1 / 39

GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS & PROTECTION OF PLANT VARIETIES

GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS & PROTECTION OF PLANT VARIETIES. Compiled by C.Sangeethalakshmi 07MSB116. Geograpical Indication (GI) Case studies - India - Globally Laws concerning GIs Protection of plant varieties Laws concerning the same. TOPICS TO BE COVERED.

shay
Download Presentation

GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS & PROTECTION OF PLANT VARIETIES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS & PROTECTION OF PLANT VARIETIES Compiled by C.Sangeethalakshmi 07MSB116

  2. Geograpical Indication (GI) Case studies - India - Globally Laws concerning GIs Protection of plant varieties Laws concerning the same TOPICS TO BE COVERED

  3. GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS

  4. GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS-DEFINITION • It is an indication. • It originates from a definite geographical territory. • It is used to identify agricultural, natural or manufactured goods. • The manufactured goods should be produced or processed or prepared in that territory. • It should have a special quality or reputation or other characteristics.

  5. BENEFITS OF GIs • It confers legal protection. • Prevents unauthorized use of a Registered Geographical Indication by others. • It promotes economic prosperity of producers of goods produced in a geographical territory. • Boosts the export.

  6. BENEFITS OF GIs • Can serve as source-identifiers for consumers. • Helps the producers develop consumer loyalty. • Plays a role in consumer decisions, including willingness to pay a higher price for regionally branded food products. • For example, geographic location is an important component of wine pricing.

  7. INDIA Basmati rice Darjeeling tea Kanchipuram silk saree Alphonsa mango Nagpur orange Kolhapuri chappal WORLD Canadian whisky Swiss watches Florida oranges Champagne Tequilla Kimchi New Zealand lamb EXAMPLES OF GIs

  8. Who can apply for the registration of a geographical indication? • Any association of persons, producers, organization or authority established by or under the law can apply • The applicant must represent the interest of the producers • The applicant should be in writing in the prescribed form • The applicant should be addressed to the Registrar of Geographical Indications along with prescribed fee

  9. IMPACT OF GIs ON DEVELOPING COUNTRIES • Encourages rural development. • Facilitates market access. • Saves local natural resources . • Plays an important role in the preservation of cultural identity.

  10. Is the registration of a Geographic Indication compulsory and how does it help the applicant? • Registration is not compulsory • Registration affords better legal protection to facilitate an action for infringement • The registered proprietor and authorized users can initiate infringement actions • The authorized user can exercise the exclusive right to use the Geographical Indication

  11. How long the registration of Geographical Indication is valid? • The registration of a Geographical Indication is valid for a period of 10 years.

  12. GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS GIs may be used by all producers and traders whose products originate from a particular place and therefore share typical characteristics. TRADEMARK A trademark is a sign which is used in the course of trade and it distinguishes goods or services of one enterprise from those of other enterprises. Difference between GI and Trademark

  13. STEPS INVOLVED IN CREATING REGISTERS FOR GIs • Compile a list of the special products grown or manufactured in a region, which have geographical peculiarities. • Obtain detailed information of the relation of geography to the product - for e.g. the soil quality, weather, water, etc. • Identify the specific human resources required in the manufacturing process. • Perform a qualitative & quantitative classification of the product.

  14. STEPS INVOLVED IN CREATING REGISTERS FOR GIs • Establish the commercial viability of the product. • Compile a history of the profession whether it is hereditary & belongs to a particular community. • Record whether the product is used for domestic purpose e.g. for medicinal, cosmetic or as diet ingredient. • Most importantly, clearly identify its traditional, religious or cultural uses.

  15. GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS OF GOODS (Regulation and Protection) ACT Under Section 1(e) it is defined that ‘Geographic Indication’ in relation to goods, means an indication which identifies such goods as agricultural goods, natural goods or manufactured goods as originating or manufactured in the territory of a country or a region or locality in that territory, where a given quality reputation or other characteristic of such good is essentially attributed to its geographical origin and in case where such goods are manufactured goods, one of the activities of either the production or of processing or preparation of the goods concerned takes place in such territory, region or locality as the case may be.

