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Pathogens Materials: coherence as an operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS Prof. Frederick M. Abbott WTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010 THE (ELUSIVE?) QUEST FOR COHERENCE IN GLOBAL NEGOTIATIONS AND NORMS: THE CASE OF THE TRIPS AGREEMENT AND THE CONVENTION ON BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY (CBD) Organized by International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD) September 17, 2010

Pathogens Materials: coherence as an operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS Prof. Frederick M. Abbott WTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010 THE (ELUSIVE?)

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Page 1: Pathogens Materials: coherence as an operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS Prof. Frederick M. Abbott WTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010 THE (ELUSIVE?)

Pathogens Materials: coherence as an

operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS

Prof. Frederick M. AbbottWTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010

THE (ELUSIVE?) QUEST FOR COHERENCE IN GLOBAL NEGOTIATIONS AND NORMS:

THE CASE OF THE TRIPS AGREEMENT AND THE CONVENTION ON BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY (CBD)

Organized byInternational Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD)

September 17, 2010

Page 2: Pathogens Materials: coherence as an operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS Prof. Frederick M. Abbott WTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010 THE (ELUSIVE?)

The challenge to global governance

Sharing of biological materials with human pathogenic potential is necessary from a public health standpoint for the development of vaccines and therapeutic treatments

In some circumstances, e.g., threat of pandemic, prompt sharing critical to avoidance of widespread human suffering and destabilization of global economy and political environmentProbability of H5N1 pandemic may be low, but risk to

human well-being practically incalculable

In other circumstances, e.g., emergence of pathogenic bacteria with limited transmission profile, promptness of sharing a less critical factor, but access to natural biological materials nonetheless essential to R&D

Page 3: Pathogens Materials: coherence as an operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS Prof. Frederick M. Abbott WTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010 THE (ELUSIVE?)

Multilateral institutional response inadequateMultiyear negotiations within IGM-PIP

framework at WHO remain stalled, and negotiating texts reflect relatively weak compromise positions on fundamental questions such as sharing obligations

Proposals regarding financing to address developing country equity and self-sufficiency concerns are not robust

Problems of addressing “the common good” through stakeholder-based negotiations difficult to overcome

Page 4: Pathogens Materials: coherence as an operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS Prof. Frederick M. Abbott WTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010 THE (ELUSIVE?)

Coherence problem emerges at late stage

Biological materials with pathogenic potential appear within technical scope of CBD subject matter (i.e., “biological resources”)Definitional scope of “genetic materials”/genetic

resources that are subject to access and benefit sharing obligations may exclude viruses due to lack of “functional” heredity

Prior CBD efforts to clarify exclusion of “human genetic resources” probably irrelevant

Problem manifests in ABS Working Group and Protocol negotiations

Page 5: Pathogens Materials: coherence as an operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS Prof. Frederick M. Abbott WTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010 THE (ELUSIVE?)

Draft ABS Protocol presents multiple problems of coherence for WHO PIP Working Group

Protocol a separate agreement from CBD

Protocol may exclude “human genetic resources” and/or “human pathogens” from its scope

Protocol may include provision addressing relationship with WHO treatment of “pathogens” or “genetic materials”, that may provide for a sharing obligation consistent with future WHO rules

But …

Page 6: Pathogens Materials: coherence as an operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS Prof. Frederick M. Abbott WTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010 THE (ELUSIVE?)

Multiple problems of coherenceIf “human pathogens” and/or “human genetic

resources” are excluded from the scope of the Protocol, they would likewise be excluded from the link to WHO rules, and nevertheless would remain subject to the CBD (even if in some cases, i.e. viruses, excluded from the ABS obligations)

How will biological materials with human pathogenic potential be treated by the ABS Protocol and CBD if there is no WHO agreement? Will they be subject to the International Health Regulation?

Assuming that two sets of agreements come into effect: will ABS Protocol serve as “gap filler” for WHO regime?

Page 7: Pathogens Materials: coherence as an operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS Prof. Frederick M. Abbott WTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010 THE (ELUSIVE?)

Patent issue coherenceWHO treatment of patenting virus genetic

resources and derivatives remains unresolvedSome possibility for exclusion of patenting

unmodified genetic resources, but treatment of derivatives remains contentious

Current ABS Protocol largely relies on national approaches to terms of ABS agreements, but extends obligations for certification of compliance by relevant patent officesSome proposals for application of penalties

Assume arguendo completion of WHO PIP agreement and ABS Protocol: WHO solution would apply to pandemic influenza viruses but not to other materials potentially covered by CBD/ABS

Page 8: Pathogens Materials: coherence as an operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS Prof. Frederick M. Abbott WTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010 THE (ELUSIVE?)

Scope of parties and WTO

United States is not party to CBD and apparently may not be party to ABS ProtocolCountry with the largest investments in

biotechnology sector excluded from arrangementsUnited States prospectively is party to WHO solution

Parties to CBD apparently need not accept Protocol

None of the above addresses relationship to Doha negotiations regarding relationship between TRIPS Agreement and CBD

Page 9: Pathogens Materials: coherence as an operational challenge for WHO, the CBD ABS regime and TRIPS Prof. Frederick M. Abbott WTO PUBLIC FORUM 2010 THE (ELUSIVE?)

Conclusion and suggestionCountries are negotiating toward potential

multilateral legal swamp

The problem of access to pathogen materials is not likely helped by a legal regime of “constructive ambiguity”

WHO is more logical venue for negotiations on sharing of pathogen materials than CBD, but developing country voice at WHO not so well empowered, leaving CBD/ABS as attractive alternative

Countries should commit the subject of pathogen materials to a single forum and approach with a firm resolve to bridge differences in the interests of global public health, including appropriate interim measures