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The International Treatment of Biocultural Property William Fisher June 21, 2004 Ways in which Plant-Derived Drugs are Developed (1) Random Screening (2) Investigations by ethnobotanists, followed by purification and testing Ways in which Plant-Derived Drugs are Developed (1) Random Screening (2) Investigations by ethnobotanists, followed by purification and testing Disagreement concerning the relative efficacy of these two approaches --ICBG-Peru Project estimates (2) is 4 times more efficient Examples of Plants developed in the second fashion Quinine in Peru Turmeric and Neem in India Rosy Periwinkle in Madagascar Plao-Noi and Pueraria in Thailand African Soapberry in Ethiopia Stevia rebaudiana Bertoni in Paraguay Neem tree Neem tree Traditional Uses in India cleaning teeth curing psoriasis control parasitic infections spermicide insecticide W.R. Grace isolates and stabilizes azadirachtin 1992: U.S. patent on stabilized solution 1994: U.S. EPA approves “Neemix” as insecticide Rosy Periwinkle Etching by Anne Stromquist -- http://artangel.com/Stromquist/flower.html Rosy Periwinkle Species probably originates in the West Indies, spreads to many tropical countries, including Madagascar Traditional Uses: treatment of diabetes (reported in Jamaica and Philippines) treatment of sore throat, pleurisy, dysentery Rosy Periwinkle Eli Lilly tests samples from Madagascar ineffective for diabetes effective for childhood leukemia Eli Lilly secures patents on two derivatives -- vincristine and vinblastine increase remission rate from 20% to 80% annual revenue exceeds $200,000,000 Pueraria Pueraria Located in Thailand Traditional Thai use: estrogen booster enlarges women’s breasts Two Japanese pharmaceutical companies seeking patents on purified forms of its active ingredient Examples of Plants developed in the second fashion Quinine in Peru Turmeric and Neem in India Rosy Periwinkle in Madagascar Plao-Noi and Pueraria in Thailand African Soapberry in Ethiopia Stevia rebaudiana Bertoni in Paraguay Examples of Plants developed in the second fashion Quinine in Peru Turmeric and Neem in India Rosy Periwinkle in Madagascar Plao-Noi and Pueraria in Thailand African Soapberry in Ethiopia Stevia rebaudiana Bertoni in Paraguay Potential Claimants in Case 1 Individual owners of the plants or animals from which the genetic material is taken The nation from which the genetic material is taken The individual or company that purifies or modifies the genetic material for therapeutic uses The public Potential Claimants in Case 2 Individual owners of the plants or animals from which the genetic material is taken The nation from which the genetic material is taken The individual or company that purifies or modifies the genetic material for therapeutic uses The public The developers of biocultural knowledge Rosy Periwinkle Potential Claimants Rosy Periwinkle Potential Claimants Madagascar Rosy Periwinkle Potential Claimants West Indies Rosy Periwinkle Potential Claimants Jamaica Philippines Rosy Periwinkle Potential Claimants Eli Lilly Indianapolis Rosy Periwinkle Potential Claimants Eli Lilly Indianapolis West Indies Jamaica Madagascar Philippines Related Problem Agricultural Companies derive superior strains of crops from varieties cultivated by traditional communities, then market them world-wide Current Patent Law Purified forms of the drugs are patentable The plants themselves and knowledge of how to use them are not “products of nature” doctrine nonobviousness novelty Potential Claimants in Case 2 Individual owners of the plants or animals from which the genetic material is taken The nation from which the genetic material is taken The individual or company that purifies or modifies the genetic material for therapeutic uses The public The developers of biocultural knowledge Rosy Periwinkle Potential Claimants Eli Lilly Indianapolis West Indies Jamaica Madagascar Philippines Possible Grounds for Allocating Entitlements Possession Labor-desert theory Utilitarianism Environmentalism Imperialism Respect Nationalism Possible Grounds for Allocating Entitlements Possession Labor-desert theory Utilitarianism Environmentalism Imperialism Respect Nationalism Cf. Allocating rights to oil; Salmond on Adverse Possession Possible Grounds for Allocating Entitlements Possession Labor-desert theory Utilitarianism Environmentalism Imperialism Respect Nationalism Divide rewards “equitably” between: (a) developers of the biocultural knowledge; (b) drug companies Possible Grounds for Allocating Entitlements Possession Labor-desert theory Utilitarianism Environmentalism