4th meeting of the Ad hoc Open-ended Working Group on Access and 
Benefit-sharing of the Convention on Biological Diversity  -  
Issue #2 

EARTH NEGOTIATIONS BULLETIN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
PUBLISHED BY THE INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR 
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (IISD) <http://www.iisd.org>

Written and edited by:

Soledad Aguilar 
Xenya Cherny 
Stefan Jungcurt 
Elisa Morgera 
Elsa Tsioumani

Editor:

Pamela S. Chasek, Ph.D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Director of IISD Reporting Services:

Langston James "Kimo" Goree VI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Vol. 9 No. 341
Wednesday, 1 February 2006

Online at http://www.iisd.ca/biodiv/abs-wg4/

ABS-4 HIGHLIGHTS:

TUESDAY, 31 JANUARY 2006

Delegates to the fourth meeting of the Ad Hoc Open-ended Working 
Group (WG) on Access and Benefit-sharing (ABS) of the Convention 
on Biological Diversity (CBD) met in a Committee of the Whole, and 
addressed the elements and objectives of an international regime 
on ABS, a certificate of origin/source/legal provenance, and 
measures to ensure compliance with prior informed consent (PIC) 
and mutually agreed terms (MAT). A Friends of the Chair group met 
in the afternoon to discuss participation of indigenous and local 
communities in the ABS negotiations.

COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE

INTERNATIONAL REGIME ON ABS: Elements: Discussions continued on 
the elements of the regime, with Venezuela, on behalf of GRULAC, 
prioritizing: capacity building; traditional knowledge protection; 
financial mechanisms to guarantee the regime's implementation; and 
a certificate of legal provenance generated by countries of 
origin. India, on behalf of the LIKE-MINDED MEGADIVERSE COUNTRIES 
(LMMC), said the regime should implement the CBD objectives and 
include benefit-sharing, compliance measures, a certificate of 
legal provenance, traditional knowledge protection, effective 
implementation and financial mechanisms. The EU stressed: human 
rights, and the work of the World Intellectual Property 
Organization (WIPO) on prior art, in elements on traditional 
knowledge; and awareness raising and disclosure requirements, in 
elements on compliance. She also proposed a transparent and 
workable certificate of origin, and suggested using the gap 
analysis to check whether elements identified in the discussion 
are covered by existing agreements. SWITZERLAND proposed 
regrouping the list of elements into clusters on: access; benefit-
sharing; traditional knowledge; compliance; and capacity building.

UGANDA said the regime should take into account the transboundary 
nature of genetic resources, and highlighted: benefit-sharing; 
collaborative research and technology transfer; traditional 
knowledge protection; compliance, enforcement, and arbitration 
mechanisms; and an international certificate of 
origin/source/legal provenance. COTE D' IVOIRE and KIRIBATI 
supported ensuring benefit-sharing, including through, inter alia, 
monetary and non-monetary benefits and effective technology 
transfer and cooperation. COLOMBIA said that PIC should be 
unilateral, while benefit-sharing should not be voluntary but 
directly related to the conditions of access.

Noting their commitment to facilitating access to genetic 
resources, MEXICO and COSTA RICA said access falls under national 
sovereignty and does not require an international instrument other 
than for providing legal certainty. AUSTRALIA said access is a 
fundamental building block of the regime. EGYPT said facilitating 
access must be linked to benefit-sharing on the basis of PIC and 
MAT. BURKINA FASO cautioned against references to facilitated 
access, and suggested instead using the CBD language relating to 
creating conditions to facilitate access to genetic resources.

GRULAC, UGANDA and EGYPT said the regime should address genetic 
resource derivatives and related traditional knowledge, with EGYPT 
noting that derivatives are the main object of biopiracy. 
AUSTRALIA opposed reference to derivatives. The EU suggested 
considering concerns related to derivatives prior to their 
inclusion in the international regime, while NEW ZEALAND requested 
clarification on the need to address them in the regime.

