological
diversity (such as the inappropriate use of pesticides). For example,
there are concerns that IPR-supported research is leading to the
development of herbicide-resistant crop varieties the use of which
may encourage a greater application of herbicides.
47. Intellectual property rights are also sometimes
cited as a reason for the widespread erosion of thousands of traditional
crop varieties, which typically contain diversity within as well
as among varieties, and their replacement by a much smaller number
of "elite" varieties. During the same period that the
strength of IPR over plant varieties increased, vast numbers of
traditional crop varieties disappeared (WCMC 1992). The requirement
that a variety be uniform motivates breeders to reduce the internal
genetic variation of the crop varieties they develop (Keystone
Center 1991:14). Thus, "[t]o the extent that PBR is intended
as an incentive to develop improved varieties, it contributes
indirectly to the loss of landrace genetic diversity"(Op
cit.: 13).
48. Other policies, however, have major impacts
on the use of new crop varieties and the loss of traditional ones.
Examples are:
(a) government farm credits and subsidies, and extension
services;
(b) the policies and programs of international agencies
and donor institutions;
(c) the marketing and research and development policies
and programmes of transnational corporations; and
(d) the increasingly concentrated corporate control
of pesticide and agri-biotechnology research and distribution.
The extent to which PBR and other IPR, as compared
to these factors, contribute to the displacement of traditional
varieties and other changes in agricultural practices is unclear.
49. In addition, there are counter-arguments that
IPR protection encourages conservation through the development
of conservation technologies or through more efficient agricultural
land use. For example, it is argued that IPR encourage the development
of new crop varieties that reduce the pressure to convert land
to agriculture by increasing yields and enhancing the pest-resistance
of crops on existing farmland. With respect to the example of
herbicide-resistant crop varieties, it is argued that while the
development of such varieties may encourage the greater use of
herbicides, some of these herbicides could replace more injurious
ones used currently. There are also arguments that PBRs, by encouraging
investment in plant breeding, may lead to an increase in the number
of crop varieties (Keystone Center 1991:13, Crucible Group 1994:18).
50. A number of general proposals have been made
for the creation of new categories of property rights that would
enhance incentives for conservation and sustainable use. For example,
a number of commentators have proposed the creation of IPR-like
property rights schemes that would confer property rights over
biological information contained in genetic resources to the countries
and/or communities of origin (see, e.g., Sedjo 1989; Vogel 1994;
Swanson 1996b). Others have proposed an international "seed
tax" on sales of crop varieties; the revenues would go to
countries or communities of origin for genetic resources. The
amount of tax, the identity of the authorities who would collect
it, the nature of the institution that would distribute the revenues,
the definition of the entities that would be eligible for receiving
the proceeds, and the mechanism for allocating the funds, all
remain unspecified. Implementation of farmers' rights through
a multilateral fund, financed by developed countries, that would
distribute grants to developing-country farmers has also been
proposed, and raises similar questions about how it would be operationalised.
All of these proposals have met with criticism.
51. There are several other proposals that are
also somewhat more detailed. They include the following:
(a) Development access of and benefit-sharing
arrangements and/or guidelines for such arrangements through
the implementation of Article 15. Such arrangements can include
the negotiated allocation of IPR between parties. A number of
countries are moving forward with this option (see UNEP/CBD/COP/3/20
on access to and benefit-sharing from the use of genetic resources).
(b) Disclosure in patent applications of the country
and community of origin for genetic resources and informal knowledge
used to develop an invention. A number of commentators have
argued that Parties should encourage or require such disclosure
in their patent procedures (e.g., Gadgil and Devasia 1995), possibly
also including the certification of prior approval of the use
by the source country or community (e.g. Downes 1993). Possible
elements of such a mechanism are outlined in Knowledge, Innovations
and Practices of Indigenous and Local Communities (UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/2/7).
This type of action could implement Article 8(j) by promoting
respect for indigenous and local traditional knowledge. It is
worth noting that such disclosure may implicate other conservation
concerns; for example, by affecting the rates of exploitation
of species vulnerable to overexploitation.
