
The higher level of protection given to place names used
to identify wines and spirits should be expanded to
geographical indications identifying other products, a
group of WTO members once again told the
organizations intellectual property Council on 21
March.Another
group of countries said the council should concentrate on
its current task of setting up a multilateral system for
notifying and registering these names and assessing
actual implementation of the rules on geographical
indications before thinking about extension of product
coverage.
Among
the other topics discussed in the meeting were:
> forthcoming
reviews
of intellectual property laws in countries which have
recently had to implement The WTOs Agreement on
Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
(TRIPS),
> an
on-going debate between Cuba and others and the US
over a US law,
> the
review of the agreements provisions on
biotechnological inventions and plant varieties,
> review
of the implementation of the TRIPS Agreement
> non-violation
complaints under the TRIPS agreement
Geographical
indications back
to top
Geographical
indications are place names, or words closely associated
with places, such as Champagne,
Scotch, Tequila, and
Roquefort cheese.
The
WTOs Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) says geographical
indications in general should be protected, at least with
a view to avoiding unfair competition and consumers being
misled. Place names used to identify wines and spirits
are given a higher level protection, i.e. even if
consumers are not misled or if using the names does not
constitute an act of unfair competition.
Members
of the Central European Free Trade Agreement (CEFTA) with
Latvia and Estonia (Poland speaking on their behalf) made
a strong call for negotiations on geographical
indications aimed at expanding the higher level of
protection currently given to wines and spirits
to other products.
They
said that if benchmarks (i.e. flexible target
dates for various stages of the negotiations) are to be
set for the talks agriculture and services, then there
should be similar benchmarks for negotiations on
geographical indications.
They
were supported wholly or partly by Turkey, India,
Switzerland, Pakistan, Mauritius, Sri Lanka, Egypt, Cuba,
and the EU.
Many
in this group argued that a mandate to negotiate
extending the product coverage exists in the TRIPS
agreement (under Article 24). Several complained that
after four years of implementing the agreement, there has
been no progress either on negotiating a multilateral
system of notification and registration of geographical
indications for wines and spirits (Art 23.4) or on
expanding the higher level of protection to other
products.
Opposing
the call with varying degrees of flexibility were:
Argentina, New Zealand, US, Australia, Canada, Chile,
Mexico, Brazil, and Hong Kong China. They said
negotiations on geographical indications could not be put
on the same level as the mandated negotiations on
agriculture and services. They added that any
negotiations on extending the scope of the product
coverage of Article 23 should wait until the TRIPS
Council has finished its review of how member countries
are applying the agreements provisions on
geographical indications.
They
also argued that the TRIPS Council should not divert
attention away from the current negotiations on setting
up a multilateral notification and registration system
for geographical indications. They welcomed the EUs
announcement that it would submit a new paper on the
subject soon.
The
TRIPS Council agreed that its chairperson should start
informal consultations on how to continue work in these
areas.
Review
of national implementing legislation back
to top
The
council made further practical arrangements for the 27
countries whose legislation is to be reviewed in June and
November this year (these are mainly developing countries
which were required to implement the TRIPS Agreement at
the beginning of this year). See
lists.
The chairperson is consulting with delegations on the
lists of the 42 countries to be reviewed in 2001.
Cuba
and EU vs. US on Section 211 of the 1998 US Omnibus
Consolidated and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
Act back
to top
This
issue has come up in several previous meetings. Cuba
complained again that the USs replies to its
questions consisted of texts of laws and court rulings
but not an explanation of how the US considers the law to
conform with TRIPS. The US argued again that this is all
it is required to do under the TRIPS provision that Cuba
cited. The EU, which has brought this formally to the
WTOs dispute settlement process, supported Cuba in
demanding a proper explanation from the US.
Plant
and animal inventions (Art 27.3(b)) back
to top
This
article says plants and animals do not have to be
eligible for patenting, except in the following cases.
Inventions of micro-organisms have to be eligible for
patenting. So do inventions of non-biological and
microbiological processes for the production of plants or
animals. And plant varieties have to be eligible for
protection either by patents, or by an effective system
specially created for the purpose (sui
generis), or a combination of the two. A review of
these provisions, as required by the agreement, began in
1999. The council agreed at this meeting that there was a
need to continue considering the issues raised in this
review. Members were urged to provide additional
material, in particular countries that did not yet apply
these provisions in 1999.
Most
of the discussion was procedural: whether to continue
with wide-ranging deliberations or to organize more
structured discussions focusing on specific issues that
had been raised by various delegations at the
councils meetings in July and October last year
(including how to deal with, for example, biodiversity
issues and ethical questions of intellectual property
protection for life forms).
The
council agreed that the chairperson should hold
consultations on how to organise work on these issues.
This, the council said, should take into account work
underway on the issues in other forums (e.g. the World
Intellectual Property Organization WIPO and
the Convention on Biological Diversity CBD).
Review
of the implementation of the TRIPS Agreement
back
to top
Article
71.1 says the implementation of the agreement must be
reviewed five years after it came into existence (i.e. in
2000). The council invited members to submit written
suggestions on how to proceed. The chairperson will also
consult members informally and report back at the next
meeting.
Non-violation
complaints back
to top
This
deals with governments ability to bring a dispute
to the WTO based on loss of an expected benefit as a
result of a members actions, even if no agreement
or commitment has actually been violated. The item was on
the agenda at the request of the EU, which informed the
council that in the near future it will submit a
communication on the matter to the council.
Note:
Members whose TRIPS legislation is to be reviewed in 2000
and 2001
back
to top
To date, the following members have volunteered to be
reviewed in the year 2000.
| 26-30
June 2000 |
27
November to 1 December 2000 |
| Belize |
Bahrain |
| Cyprus |
Chile |
| El
Salvador |
Colombia |
| Hong
Kong, China |
Egypt |
| Indonesia |
Estonia |
| Israel |
Ghana |
| Korea |
Guatemala |
| Macau |
Kuwait |
| Malta |
Paraguay |
| Mexico |
Peru |
| Poland
(areas for which not reviewed in '96-'98) |
Qatar |
| Singapore |
Saint
Lucia |
| Trinidad
and Tobago |
Turkey |
| |
United
Arab Emirates |
The
following members are scheduled for review in 2001
(i.e., those Members to which Article 65.2 or 65.3
applies and which have not yet been reviewed or taken up
in the lists above).
| Antigua
and Barbuda |
Fiji |
Pakistan |
| Argentina |
Gabon |
Papua
New Guinea |
| Barbados |
Grenada |
Philippines |
| Bolivia |
Guyana |
St.
Kitts and Nevis |
| Botswana |
Honduras |
St.
Vincent and Grenadines |
| Brazil |
India |
Senegal |
| Brunei
Darussalam |
Jamaica |
Sri
Lanka |
| Cameroon |
Kenya |
Suriname |
| Congo |
Malaysia |
Swaziland |
| Costa
Rica |
Mauritius |
Thailand |
| Côte
d'Ivoire |
Morocco |
Tunisia |
| Cuba |
Namibia |
Uruguay |
| Dominica |
Nicaragua |
Venezuela |
| Dominican
Republic |
Nigeria |
Zimbabwe |
|