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Global IP Policy in 2010:
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    We welcome your participation in article and blog comment threads, and other discussion forums, where we encourage you to analyse and react to the content available on the Intellectual Property Watch website.

    By participating in discussions or reader forums, or by submitting opinion pieces or comments to articles, blogs, reviews or multimedia features, you are consenting to these rules.

    1. You agree that you are fully responsible for the content that you post. You will not knowingly post content that violates the copyright, trademark, patent or other intellectual property right of any third party or which you know is under a confidentiality obligation preventing its publication and that you will request removal of the same should you discover that you have violated this provision. Likewise, you may not post content that is libelous, defamatory, obscene, abusive, that violates a third party's right to privacy, that otherwise violates any applicable local, state, national or international law, that amounts to spamming or that is otherwise inappropriate. You may not post content that degrades others on the basis of gender, race, class, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual preference, disability or other classification. Epithets and other language intended to intimidate or to incite violence are also prohibited. Furthermore, you may not impersonate others.

    2. You understand and agree that Intellectual Property Watch is not responsible for any content posted by you or third parties. You further understand that IP Watch does not monitor the content posted. Nevertheless, IP Watch may monitor the any user-generated content as it chooses and reserves the right to remove, edit or otherwise alter content that it deems inappropriate for any reason whatever without consent nor notice. We further reserve the right, in our sole discretion, to remove a user's privilege to post content on our site. IP Watch is not in any manner endorsing the content of the discussion forums and cannot and will not vouch for its reliability or otherwise accept liability for it.

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    9. These terms and your posts and contributions shall be governed and interpreted in accordance with the laws of Switzerland (without giving effect to conflict of laws principles thereof) and any dispute exclusively settled by the Courts of the Canton of Geneva.

    Interview With Bill Pollock, Founder Of No Starch Press

    Bill Pollock is the president and founder of No Starch Press, which publishes books on computing. Known to offer the “finest in geek entertainment,” the publishing house has released such titles as “Steal This Computer Book,” “How Linux Works,” “Hacking: The Art of Exploitation,” “The Cult of Mac,” and “The Unofficial LEGO Builder’s Guide.” Its books are largely about hacking, open source, security, programming, and non-Windows-based operating systems, such as Linux. Mr. Pollock shared his thoughts with Intellectual Property Watch about hacking, piracy, and future of the book publishing business.


    Copyright Law Reform in Brazil: Anteprojeto or Anti-project?

    A balancing of the rights of authors and consumers, the re-introduction of a private copying exception, a remixing permission and a new regulatory agency for copyright issues are among the core points the Brazilian Ministry of Culture has planned for the new copyright law. But at the Third Conference on Copyright and the Public Interest in São Paulo a month ago, the Ministry emphasised that the bits and pieces shown to the audience were not from an actual law draft (”anteprojeto”) but only a preliminary proposal for formulating such a draft. The bill still has not been published to date. The delay in releasing the bill for public consultation now threatens the work of more than two years on the reform.


    Intellectual Property Watch
    8 October 2009

    IP Rights In Agriculture: High Stakes, Entrenched Positions At WTO Public Forum

    By Catherine Saez @ 1:25 pm

    The economic, climate and food crises were on the lips of speakers at the 2009 World Trade Organization Public Forum last week. Suggestions for better global governance were sought from stakeholders who took the podium in different sessions, and trade in agriculture was a focal point of the event.

    Although WTO Director General Pascal Lamy warned against “the impulse to go local in answer to the financial crisis” and advised, on the contrary “to go global,” some speakers encouraged local solutions to achieve food security and a sustainable agriculture.

    Estrella Penunia of the Asian Farmers Association, a non-governmental organisation representing 10 million small farmers in eight Asian countries, said that one key to the food, climate change and financial crises was to promote organic and ecologically friendly agro-based industries, owned and managed by organisations of small-scale farmers.

    She recommended that WTO negotiators from developing countries ensure that trade agreements that their countries are entering preserved their capacity to exempt sectors relating to food security and rural development objectives from trade liberalisation. “Trade agreements should not deprive countries of the right to adopt and implement trade policy safeguarding the livelihood of small producers,” she said.

    The agriculture trade situation in the world can be broadly described with two paradigms, said Ujal Singh Bathia, Indian ambassador to the WTO. On the one hand, in developed countries, agricultural trade is marked by the concentration of economic power and trade distortions due to huge subsidies, market access barriers and increasing control of agricultural production by a few companies through proprietary technologies and production methods. And on the other hand, some developing countries have neglected their agriculture sectors and have used cheap imports to manage their shortages. This is a “perverse complementarity which is striking,” he said.