  16. FOCUS OF THE ACT • Quality ,reputation or other characteristic of such good, which is essentially attributed to its geographical origin. • In doing so, the geographical domain can be a territory of a country or a region or locality in that territory. • The quality of the product is attributed essentially to its geographical origin and if it is of goods either the raw material production or processing or the preparation shall take place in such territory.

  17. CASE STUDY - INDIA

  18. BASMATI CASE STUDY In late 1997, an American company RiceTec Inc, was granted a patent by the US patent office to call the aromatic rice grown outside India 'Basmati'. RiceTec Inc, had been trying to enter the international Basmati market with brands like 'Kasmati' and 'Texmati' described as Basmati-type rice with minimal success.

  19. BASMATI CASE STUDY • However, with the Basmati patent rights, RiceTec will now be able to not only call its aromatic rice Basmati within the US, but also label it Basmati for its exports.) • India and Pakistan will not only lose out on the 45,000 tonne US import market, which forms 10 percent of the total Basmati exports.

  20. BASMATI CASE STUDY • In addition, the patent on Basmati is believed to be a violation of the fundamental fact that the long grain aromatic rice grown only in Punjab, Haryana, and Uttar Pradesh is called Basmati.."

  21. BASMATI CASE STUDY • Basmati rice means the "queen of fragrance or the perfumed one." • Grown in the foothills of the Himalayas for thousands of years. • Perfumy, nut-like flavor and aroma. • A long-grained rice with a fine texture • Costliest rice in the world. • Favored by emperors and praised by poets for hundreds of years. • India is the second largest producer of rice after China, and grows over a tenth of the world's wheat.

  22. BASMATI CASE STUDY • In the abstract, "the invention relates to novel rice lines and to plants and grains of these lines . . . . . Specifically, one aspect of the invention relates to novel rice lines whose plants are semi-dwarf in stature, substantially photoperiod insensitive and high yielding, and produce rice grains having characteristics similar or superior to those of good quality Basmati rice. Another aspect of the invention relates to novel rice lines produced from novel rice lines . . . . "

  23. BASMATI CASE STUDY • According to Dr Vandana Shiva, director of a Delhi-based research foundation which monitors issues involving patents and biopiracy, • Moreover, she claims the "theft involved in the Basmati patent is, therefore, threefold: - a theft of collective intellectual and biodiversity heritage on Indian farmers, - a theft from Indian traders and exporters whose markets are being stolen by RiceTec Inc., and , - a deception of consumers since RiceTec is using a stolen name Basmati for rice which is derived from Indian rice but not grown in India, and hence not the same quality."

  24. NEEM TREE CASE STUDY • U.S and India are currently involved in a biopiracy dispute over the rights to a tree indigenous to the Indian subcontinent, the neem tree. • The neem tree has been used in India for over 2000 years for various purposes such as pesticides, spermicides and toothbrushes. • A US company has been suing Indian companies for producing the emulsion because they have a patent on the process.

  25. JAPAN KOREA KIMCHI DISPUTE • Dispute over Korean traditional side dish, kimchi. • Kimchi is garlicky, peppery, pungent pickled cabbage. • Japanese-style kimchi has been getting popularity in Japan. • The amount of Japanese kimchi export excesses that of Korean kimchi export. • South Korea has asked the WHO and the FAOs Codex Alimentarius commission to establish an international standard of "kimchi".

  26. JAPAN KOREA KIMCHI DISPUTE • Japanese Kimchi is cheaper than the traditional Korean Kimchi • Less spicy than Korean Kimchi • Korean kimchi is made with Chinese cabbage, red pepper, garlic, salted fish and ginger, and then fermented in clay containers for at least four weeks. • Japanese kimchi is made with Chinese cabbage and artificial flavor, skipping the fermentation process.

