Slide1:
FAO-EBRD Project Tbilisi, Georgia – 27 November 2007
TRIPS
- GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATIONS -
Wolf R. Meier-Ewert
WTO Secretariat
Structure of presentation: Structure of presentation Current Regime for GIs under the TRIPS Agreement (Section 3 of Part II)
On-going discussions in the WTO:
Review of application of Section 3
Multilateral System of Notification and Registration for GIs for wines and spirits
Issues of extension of Additional Protection to goods other than wines and spirits
„Claw-back “ provisions in Agriculture Negotiations
(Dispute Settlement Case on GI protection)
Slide3: Definition (Article 22.1)
Basic level of protection (Article 22.2-4)
Additional protection for wines and spirits (Article 23)
Exceptions (Article 24.3-9)
Negotiations (Article 24.1)
National and MFN treatment (Articles 3-5)
Procedures of acquisition & maintenance of rights if registration is foreseen (Article 62)
Enforcement (Part III)
Transition periods
Dispute settlement Relevant TRIPS Provisions
Definition Geographical Indication - Art. 22.1: Definition Geographical Indication - Art. 22.1
indications … identify a good as originating in the territory of a Member, or a region or locality in that territory, where a given quality, reputation or other characteristic of the good is essentially attributable to its geographical origin
Level of Protection: Level of Protection Outside TRIPS: national laws, bilateral, regional and other multilateral agreements
↑
Higher level of protection:
Art. 23 (wines and spirits) ↑
Minimum level: Art. 22
- Misleading/confusion test
- Unfair competition
Basic level of protection: Art. 22.2-3 : Basic level of protection: Art. 22.2-3 “Interested parties” must have legal means to prevent any use which:
misleads the public as to the geographical origin of the good
constitutes an act of unfair competition (Art. 10bis Paris Convention)
Refusal or invalidation of registration a trademark if use of the GI in the trademark would mislead the public as to origin
Additional protection for wines and spirits - Art. 23 : Additional protection for wines and spirits - Art. 23 Additional protection against use of a GI for wines on wines (and for spirits on spirits) not originating in the place indicated by the GI:
without requirement to show misleading of the public or act of unfair competition
even where the true origin of the good is indicated; and
even where the GI is accompanied by expressions, e.g. kind, type, style, imitation
Against registration as a trademark with respect to wines and spirits not having the origin indicated
Slide8: Generic terms (“customary”) (Art. 24.6)
For goods or services
For products of the vine for which indication is identical with name of a grape variety customary before 1995
Prior trademark rights (Article 24.5):
Good faith before date of application of TRIPS in the WTO Member;
Before the GI is protected in its country of origin Exceptions – Art. 24
Slide9: Certain other prior use (Article 24.4) (grand-father clause):
Goods or services
At least 10 years before signature of Marrakech or in good faith preceding that date
Personal names (Article 24.8)
GIs not protected or used in their country of origin (Article 24.9) Exceptions – Art. 24 (cont.)
Ongoing Work (1) Review of Application - Art. 24.2 : Ongoing Work (1) Review of Application - Art. 24.2 Secretariat checklist of questions (document IP/C/13 and addendum 1)
Responses from 46 Members so far (document IP/C/W117 and addenda)
Secretariat summary of the responses (document IP/C/W/253/Rev.1)
Slide11: Article 23.4 TRIPS
The 1996 Report of the TRIPS Council to the Singapore Ministerial Conference
Doha Ministerial Declaration, 1st sentence of paragraph 18
Special Session of the Council for TRIPS
Decision of 1 August 2004 on the Doha Work Programme
Hongkong Ministerial Declaration Ongoing Work (2) Multilateral System of Notification and Registration of GIs for wines and spirits
Slide12: In order to facilitate the protection of geographical indications for wines,
negotiations shall be undertaken in the Council for TRIPS
concerning the establishment of a multilateral system of notification and registration of geographical indications for wines eligible for protection in those Members participating in the system Multilateral Register (Art. 23.4):
Mandate and Objectives
Slide13: Ongoing Work (3) Multilateral System of Notification and Registration of GIs for wines and spirits Negotiating Positions:
Main differences: legal effect and participation
Two basic approaches:
Commitment to consult a data base of registered GIs; legal effects under the domestic law; voluntary participation
A registration to have certain legal effects in all Members unless objected to
Middle ground proposed Hong Kong, China: certain presumptions; voluntary participation
Ongoing Work (3) Multilateral System of Notification and Registration of GIs for wines and spirits: Secretariat’s document TN/IP/W/12: side-by-side presentation of:
TN/IP/W/8 by Hong Kong, China: in Annex A Alternative Model for a Multilateral System of Notification and Registration of Geographical Indications Established under Article 23.4 of the TRIPS Agreement
TN/IP/W/10 by the Joint proposal Group (Argentina, Australia, Canada, Chile, Costa Rica, Dom. Rep., Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala; Honduras, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Chinese Taipei and US): Draft Decision by the Council for TRIPS
TN/IP/W/11 by the European Communities: in Annex: Multilateral System of Notification and Registration of Geographical Indications.