There is evidence suggesting that disclosure of origin
would in large part involve simply regularising a practice that
is already common in filing patent applications. One recent study
reviewed over five hundred patent applications in which the invention
involved the use of biological materials, such as materials derived
from plants or animals; most were in the pharmaceutical field,
with some in other fields such as cosmetics and pesticides (Sukhwani
1996 and pers. comm.). The applications reviewed came from a number
of jurisdictions, including France, Germany, UK, Spain, the USA,
and the European Patent Office. Of the applications involving
plants, the country of origin was invariably mentioned unless
the plant was widely distributed or well known (such as the lemon
or rosemary). A number of applications also mentioned indigenous
or traditional uses as prior art.
One way that indigenous and local communities might
choose to maintain their knowledge innovation and practices relating
to sustainable use could be to market products created using such
knowledge, innovations or practices to consumers who prefer to
support conservation or indigenous autonomy by buying such goods.
To market successfully, producers need be able to present information
about how their products were produced, and they must be able
to prevent false claims. In light of this, some have suggested
that trademarks or marks of geographic origin could reward communities
and enhance economic incentives for sustainable traditions. Already
there have been some efforts to develop such systems (Pinel and
Evans 1994). Trademarks and marks of origin may also serve to
protect the cultural and moral values of communities against commercial
intrusion and exploitation. Another option might involve the application
of concepts found in the Model Provisions for National Laws on
the Protection of Expressions of Folklore Against Illicit Exploitation
and Other Prejudicial Actions, developed by UNESCO and WIPO (WIPO
1985).
Impact of IPR Systems on Benefit-Sharing Through the Development
of Technologies Using Genetic Resources
52. A related set of arguments revolve around the
impacts of IPR systems with a focus on the issue of equitable
benefit-sharing, rather than on conservation and sustainable use.
Some critics argue that IPR systems favour the development of
products that primarily benefit private industry and users in
more lucrative markets in developed countries, and that do not
respond to the needs of smaller, poorer farmers who cannot afford
the expensive inputs needed to cultivate such varieties (Crucible
Group 1994:17). Moreover, IPR systems are sometimes claimed
to hinder the diffusion of useful new crop varieties to smaller,
poorer farmers in developing countries who cannot afford to pay
for such proprietary technology. In addition, there are complaints
that the existing system is not equitable in that it does not
reward indigenous and local communities at a level commensurate
with their contributions to the world's plant genetic resources
inputs in the form of creativity, ingenuity and work over many
generations.
53. In contrast, defenders of existing IPR
systems point out that IPR systems were not designed to distribute
rewards equitably for a wide range of endeavours and activities,
or for activities in the distant past. Rather, they are intended
to create incentives in the present for a specific activity, a
socially productive investment in innovation. They are not designed
to create proprietary rights or provide economic rewards for current
populations in exchange for inventions or conservation efforts
by their ancestors in generations past. On the contrary, in order
to limit concentrations of economic power, IPR systems are specifically
designed not to confer proprietary rights for more than
a limited duration.
54. There appears to be increasing agreement that,
over many generations, indigenous and traditional farming communities
have contributed significantly to the world's genetic resources
and knowledge of biological resources. There is also considerable
support for the principle that present-day communities should
receive a greater share of the benefits from the use of genetic
resources and traditional knowledge created from present inhabitants
or previous generations. Significant disagreement remains, however,
as to how these benefits should be dispensed, how large they should
be, and how they should be distributed. In particular, there is
little agreement about whether and how IPR systems should be modified
to encourage a different distribution of benefits. Proposals
for action are discussed under sub-parts 2.1 and 2.2 above.
2.4 Impacts of IPR Systems on Transfer of or Access
to Technology
55. Another set of arguments is concerned with whether
IPR create incentives for the diffusion or transfer as distinct
from innovation of technology, including biotechnology that uses
genetic resources, particularly to developing countries. These
issues also arise with respect to the transfer of and access to
technology relevant for the conservation and sustainable use of
the components of biological diversity. Such technology could
include, for example, geographic information systems useful for
inventorying and mapping biological diversity concentrations and
associated biological resources, or more selective gear for harvesting
marine living resources that reduce the level of bycatch or damage
to ecosystems.
56. While there is widespread agreement that
IPR in some form are necessary to stimulate innovation, there
is less agreement regarding the impact of IPR on the diffusion
of technology. In the area of plant genetic resources, for example,
the seed industry in developed countries has successfully sought
to expand IPR protection, such as PBRs and more recently utility
patents, over "elite" crop varieties. There are concerns
that the result is a worsening disparity between rewards flowing
to seed companies in industrialised countries and rewards flowing
to countries and farming communities providing genetic resources.
