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Don't TRIP over at WTO
The developed countries should not be allowed to expand IPR in a 21st century agenda for the WTO.
 The World Trade Organisation’s (WTO) Agreement  on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) insists  on pate-nts in every field of technology which includes seed  technolog-ies in agriculture and agrichemicals. This has a bearing on  the crisis of farmers’ own seeds. 
Agriculture will be  very much on the table in the Tenth Ministerial Conference (MC10) in  December in Nairobi, Kenya, with both Northern subsidies and food  security issues resurfacing. But the IP concerns in agriculture will not  get as much attention, unless they are reiterated by countries like  India.
At the Doha MC in 2001, the need to address pending TRIPS’  implementation concerns raised by developing countries was recognised.  The protection of tr-aditional knowledge (TK) from ‘biopiracy’ has been  high on the agenda of developing countries. The Doha Declaration  broadened the frame of the TRIPS’ Article 27.3(b) discussions. It  requires the TRIPS Council to look at the relationship between the TRIPS  and the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the protection  of TK.
For this purpose, India had initiated a ‘Biodiversity  Amendment’ of the TRIPS text in 2008, proposing an Article (29bis) on  Disclosure of Origin of Biological Resources and/or Associated  Traditional Knowledge. This is also interest to African communities that  continue to remain vulnerable to bioprospecting. In 2011 India, along  with Kenya (on behalf of the African Group) and other country  delegations, made a joint submission on this to the WTO’s Trade  Negotiations Committee. 
If the WTO abandons the DDA as per demands of the powerful countries, this critical issue will also get dropped.
TRIPS’  Article 27.3(b) requires a review of the Agreement four years after the  date of entry into force of the WTO. Article 71.1 of the TRIPS  Agreements expressly states that the Council for TRIPS shall review the  implementation of this Agreement after the expiration of the  transitional period and shall, having regard to the experience gained in  its implementation, review it two years after that date. 
Not  once has this happened. The African Group had taken a strong position  for the review that asks for prohibition of patents on all life forms  and for a moratorium on implementing the TRIPS Agreement until the  completion of the review. 
There is two decades (1995-2015) of  experience with the implementation of WTO-styled IP laws in the area of  seed. The evidence gathered must form the basis for developing our 
negotiating position. 
This  is particularly relevant in the context of patents on genetically  modified (GM) seeds and the grant of IP protection to plant varieties.  That IP essentially serves the interests of big industry is becoming  more apparent to small farmers, public scientists and domestic seed  companies. These two articles of the TRIPS Agreement must be insisted  upon. The Doha Declaration states that the TRIPS Council must be guided  by the objectives in these articles in its work. 
The IPR should  be conducive to social and economic welfare, and to a balance of rights  and obligations. As per the principles in Article 8, WTO members may  adopt measures necessary to promote the public interest in sectors of  vital importance to their socio-economic and technological development.  Seed is one such sector.
Dispute settlement 
Another  IP-related issue, pertains to the so-called “non-violation” complaints  in IP. According to the dispute settlement provisions of the WTO,  disputes can be initiated whether or not a measure adopted by a member  conflicts with the provisions of any of the WTO Agreements. If a member  is complying with the provisions of any WTO Agreement, another member  can initiate a dispute if it perceives that its interests are adversely  affected. 
The TRIPS did not allow this provision to be used for  an initial period of five years and this has subsequently been extended.  In the MC9 of WTO Indonesia – in the ‘Bali Package’– a decision was  taken to consider recommendations on this issue in the MC10. There is  deepening bilateralism between both sides, particularly on the issue of  IP. This includes the joint Indo-US IP Working Group. A new National IPR  Policy has been finalised by the DIPP in the backdrop of the  relationship. 
The legitimate space for discussions on global IP  standards is the TRIPS Council, and it is in this multilateral forum  that issues on IP ought to be discussed. Outside the WTO, talks for new  FTAs are picking up pace. These go well beyond what TRIPS established as  ‘minimum standards’ for IP protection. The Regional Comprehensive  Econo-
mic Partnership (RCEP) is one such FTA that India is actively negotiating with 15 countries in the Asia and Pacific region. 
‘Leaked’  IP drafts propose that all RCEP members comply with a dozen  international IP-related agreements, including the International  Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV),  particularly its 1991 version, which India has kept away from to retain  seed freedoms for its farmers. 
We have to be cautious against  maximalist tendencies on IP penetrating the WTO. The developed countries  should not be allowed to expand IPR in a 21st century agenda for 
the WTO. This will be detrimental to farmers’ seeds in the ‘global South’.

