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A new international regime: how does it affect botanic gardens? Kate Davis CBD Unit, Conventions and Policy Section, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew Eurogard IV 18-22 Sept 2006, Prague
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Outline Why an international regime on access to genetic resources and benefit- sharing? What might change? Why is this relevant to botanic gardens? What can botanic gardens do and how can we be involved?
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Access and benefit-sharing: ‘the grand bargain’ The fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising out of the utilization of genetic resources
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Article 15 Follow national laws Facilitate access Excludes pre-CBD Prior informed consent Mutually agreed terms Research with/in countries of origin Benefit-sharing
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National legislation on access and benefit-sharing Legislation in placePlanning legislation
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ABS timeline 1992 – CBD opened for signature 1993 – CBD comes into force 2001 – ABS working group drafts Bonn Guidelines ABS Guidelines drafted in Bonn, 2001 2002 – COP6 adopts Bonn Guidelines 2002 – World Summit on Sustainable Development – call for new international regime 2004 – COP7 sets terms of reference for international regime negotiations 2006 – COP8 sets deadline for end of negotiations by 2010 2007 – Technical expert group to discuss certificates of origin
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Why an international regime? Bonn Guidelines voluntary Perceived over-emphasis on provider country actions Need for compliance and enforcement in ‘user’ countries Fears of biopiracy Re-open debate
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What kind of international regime? A new treaty? Or linkage between existing instruments? –Bonn Guidelines, International Treaty on PGRFA, CITES, WIPO, TRIPs Same everywhere, or different? What are the current gaps in ABS?
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Controversies Legally-binding? Facilitate access? Derivatives? Traditional knowledge? Who’s involved? www.bourzeix.com/weblog/images/galleries/blender/sharks.jpg
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What’s new? Focus on compliance by ‘users’ –Disclosure of origin/source in applications for intellectual property rights –Certificates of origin/source/legal provenance for genetic resources (GRs) We are ‘users’! ©cambridge2000.com
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Certificates of origin/source/legal provenance Mechanism to prove legal origin of/right to use GRs Who can issue a certificate? What should be certificated? –All genetic resources, pre/post CBD? –GRs collected for commercial purposes only? –Groups of specimens? Individual specimens? Samples/derivatives? –GRs collected under 1 agreement?
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Certificates Tracking backwards and/or forwards? Duplicates, samples, progeny? Paper, barcodes or alphanumeric code? Checkpoints? Facilitation/exemption for non- commercial collections? Who benefits and who pays the costs? …What’s the alternative?
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‘Life of a specimen’ case studies Smithsonian Institution –500,000 transactions/year Natural History Museum –£22m to digitise all botanical specimens –£142m to digitise & barcode Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew –low risk (herbarium specimens) vs high risk (seeds) Collections Management Unit Kew Herbarium
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Exchange at Kew (2004) 20003100 (some from Kew) DNA bank 2000Living collections 6003800Seed Bank 24000 + 11000 loans 37000 + 13000 loans 6300 from Kew fieldwork Herbarium Supply/LoanAcquisitionsCollection 1200
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Implications? New access procedures More formal agreements (access and transfer) Clearer distinction between commercial and non- commercial use? Interest in use of ex situ collections for bioprospecting? More tracking and reporting for everyone Greater need to understand, network and lobby
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Now what? © Kate Davis
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Institutional use and exchange Get material/ information legally …with PIC & mutually agreed terms Use according to terms of acquisition Supply according to terms of acquisition Institution
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Guidelines, codes & tools Principles on Access to Genetic Resources and Benefit Sharing –Framework to cover acquisition (in situ and ex situ), use, supply, written agreements, curation, commercialisation, benefit-sharing International Plant Exchange Network (IPEN) –Code of conduct; facilitated exchange of living plants for non-commercial use Swiss good practice guide –Guidance for academic research; case studies ABS Management Tool –Guidance/system for users & providers ‘Principles’ group Pilot project for Botanic Gardens Cartagena, 2000
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Kew tools ABS policy based on Principles Intranet staff guide to CBD Staff training (CBD/CITES/plant health) Training course Donation letter Overseas Fieldwork Committee Agreements with partner institutions Standard documents –Donation form –Standard Material Supply Agreement –Use letter Benefit-sharing trust fund for plant auction
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Stay in the loop Meet your CBD National Focal Point Keep in touch with (or join!) your country’s CBD delegation How would certificates/disclosure affect your institution? And how would this affect your country’s ability to contribute to CBD goals?
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Show you’re worth it Build trust –Adopt institutional ABS policy –Be clear about research links to universities/industry, bioprospecting and intent to commercialise –Work on ‘housekeeping’ Demonstrate (and keep track of) effective benefit-sharing Contribute to national CBD reports
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Prepare for debate: questions for collections What kinds of collections does your garden hold? Do you do fieldwork abroad? Do you currently have a policy? A Material Supply Agreement? Do you database your specimens? (All/some?) Specimen flow: how many transfers in and out? (Loans/donations/samples) Do you track transfers? How? How do you keep track of special terms on specimens? Do you have links to universities? How do you accept/supply material? Do you have links to industry? (Pharmaceutical/botanicals/agricultural/horticultural) Do you have plant sales? What kinds of plants do you sell? What types of benefits do you share? How?
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Further information CBD website www.biodiv.orgwww.biodiv.org Principles, IPEN, ABS case studies www.bgci.org/abs www.bgci.org/abs Swiss good practice guide http://abs.scnat.ch http://abs.scnat.ch CBD for Botanists www.kew.org/data/cbdbotanists.html www.kew.org/data/cbdbotanists.html ABS Management Tool www.iisd.org/abs www.iisd.org/abs Science and Development Network www.scidev.net www.scidev.net Kew CBD Unit cbdunit@kew.org www.kew.org/conservation cbdunit@kew.org www.kew.org/conservation
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