Imperialism Respect Nationalism Provide incentives for: --preservation of the knowledge; --willingness to disclose --collecting the knowledge --developing the drugs Offset by: --social losses associated with monopoly pricing Possible Grounds for Allocating Entitlements Possession Labor-desert theory Utilitarianism Environmentalism Imperialism Respect Nationalism (a) Preserve rainforests; (b) Reduce pesticide use; (c) Preserve biodiversity Possible Grounds for Allocating Entitlements Possession Labor-desert theory Utilitarianism Environmentalism Imperialism Respect Nationalism President Mwinyi: “Most of us in developing countries find it difficult to accept the notion that biodiversity should [flow freely to industrial countries] while the flow of biological products from the industrial countries is patented, expensive and considered the private property of the firms that produce them. This asymmetry reflects the inequality of opportunity and is unjust.” Possible Grounds for Allocating Entitlements Possession Labor-desert theory Utilitarianism Environmentalism Imperialism Respect Nationalism Much biocultural knowledge is sacred; cf. “Moral Rights” Possible Grounds for Allocating Entitlements Possession Labor-desert theory Utilitarianism Environmentalism Imperialism Respect Nationalism The government of each nation has a right and duty to protect its own citizens What do the providers of Knowledge/Genetic Material Want? Credit Co-inventor status Other forms of acknowledgment Payment Up-front fees for access Payments in stages as drugs are developed Share of profits if drug is successful Indemnification for the costs of preserving biodiversity Participation Training of local scientists in ICBG projects Possible Reforms 1) LDCs deny patent protection to drugs and plants developed from local materials (novelty; naturally occurring substance) 2) LDCs recognize prior user rights 3) LDCs amend patent law to make plants or traditionally medicinal uses thereof patentable locally 4) DCs constrict rights associated with drug patents 5) DCs treat holders of biocultural knowledge as coinventors 6) Physical Exclusion of Bioprospectors 7) National Natural Resources Laws 8) Deals between individual countries and pharmaceutical firms (e.g., Costa Rica; ICBG Projects) 9) Cartel of Tropical Gene-Rich Countries 10) TRIPS reform: violation of natural-resources laws = affirmative defense (cf. inequitable conduct; patent misuse) or basis of a compulsory license Possible constrictions of the rights associated with drug patents Expanded definitions of prior art (e.g., elimination of publication requirement for inventions in use in other countries) Narrowing of the “purified substance” doctrine Elimination of extended term (HatchWaxman) Possible Reforms 1) LDCs deny patent protection to drugs and plants developed from local materials (novelty; naturally occurring substance) 2) LDCs recognize prior user rights 3) LDCs amend patent law to make plants or traditionally medicinal uses thereof patentable locally 4) DCs constrict rights associated with drug patents 5) DCs treat holders of biocultural knowledge as coinventors 6) Physical Exclusion of Bioprospectors 7) National Natural Resources Laws 8) Deals between individual countries and pharmaceutical firms (e.g., Costa Rica; ICBG Projects) 9) Cartel of Tropical Gene-Rich Countries 10) TRIPS reform: violation of natural-resources laws = affirmative defense (cf. inequitable conduct; patent misuse) or basis of a compulsory license Possible Reforms Int’l LDC DC LDC 1) LDCs deny patent protection to drugs and plants developed from local materials (novelty; naturally occurring substance) 2) LDCs recognize prior user rights 3) LDCs amend patent law to make plants or traditionally medicinal uses thereof patentable locally 4) DCs constrict rights associated with drug patents 5) DCs treat holders of biocultural knowledge as coinventors 6) Physical Exclusion of Bioprospectors 7) National Natural Resources Laws 8) Deals between individual countries and pharmaceutical firms (e.g., Costa Rica; ICBG Projects) 9) Cartel of Tropical Gene-Rich Countries 10) TRIPS reform: violation of natural-resources laws = affirmative defense (cf. inequitable conduct; patent misuse) or basis of a compulsory license A Global Patent System? Unitary, global patents issued by branch offices of GPO Subject matter: TRIPS standards [Living things; genes; software?] First to file + provisional applications + prior-user rights 1-year grace period for statutory bars English Infringement [Peripheral or central claiming?] [Equivalents doctrine?] World Patent Court; judgments enforced by national courts