    Biotech Industry Partnership Effort

    Private-public partnerships (PPPs) might be the way forward to promote innovation, as described by John Kilama, president of the Global Bioscience Development Institute, a US consultancy agency encouraging developing countries to adopt strategies favourable to bioscience, bioprospecting and biotechnology industry.

    The goal of PPPs is to promote innovation, he said. There are many excellent national laboratories in developing countries and there is an opportunity for companies to take findings from those laboratories to be able to market them, he said. So there are a lot of opportunities in using those public and private entities to provide products that can be very useful to meet the demand for agricultural products.

    There is a critical need for a legal framework to enable PPPs to address the food demand, Kilama said. Challenges to PPPs, he added, are mainly the small local private sector, the lack of regulatory capacity and the liability for private sector that donates technologies. Kilama encouraged corporate solutions to these challenges, including creating IP rules, increasing venture capital, and increasing large farming in poor countries.

    For Juan Gonzalez Valero, head of corporate responsibility for Syngenta, food production should double by 2050 and has to be increased to accommodate 2.5 billion people, create jobs for those people and integrate them in the trade system.

    It is not so much the notion of public-private partnerships that is important, he said, but partnerships in general. The private sector is heavily investing in research and development to find solutions but new technologies have to be brought to the farmers and “we cannot reach each” farmer, he said, and this is where partnerships are important.

    Syngenta has developed hundreds of partnerships, Gonzalez Valero said, in knowledge sharing and technology transfer, for example. The company also is subcontracting research at universities. “What is public and what is private is starting to disappear in that context,” he said.

    In order to get farmers to adopt new technologies, innovative approaches and new business models are needed, he said. He gave the example of the market introduction of Syngenta’s tropical sugar beet. The new variety of sugar beet can be used in tropical climes and grows in half the time. In one public-private partnership, to prompt farmers to adopt this new variety, the mill that transforms the sugar beet into sugar or ethanol was financed by Syngenta and some stakeholders. A refinancing system was then used so that, in time, the ownership of the mill can be handed over to the farmer, said Gonzalez Valero.

    Partnerships take time, he said, and IP rights systems have to protect the investment in order to have responsible and safe management of these new technologies. An international regulatory framework more supportive of partnerships than the existing one is needed, he said. Gonzalez Valero warned against overly politicised regulatory requirements that are leading, in the case of genetically modified organisms, to the technology not being shared because nobody is ready to take the risks and liabilities.

    UN Rapporteur: IP Rights Threatening Biodiversity, Food Security

    The commercial seed system may jeopardise the farmer seed system, according to Olivier de Schutter, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the right to food.

    There are two ways for farmers to access seeds, he said. The first is the informal or farmer seed system in which local varieties and exchanged, traded between farmers who select the seed from the harvests. He described this system as prevalent in many developing countries. The second is the commercial seed system in which better or improved varieties, uniform and stable are certified by governments. Those seeds are either provided to the farmers by subsidised schemes or sold to those farmers. This system is increasingly being used in developing countries, he said.

    Although both systems coexist in many countries, several factors tend to gradually replace the informal farmers’ seeds systems with commercial ones. One of them is the impact of seed certification schemes which are government-provided lists of seeds, considered to be reliable. Those lists often do not include traditional local varieties because those do not present the uniformity and stability to allow them to be catalogued.

    Another factor is that in an effort to support farmers, governments provide farmers with packages including seeds, fertilisers, pesticides and sometime access to credit. The farmers are thus provided with improved commercial varieties of seeds and put aside local traditional varieties.

    This presents two risks, according to de Schutter. One is despite higher yields under the right conditions of irrigation and inputs, superior nutritious value, disease resistance, offered by improved varieties, there are some drawbacks. In many cases it leads to less stable income for farmers across the years as uniform seeds present less resilience to natural phenomenon.

    The second risk is that inputs are also protected by IP rights, which creates a system in which farmers are dependent on the acquisition of seeds, he said. There is an increased concentration in the seed market with the three top companies owning some 47 percent of the market. “Very concentrated sectors make it possible for the companies to reap very high benefits” and “that might call for a more energetic use of antitrust legislation,” he added.

    The reliance on improved varieties also could lead to a loss of agro-biodiversity as the pressure toward more uniform crops increase. Most research efforts are invested in five species, de Schutter said: maize, soybean [corrected], wheat, rice and potato. Even within those five species, the genetic diversity is decreasing, for example in Sri Lanka, where in 1969 some 2,000 rice varieties were being cultivated compared to today’s fewer than a hundred.

    It is important to ensure that countries are better equipped to make appropriate choices in establishing IP rights regimes, de Shutter advised.

    Trade Deals Seen Promoting Rising IP Rights on Plants

    The enforcement of IP rights in agriculture is getting stronger, according to François Meienberg, campaign director for agriculture, biodiversity and intellectual property at the Berne Declaration, and while the number of applications on seed patents is dropping at the European Patent Office, there is a trend towards patents on conventional plant breeding.