For the latter, it is argued, proprietary varieties may be prohibitively
expensive; in addition, there is no formal mechanism analogous
to IPR to ensure that they share in the benefits from the use
of their resources in the development of elite varieties. Moreover,
there are concerns that the expanding scope and use of IPR ) in
particular utility patents on plant varieties may discourage researchers
from exchanging resources freely (Plowman 1993). More generally,
there are concerns that strengthened IPR in at least some developing
countries may open doors to imports of IPR-protected goods without
stimulating foreign direct investment in productive facilities
(e.g., Correa 1993).
57. On the other hand, some commentators argue that
IPR encourage technology transfer and foreign direct investment
in sectors like pharmaceuticals or chemicals, where research and
development costs are high and products are easily copied, by
reassuring owners of proprietary technology that their rights
will be protected (Mansfield 1994, UNEP/CBD/COP/3/Inf.10). However,
it has been argued that IPR in other sectors in fact play a relatively
small role in determining whether technology is accessible (UNEP/CBD/COP/3/Inf.10).
Often, access to information about technologies, financial resources
and technological capacity are more important determinants of
whether a country or firm within a country can acquire a given
technology (UNEP/CBD/COP/3/Inf.10). In industries where IPR are
considered important, it is argued that potential suppliers of
technologies are more willing to transfer technology voluntarily
if the host country has an effective IPR regime in place (Ibid.).
58. As a whole, the empirical evidence on these issues
appears to be inconclusive (Blakeney 1989; Siebeck, ed. 1990).
Recently, the conflict around IPR and technology transfer
appears to have abated somewhat, perhaps because the TRIPs Agreement
has articulated somewhat more detailed IPR standards for its 120-plus
members than previously existed at the international level. Discussion
appears to focus increasingly on the impacts of IPR on the transfer
of or access to specific types of technologies. This is consistent
with the second meeting of the SBSTTA's recommendation to the
COP that "[t]he work of the SBSTTA on access to and transfer
of technology should now adopt an integrated approach. It should
be conducted within sectoral themes related to the priority issues
under the programme of work of the SBSTTA, for example technologies
relevant to the conservation and sustainable use of, or making
use of, marine biological diversity or agricultural biological
diversity" (UNEP/CBD/COP/3/3, Recommendation II/3).
2.5 Relationships Between IPR Systems and the
Clearing-House Mechanism
59. Intellectual property rights systems are likely
to have significant implications for the clearing-house mechanism
for scientific and technical cooperation (CHM) established under
the Convention pursuant to Article 18(3). The IPR framework for
collections of data, especially in digital electronic formats,
is evolving rapidly, although perhaps not as rapidly as are the
technologies for computerised data organisation and electronic
data communications. It is becoming increasingly easy to collect,
process, organise, transmit and distribute data in electronic
form. These trends are likely to affect IPR regimes, including
relevant international law such as the TRIPs Agreement and the
intellectual property agreements administered by the World Intellectual
Property Organization, including the Berne Convention for the
Protection of Literary and Artistic Work. (UNEP 1995:662-65).
60. Several competing principles will bear on these
developments. They include the "public interest in encouraging
the broadest possible access to information on biological diversity",
which encourages the treatment of databases as "public goods"
(Ibid.) This approach reflects a long-standing tradition in the
scientific community, and is also reflected in provisions of environmental
agreements, including the Convention on Biological Diversity,
calling for international exchange of scientific and technical
information (see, e.g., Article 17 of the Convention on Biological
Diversity). In contrast, the private sector often seeks to restrict
the sharing of information to protect economic interests, while
government agencies sometimes do the same on grounds of national-security
interests. Those seeking to restrict information flows may resort
in some cases to the use of IPR, at least for the purpose of conditioning
access on payment. There may also be conservation reasons for
withholding information; for example when public disclosure of
the location of a population of an endangered species would put
the species' survival further at risk.
61. Much if not most of the information that will
likely be offered (through links or database storage) for the
CHM will have been collected by scientists in the public sector.
This raises the issue of how IPR are to be allocated if information
is obtained from the CHM and then used for economic gain, perhaps
as an input into an IPR-protected product or process. Should users
be obliged to sign an agreement to share any profits with information
providers? Or perhaps to sign an agreement not to assert proprietary
rights over information from the CHM or over products developed
using that information? Or is a signed agreement the wrong approach
altogether?