The UN PERMANENT FORUM ON INDIGENOUS ISSUES (UNPFII) stressed that 
any instrument must conform to existing and emerging international 
law relating to indigenous rights. The UN CONFERENCE ON TRADE AND 
DEVELOPMENT drew attention to its study of options for 
implementing disclosure of origin requirements in intellectual 
property rights (IPRs) applications (UNEP/CBD/WG-ABS/4/INF/2). The 
INTERNATIONAL UNION FOR THE PROTECTION OF NEW VARIETIES OF PLANTS 
(UPOV) said the principles of plant variety protection and 
breeders' rights should be recognized in the regime. WIPO reported 
on the preparation of a technical paper contributing to 
international discussions on ABS and IPRs and clarifying legal 
questions, for submission to COP-8. The WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION 
(WTO) reported on the activities of the Council on Trade-related 
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) and the 
consultative process on the TRIPS-CBD relationship. She identified 
four divergent positions among WTO members on disclosure of 
origin/source in patent applications and noted that the Hong Kong 
Ministerial Declaration calls for an intensification of the 
consultative process.

The IIFB noted that the recognition and protection of indigenous 
rights should not be a separate element but a cross-cutting issue. 
She also said the regime should address conflict resolution for 
PIC cases and conflict of laws to decide on cases of transboundary 
or shared traditional knowledge.

The US called for developing a clear understanding of technical 
terms and definitions. Stressing that an international regime 
cannot replace national frameworks, the INTERNATIONAL CHAMBER OF 
COMMERCE noted that a regime should be composed of different 
national and international instruments, including guidelines 
developed by stakeholders. The BIOTECHNOLOGY INDUSTRY ORGANIZATION 
drew attention to its guidelines on bioprospecting. The AUSTRALIAN 
APEC STUDY CENTER called for a practical approach with market-
based instruments.

Objectives: Discussions were held on the basis of the options 
contained in Annex I of Recommendation 3/1 of the WG on ABS 
(UNEP/CBD/WG-ABS/4/2). MEXICO, COLOMBIA, PERU, VENEZUELA, ECUADOR, 
YEMEN, MALI, ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA, GRENADA, SAINT VINCENT AND THE 
GRENADINES, SAINT KITTS AND NEVIS, BAHAMAS and EGYPT proposed 
preventing the misappropriation of genetic resources and their 
derivatives, facilitating access for environmentally sound uses, 
supporting compliance with PIC, MAT and, with GUINEA and GABON, 
protecting traditional knowledge and supporting compliance with 
national legislation. CUBA, VENEZUELA, EGYPT, KENYA and INDONESIA 
supported widening the capacity to use genetic resources through 
technology transfer, especially for developing countries. Many 
highlighted collaborative research and capacity building.

The EU, COSTA RICA, THAILAND, CUBA and ZAMBIA supported 
contributing to the effective implementation of CBD Articles 15 
(Access to Genetic Resources) and 8(j) (traditional knowledge) and 
the three objectives of the Convention. The EU, COSTA RICA and 
THAILAND also supported promoting implementation and compliance, 
benefit-sharing, user rights and obligations, and rights of 
indigenous and local communities; and with AUSTRALIA, CANADA and 
NEW ZEALAND, facilitating access to genetic resources.

SWITZERLAND said the objectives should be drafted in a positive 
way with no reference to misappropriation. JAPAN supported 
creating conditions to facilitate access to genetic resources for 
environmentally sound uses and, with CUBA, to provide effective 
protection of traditional knowledge subject to national 
legislation. The IIFB highlighted consistency with international 
human rights obligations.

CERTIFICATE OF ORIGIN/SOURCE/LEGAL PROVENANCE: Chair Margarita 
Clemente (Spain) opened the discussion on other approaches, 
including the design of an international certificate of 
origin/source/legal provenance (UNEP/CBD/WG-ABS/4/4). Many said a 
certificate should be issued by national authorities in the 
country of origin, be homogeneous in format, simple, easily 
recognizable, practical and cost-effective.

The EU said an international certificate could be a key component 
of an international ABS regime, cautioning against a "one-size-
fits-all" certificate and high transaction costs. With NORWAY, NEW 
ZEALAND, JAPAN and AUSTRALIA, she also called for further studies 
on potential benefits, practical aspects and costs of an 
international certificate. 

BRAZIL supported a certificate of legal provenance of genetic 
resources, derivatives and traditional knowledge as one of the 
central elements of an international benefit-sharing regime. 
Noting that the certificate's purpose is to provide a mechanism 
for disclosure of origin, INDONESIA proposed establishment of 
web-based databases for tracing ownership. MEXICO, supported by 
many, said a certificate should provide an international 
instrument to trace genetic resources across the entire reach of 
CBD obligations, and have clear triggers to activate disclosure 
requirements. NORWAY said a certificate should verify compliance 
with the CBD and national access legislation. NEW ZEALAND 
emphasized that a certificate does not substitute national ABS 
legislation. EL SALVADOR said that certification of legal 
provenance is a prerequisite to certifying legality of access, and 
it should be complemented by a national regime, with HAITI 
highlighting the need for functioning national ABS procedures. 
UGANDA and VENEZUELA highlighted successful application of 
certificates within the Convention on International Trade in 
Endangered Species. 