    Prof. Carlos Correa of the University of Buenos Aires said Article 27.3(b) of the 1994 WTO Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement provides the possibility for exception from patentability for plants and animals but also requires countries to provide protection for plant varieties either by an effective sui generis system or patent, or a combination of both.

    The International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV) is the main model for protection of plant varieties, Correa said, adding that a large number of developing countries had joined the UPOV convention. Very few countries, such as Thailand, Malaysia and India, have developed sui generis systems that are not based on the UPOV regime.

    According to Correa, one of the reasons many developing countries joined the UPOV convention is because free trade agreements, mainly with the European Union or the United States, include obligations to provide protections for plants and animals. Correa said the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture is providing a philosophy of sharing resources through a multilateral system and putting IP rights in the right perspective.

    Catherine Saez may be reached at csaez@ip-watch.ch.

     

    Comments

    1. Nuria Urquia says:

      Dear Ms. Saez,

      please note that maize and corn is the same species. Also th elast sentence in this article seem to have an spelling mistake. It seems to me it should read “is providing” instead of “as providing”.

      Kind regards

      Nuria Urquia

    2. Catherine Saez says:

      Many thanks for your comment and careful reading. Corn and maize are indeed the same species and the list should have stated: rice, maize, potatoes, wheat and soybean. I am sorry about this oversight. The last sentence has been corrected as well.


    Leave a Reply

    We welcome your participation in article and blog comment threads, and other discussion forums, where we encourage you to analyse and react to the content available on the Intellectual Property Watch website. By participating in discussions or reader forums, or by submitting opinion pieces or comments to articles, blogs, reviews or multimedia features, you are consenting to these rules.

    We welcome your participation in article and blog comment threads, and other discussion forums, where we encourage you to analyse and react to the content available on the Intellectual Property Watch website.

    By participating in discussions or reader forums, or by submitting opinion pieces or comments to articles, blogs, reviews or multimedia features, you are consenting to these rules.

    1. You agree that you are fully responsible for the content that you post. You will not knowingly post content that violates the copyright, trademark, patent or other intellectual property right of any third party or which you know is under a confidentiality obligation preventing its publication and that you will request removal of the same should you discover that you have violated this provision. Likewise, you may not post content that is libelous, defamatory, obscene, abusive, that violates a third party's right to privacy, that otherwise violates any applicable local, state, national or international law, that amounts to spamming or that is otherwise inappropriate. You may not post content that degrades others on the basis of gender, race, class, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual preference, disability or other classification. Epithets and other language intended to intimidate or to incite violence are also prohibited. Furthermore, you may not impersonate others.

    2. You understand and agree that Intellectual Property Watch is not responsible for any content posted by you or third parties. You further understand that IP Watch does not monitor the content posted. Nevertheless, IP Watch may monitor the any user-generated content as it chooses and reserves the right to remove, edit or otherwise alter content that it deems inappropriate for any reason whatever without consent nor notice. We further reserve the right, in our sole discretion, to remove a user's privilege to post content on our site. IP Watch is not in any manner endorsing the content of the discussion forums and cannot and will not vouch for its reliability or otherwise accept liability for it.

    3. By submitting any contribution to IP Watch, you warrant that your contribution is your own original work and that you have the right to make it available to IP Watch for all purposes and you agree to indemnify IP Watch, its directors, employees and agents against all damages, legal fees and others expenses that may be incurred by IP Watch as a result of your breach of warranty or of these terms.

    4. You further agree not to publish any personal information about yourself or anyone else (for example telephone number or home address). If you add a comment to a blog, be aware that your email address will be apparent.

    5. IP Watch will not be liable for any loss including but not limited to the following (whether such losses are foreseen, known or otherwise): loss of data, loss of revenue or anticipated profit, loss of business, loss of opportunity, loss of goodwill or injury to reputation, losses suffered by third parties, any indirect, consequential or exemplary damages.

    6. You understand and agree that the discussion forums are to be used only for non-commercial purposes. You may not solicit funds, promote commercial entities or otherwise engage in commercial activity in our discussion forums.

    7. You acknowledge and agree that you use and/or rely on any information obtained through the discussion forums at your own risk.

    8. For any content that you post, you hereby grant to IP Watch the royalty-free, irrevocable, perpetual, exclusive and fully sub-licensable license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, perform and display such content in whole or in part, world-wide and to incorporate it in other works, in any form, media or technology now known or later developed.

    9. These terms and your posts and contributions shall be governed and interpreted in accordance with the laws of Switzerland (without giving effect to conflict of laws principles thereof) and any dispute exclusively settled by the Courts of the Canton of Geneva.