  27. PLANT VARIETY PROTECTION

  28. PLANT VARIETY DEFINITION The UPOV Convention defines PLANT VARIETY as: “A plant grouping within a single botanical taxon of the lowest known rank, which grouping, irrespective of whether the conditions for the grant of a breeder's right are fully met, can be • defined by the expression of the characteristics resulting from a given genotype or combination of genotypes, • distinguished from any other plant grouping by the expression of at least one of the said characteristics and • considered as a unit with regard to its suitability for being propagated unchanged;"

  29. NEED FOR PROTECTION OF PLANT VARIETY • New varieties of plants are of a better quality and disease resistant. • Increased productivity and hence cost effective. • Better marketability and improves the economic value • The development of breeding programs for certain species can remove the threat to the survival of the species in the wild.

  30. BENEFITS OF PROTECTION • Economic benefits, such as varieties with improved yields lead to a reductions in the price of end-products for consumers. • Health benefits, for example through varieties with improved nutritional content. • Environmental benefits, such as varieties with improved disease resistance or stress tolerance. • Pleasure, such as that afforded by ornamental plants.

  31. PLANT VARIETY PROTECTION ACT • Provides developers of new varieties of plants some patent-like rights ,that protect the reproduction and distribution of their varieties. • Varieties that are protected under this act can be sold as seed stocks only with permission of the certificate holder and in some cases, only as a class of Certified seed. • Varieties that are protected must have labels on the seed containers indicating the type of protection. • Farmers may save a limited amount of seed for replanting, but cannot sell it to anyone without permission of the owner.

  32. HOW TO APPLY To request protection for a new variety, the applicant completes an application packet. The complete packet must contain the following items : • Exhibit A. The origin and breeding history of the variety are presented, including geneology, breeding method, selection criteria, and evidence of uniformity and stability. Variants, predictable deviants from the standard variety description, must be described and their frequencies stated. • Exhibit B. The novelty statement lists specific characters in which the subject variety differs from all other varieties in the crop.

  33. HOW TO APPLY • Exhibit C. An objective description of the variety is given. The PVP Office has developed forms for use in describing varieties of many crops. They are constantly improving older forms or creating forms for new crops. Breeders and other knowledgeable persons are consulted before a draft form is finalized. • Exhibit E. The basis of the applicant's ownership is stated by describing how ownership was obtained.

  34. HOW TO APPLY • Seed Sample. A voucher specimen of 2,500 viable seeds (85 percent or greater germination rate) is required when the application is filed. • Fees. The filing fee ($250) and the examination fee ($1,900) are payable to the Treasurer of the United States. The PVP Office is completely funded by user fees, so fees may occasionally be raised to cover operating costs.

  35. HOW TO APPLY • Additional information concerning the variety can by given in exhibit D. Information in this exhibit may include test-cross results, trial data, isozyme or other molecular test results, photographs, possible uses for the variety or its products, specific descriptive information not disclosed elsewhere in the application, or anything the applicant feels may be useful. This section may be omitted if the data is placed in another exhibit.

  36. CONDITIONS FOR THE GRANT OF THE BREEDERS RIGHT A variety shall be granted protection if it is • New- It should not have been sold. • Distinct- Clearly distinguishable from any other variety . • Uniform-If subjected to variation that may be expected from the particular features of its propagation, it should be sufficiently uniform in its relevant characteristics. • Stable -A variety is deemed to be stable if its relevant characteristics remain unchanged after repeated propagation.

  37. STRUCTURE OF THE ORGANIZATION • The "International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants" was established by the UPOV Convention in 1961. • The permanent organs of the Union are the Council and the Office of the Union. • The Council has established a Consultative Committee, an Administrative and Legal Committee and a Technical Committee. • In addition, it has established Technical Working Parties.

  38. CONCLUSION - GIs • Need to protect TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE. • Difficult to apply IP rights on culture and cultural products. • Hence proper consolidation and documentation is necessary

  39. CONCLUSION - PVP • Ensures legal protection. • The PVPA protects sexually reproduced and tuber propagated plants. • The Plant Patent Act is limited to asexually reproduced plants, excluding tuber propagated plants .

More Related