62. Another issue involves the need to protect the
interests of indigenous and local communities if their knowledge,
innovations and practices are to be made available through the
CHM. At its second meeting, the SBSTTA recommended that the COP
should "[r]ecognize that ownership and control of all information
remain [sic] with the providers, respecting the rights of countries
of origin and of indigenous and local communities" (UNEP/CBD/COP/3/3,
Recommendation II/6). The relationship of this language to the
relevant provisions of the Convention, such as Articles 8(j) and
16(5), leaves a number of questions unanswered.
3. OPTIONS FOR FUTURE WORK UNDER THE CONVENTION
63. The complex debate on IPR systems and their relationship
with the Convention's objectives has often been hampered by a
lack of specific factual grounding. For example, there has been
little empirical study of the impact of specific types of IPR
on specific bodies of traditional knowledge. The following options
identify areas where the COP might wish to proceed by initiating
processes for studying the status and impacts of existing IPR
systems or by studying the possibility of changing or adding to
the existing IPR framework. Such specific initiatives could help
move the debate beyond general discussions of IPR.
64. The COP may wish to consider:
(a) Encouraging Case Studies of IPR Impacts. The
COP might wish to call on governments, intergovernmental organisations
and other organisations in the field of conservation and sustainable
use to conduct and bring to the Secretariat's attention studies
of IPR impacts on the Convention's objectives, for wider distribution
through the clearing-house mechanism (CHM). Such studies would
focus on specific cases in which genetic resources, associated
traditional knowledge and/or biological resources have been used
outside of the country of origin. The studies might analyse the
relationship between IPR impacts and the principles articulated
in Articles 8(j), 15 and 16.
(b) Encouraging Continued Study on Patent Application
Disclosure Policy. The COP might wish to encourage continued
and expanded study by Parties and interested organisations of
the extent to which the Convention's objectives might be furthered
through a practice requiring patent applicants to disclose information
regarding the origin of biological materials and the traditional
knowledge or practices of indigenous and local communities used
in the development of the invention, possibly also disclosing
measures taken to gain approval for such use and to share benefits.
The study could consider the implications of formalising such
a procedure, including the practicalities of defining terms, and
the feasibility of incorporating such requirements into patent
examinations.
(c) Exploring Options for Accommodating Traditional
Knowledge Within Existing IPR Regimes. The COP might wish
to call for study of the potential for existing IPR regimes to
accommodate and protect traditional knowledge so as to promote
the implementation of Article 8(j) and the achievement of the
Convention's objectives.
(d) Reviewing the Relationship Between Appellations
of Origin or Trademarks and Traditional Knowledge and Practices.
The COP might wish to consider calling on governments and
relevant organisations to conduct a study of the potential for
existing systems of appellations of origin or trademarks to ensure
indigenous and local communities' prior approval of wider use
of their traditional knowledge and practices and to encourage
sharing of benefits from such use. The study could also review
options for modifying or augmenting such systems in order to enhance
the opportunities for prior approval and benefit sharing.
(e) Managing Information Relating to the Clearing
House Mechanism (CHM). The COP might request that the Secretariat
carry out a study, as part of the pilot phase of the CHM, exploring
practical options for implementing SBSTTA II Recommendation II/6,
para. 4, that the COP should "[r]ecognize that ownership
and control of all information [made available through the CHM
should] remain with the providers, respecting the rights of countries
of origin and of indigenous and local communities". In particular,
the Secretariat might explore options for how the CHM might model
approaches for acknowledging or sharing the benefits of indigenous
and local communities' knowledge, innovations and practices, and
for assuring prior approval for the dissemination or use of such
knowledge, innovations or practices.
(f) Encouraging Parties to Convene Stakeholder
Consultations. The COP might wish to consider calling on governments
and IGOs to carry out consultations with stakeholders, which could
focus on the impacts of specific types of IPR on specific bodies
of traditional knowledge, or on the sharing of specific experiences
of IPR impacts on particular communities. Stakeholders could include
indigenous and local communities, industry, and public-sector
researchers.
(g) Request the Involvement of Relevant IGOs.
For each of these options, the COP might wish to encourage
or request involvement of relevant IGOs, in particular the World
Intellectual Property Organization and the World Trade Organizationl,
as well as relevant NGOs, including academic institutions and
professional associations, as appropriate.
(h) Distribute Results Through the Secretariat
and the CHM. For each of the options above, Parties and other
actors could report outcomes and results to the Secretariat, for
wider distribution through the CHM.
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