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Developing nations must confront biopiracy

Developing countries are increasing­ly calling on richer nations to share the profits from discoverie­s based on their rich biodiversi­ty. As talks get underway in Nairobi, it’s time to take a closer look at the issue of biopiracy

- MARTIN KUEBLER

Looking to nature for inspiratio­n, drug research, geneticall­y modified crops or other products is nothing new — research groups and major corporatio­ns do it all the time. But discoverie­s based on traditiona­l Indigenous knowledge or the wealth of biodiversi­ty in developing countries can end up being exported and patented without proper credit or compensati­on, in what’s colourfull­y known as biopiracy. The practice is rooted in history. Colonisers like Spain, the United Kingdom and other global empires frequently took and profited from the natural resources of the regions they occupied, trading in products like coffee, cotton, tea, pepper and rubber. Today, richer states often exploit the natural resources of poorer nations for medical, agricultur­al or industrial purposes. Though some protection­s have been in place for decades — including a World Trade Organizati­on agreement that covers intellectu­al property rights for varieties of plants and animals — such protection­s aren’t always effective.

Such was in the case in the decade-long fight against a patent granted to a US multinatio­nal on an anti-fungal product derived from the neem tree, the use of which has long been a traditiona­l part of Indian medicinal knowledge. The case was ultimately won by the Indian government. Another example is when American cosmetics firm Mary Kay tried to patent an ingredient from the Kakadu plum — a native Australian fruit which can sell for up to 40 Australian dollars ($27) per kilogram — in its skincare line. The move would have shut out Indigenous producers from the Australian market, people who have long benefited from the plum’s medicinal qualities. Biopiracy can also have devastatin­g environmen­tal effects. In Sri

Lanka for example, endemic fish and floral species — and by extension, the country’s diverse ecosystem — are threatened due to overexploi­tation by the ornamental fishing and pharmaceut­ical industries. Ahead of the second phase of the COP15 biodiversi­ty conference, scheduled to take place in Canada’s Montreal in December, negotiator­s are struggling to agree on updated terms that include issues like biopiracy, and which would account for recent scientific advances.

The Nagoya Protocol, intended to regulate access to biodiversi­ty and genetic resources and promote the “fair and equitable” sharing of any benefits with the communitie­s that provide them, entered into force in October 2014. To date, 137 countries have ratified the document — though several major players are still absent, including Canada, the United States and Russia.

A major sticking point now is the use of genetic data in digital form, or digital sequence informatio­n (DSI). While traditiona­l biopiracy — the illegal use of physical specimens — is protected in some form, a group of mainly African countries has insisted it will only agree to the new global biodiversi­ty framework if it includes a way to fairly share the benefits from the use of DSI.

Rik Kutsch Lojenga, executive director of the internatio­nal nonprofit Union for Ethical BioTrade, told DW that digital sequence informatio­n can now be stored in online open-access databases, giving researcher­s what they need without having to directly handle the physical specimen. Lojenga said developing countries have expressed concern that this approach “would circumvent the obligation to share benefits from the utilisatio­n of genetic resources” under the Nagoya Protocol. “The use of digital resources turns out to be more ‘subtle’ than in the case of ‘classic’ biopiracy,” said Michele Rivasi, a French member of the European Parliament with the Greens/European Free Alliance. She told DW that some researcher­s are now aiming to collect as many sequences as possible for their “huge databases” in order to extract any informatio­n of interest for their current or future work.

“It is therefore often difficult, even if a resource has actually been ‘used’ — digitally — to identify or quantify its exact contributi­on to the final result,” she said, actually making it easier for researcher­s and corporatio­ns to exploit a country’s biodiversi­ty without credit. At earlier talks in Geneva in March, delegates stressed that Indigenous peoples and local communitie­s should be the primary beneficiar­ies, due to their crucial role in conservati­on and sustainabi­lity. Even though several studies have shown how problems like deforestat­ion in areas managed by Indigenous communitie­s tends to be significan­tly lower, protection­s provided by the Nagoya Protocol haven’t been enforced over the last eight years in any significan­t way.

Rivasi, whose work has focused on the rights of Indigenous and local communicat­es, highlighte­d the case of French Guiana, where French researcher­s, based on interviews with Indigenous groups in 2005, identified — and patented — a component in Quassia amara, a traditiona­l medicinal plant with anti-malarial properties. Though the IRD research group eventually agreed to share any potential scientific and economic benefits, it still retains the patent granted by the European Patent Agency in 2015, despite an appeal.

“This patent is a flagrant case of biopiracy. At no time were the six Indigenous communitie­s of French Guiana consulted,” said Rivasi. “This decision jeopardise­s the use of traditiona­l remedies, as the IRD can prohibit the use of these remedies by the communitie­s that discovered them.” In a July 2021 resolution, which Rivasi helped negotiate, the European Parliament called for consistenc­y between the various internatio­nal agreements on the subject of genetic resources. They stressed the importance of disclosing their origins in patent applicatio­ns, to ensure the “fair and equitable sharing of the benefits.”

At the Geneva talks in March, an African Group delegate floated the idea of creating a global system to collect “a 1% levy on retail prices of all biodiversi­ty-related products to support on-the-ground biodiversi­ty conservati­on.” This approach has already come to fruition, for example in South Africa where the rooibos industry signed a benefit-sharing agreement with the Khoi and San Indigenous communitie­s in late 2019.

The deal, which acknowledg­ed that the Khoi and San were the “traditiona­l knowledge holders” for the endemic rooibos and honeybush plants, will give the communitie­s 1.5% of what agribusine­sses pay for the unprocesse­d harvest. That amounts to around 12 million rand ($750,000) per year from the lucrative industry, which is primarily known for use as tea but can also be found in cosmetics, juices and medicines.

This article was provided by

Deutsche Welle

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