Ongoing Work (3) Multilateral System of Notification and Registration of GIs for wines and spirits
Register Negotiations Comparison of proposals on 2 key issues: Register Negotiations Comparison of proposals on 2 key issues
Register Negotiations Comparison of proposals on 2 key issues: Register Negotiations Comparison of proposals on 2 key issues
Slide17: Documentation
Secretariat paper on multilateral notification and registration systems (TN/IP/W/4)
Draft text by the Chair (JOB(03)/75)
Report by the Chair of the Special Session (July 2007, document TN/IP/17)
Compilation of points raised and views expressed on the proposals (TN/IP/12/Add.1 and Corr.1)
Ongoing Work (4) Multilateral System of Notification and Registration of GIs for wines and spirits
Slide18: Work from 1996 on "extension"
The1996 Report of the TRIPS Council to the Singapore Ministerial Conference
Doha Ministerial Declaration, paragraph 18, 2nd sentence and paragraph 12, and the list of outstanding implementation issues
General Council Decision of 1 August 2004 on the Doha Work Programme
Ongoing Work (5) Issues of Extension of additional protection to goods other than wines and spirits
Ongoing Work (6) Issues of Extension : Ongoing Work (6) Issues of Extension What do proponents want? (TN/C/W/14, 2003)
Article 23 to apply to all GIs
Article 24 exceptions to apply mutatis mutandis
Multilateral register to be established shall be open to GIs for all products
Principal actors:
Proponents: EU, European countries, certain DCs (India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Turkey, China)
Opponents: US and most Cairns Group countries
Ongoing Work (7) Issues of Extension :
Examples of issues raised in relation to GI extension
Justification for the discrimination between product categories?
Possible benefits to GI holders?
Fairness / Rural development / Quality production / Marketing tool
Easier enforcement and no risk of GIs becoming generic
Costs to non-GI holders?
Fairness / Interests of prior trademark holders and other third parties
Re-labelling / Third country markets
More/Less risk of Confusion ?
Administrative costs? Considerable/Negligible
Ongoing Work (7) Issues of Extension
Ongoing Work (8) EC „claw back“ proposal in Agriculture: A list of names currently used by producers of agricultural products other than the right holders in the country of origin to be established so as to prohibit such use
The proposal intended to be complementary to the work on GIs in the context of TRIPS
Decision of 1 August 2004 on the Doha Work Programme; Annex A on the Framework for Establishing Modalities in Agriculture:
Issues of interest, but not agreed (para. 49) Ongoing Work (8) EC „claw back“ proposal in Agriculture
Ongoing Work (9) Dispute Settlement: Complaints:
by the US (WT/DS174/20) and Australia (WT/DS290/18)
against the EU Regulation on GIs (foodstuffs)
Panel Report circulated March 2005 (WT/DS174/R and WT/DS290/R). No Appeal.
Result: EU‘s treatment of relationship between GIs and TMs is not in violation of TRIPS, but the system discriminates against non-EU GIs and thus violates hte national treatment obligation under TRIPS
New Council Regulation (EC) N° 510/2006 of 20 March 2006, in force on 31 March 2006 (WT/DS174/25/Add.3 and WT/DS290/23/Add.3)
Ongoing Work (9) Dispute Settlement
Final remarks : GIs:
economic/trade stakes but also historical and socio-cultural dimensions
sensitive, controversial at international and national levels
lack of harmonization at national level
differing interpretations regarding WTO mandate
difficulties in discussion in the WTO because of linkages with other areas of negotiations, in particular Agriculture Final remarks
Slide24: www.wto.org
For more information:
wolf.meier-ewert@wto.org
Tel.: +41 22 739 63 44