AUSTRALIA suggested that a certificate of source, covering 
transboundary genetic resources, coupled with a certificate of 
legal provenance through the use of a contractual device, would 
provide legal certainty to both users and providers in a 
multilateral system. NAMIBIA supported the establishment of 
additional conditions through material transfer agreements. 

COLOMBIA questioned if these certificates will provide guarantees 
for benefit-sharing and protection of traditional knowledge, and 
said information should be transmitted electronically to ensure 
traceability. SINGAPORE said certificates would be useful as long 
as they do not bar IPR requests. The US highlighted existing 
certification processes, and said the certificate should build 
trust and not replace agreed contractual terms.

The IIFB commented on the complexities of developing such 
certificates in cases where the genetic resources are 
transboundary or traditional knowledge relates to genetic 
resources held ex situ. CHINA proposed using certificates of 
origin and, in the case of plant varieties improved ex situ, 
certificates of source. The REPUBLIC OF KOREA called for further 
studies on the center of origin of crops. The CONSULTATIVE GROUP 
ON INTERNATIONAL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH questioned the likelihood 
of determining the origin of many plant genetic resources for food 
and agriculture. 

COMPLIANCE WITH PIC AND MAT: Chair Clemente invited comments on 
measures to ensure compliance with PIC and MAT (UNEP/CBD/WG-
ABS/4/5 and INF/1, 2, 5 and 6). AUSTRALIA called for simplified 
arrangements and underscored the role of existing systems and 
codes of ethical conduct. CANADA highlighted the need for respect 
for decision-making processes of indigenous communities, and 
common understanding on the implications of PIC of providers and 
users of traditional knowledge. NEW ZEALAND requested further 
study on the feasibility, cost and practicality of international 
measures to ensure compliance with PIC and MAT. The PHILIPPINES 
requested considering the special situation of shared resources in 
ensuring compliance with PIC. The IIFB proposed using the UNPFII 
definition of PIC for indigenous and local communities. 

UGANDA called for transparency in patent applications and 
disclosure of origin. The EU recalled its proposal to WIPO on 
disclosure of origin or source in patent applications, and INDIA 
highlighted its proposal to the TRIPS Council. NORWAY highlighted 
disclosure of origin and of PIC under the International Treaty on 
Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture. UPOV said 
disclosure of origin should not be an additional condition for the 
protection of plant varieties. SOUTH AFRICA noted the role of 
national measures to ensure disclosure of origin and benefit-
sharing. JAPAN, SWITZERLAND and THAILAND, opposed by COLOMBIA and 
BRAZIL, preferred discussing disclosure of origin in other forums.

Chair Clemente then created a contact group on the certificate of 
origin/source/legal provenance and on PIC and MAT, which will meet 
on Wednesday. 

IN THE CORRIDORS

The second day of the ABS WG-4 was marked by convergence, 
commotion and collaboration. As delegates were shaping the 
elements and objectives of an ABS regime, many expressed surprise 
at the good pace of negotiations, noting that GRULAC and the 
LMMC's positions appeared increasingly convergent, while 
divergences with other groups were mostly evident on the issues of 
facilitated access and derivatives. A source of noticeable 
commotion throughout the day was the anticipated Chair's text on 
the elements and objectives of the regime, with some delegates 
trying to influence the document by approaching suspected, but as 
yet incognito, drafters. Finally, the question of collaboration 
was on the minds of participants in the Friends of the Chair group 
as they discussed mechanisms for participation of indigenous and 
local communities, with many optimistic that all major players 
would be eventually involved in the design of the international 
ABS regime.




This issue of the Earth Negotiations Bulletin (c) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> is 
written and edited by Soledad Aguilar, Xenya Cherny, Stefan 
Jungcurt, Elisa Morgera, and Elsa Tsioumani. The Digital Editor is 
Francis Dejon. The Editor is Pamela S. Chasek, Ph.D. 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. The Director of IISD Reporting Services is 
Langston James "Kimo" Goree VI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. The Sustaining 
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