Dear All,Global experience since CBD came into force in 1992 proved that 
benefit sharing, both as an incentive for conservation as well as royalties for 
access to traditional knowledge, is akin to fetching water in a sieve.
Regulating access to genetic resources and equitable sharing of commercial 
benefits of biodiversity are among the most contentious issues under the 
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). The tenth Conference of Parties, 
scheduled October 18-29 in Japan, is expected to evolve an international regime 
on access and benefit sharing, also called ABS, from genetic resources. 
However, the idea of ABS itself remains a pipe dream.
Pl. See our article in the latest issue of Down to Earth.( 
http://www.downtoearth.org.in/node/2012)

Thanks
Priyan

Water in a sieveAuthor(s): Priyadarsanan Dharma RajanK D PrathapanIssue 
Date: 2010-10-15Don’t confine global resources to national boundariesRegulating 
access to genetic resources and equitable sharing of commercial benefits of 
biodiversity are among the most contentious issues under the Convention on 
Biological Diversity (CBD). The tenth Conference of Parties, scheduled October 
18-29 in Japan, is expected to evolve an international regime on access and 
benefit sharing, also called ABS, from genetic resources. However, the idea of 
ABS itself remains a pipe dream.A major snag in CBD is a shift in focus from 
the ecological and scientific value of biodiversity to its commercial value. 
The biodiversity-rich developing nations had high expectations from CBD. They 
succeeded in establishing sovereign rights of states over their biological 
resources, besides inclusion of equitable sharing of commercial benefits as one 
of CBD’s objectives.State ownership
 over biodiversity, however, ignores the world’s interdependence on genetic 
resources and the evolutionary history of crop plants. Cultivated plants have 
originated in different parts of the world, so nations are in a complex network 
of plant genetic interdependence. No region can afford to isolate itself, or be 
isolated, from access to plant germplasm of other regions.The alienation of 
biodiversity from the common heritage of humanity would adversely affect global 
food security, biodiversity research, investment and international relations. 
Moreover, livelihoods of farmers and indigenous communities in the developing 
countries are innately linked to biodiversity, making them more vulnerable to 
restrictions on access to the global plant genetic resource.Global experience 
since CBD came into force in 1992 proved that benefit sharing, both as an 
incentive for conservation as well as royalties for access to traditional 
knowledge, is akin to fetching water
 in a sieve. The limitations of known ABS models are quickly realized when 
compared with benefits of free exchange of genetic material. For example, 
rubber, a crop introduced from Brazil, is the livelihood of more than one 
million farmers in Kerala. Besides being the bedrock of a robust rubber 
industry, Kerala has also achieved the highest productivity of the crop. We 
wonder whether ABS arrangement will ever match the benefit the communities gain 
out of rubber in Kerala.Patents are granted for novel inventions amenable to 
industrial applications. Traditional knowledge is developed in a cultural and 
subsistence milieu instead of a competitive industrial context and is often 
communicated and applied openly. It is a challenge to provide commercial 
benefit for such community knowledge. Protecting traditional knowledge by 
documenting it would prevent misappropriation by the private sector.A 
resolution of the UN’s Food and Agricultural Organization in
 November 2009 called upon CBD’S Conference of Parties to consider the special 
nature of genetic resources for food and agriculture because all countries 
depend on these resources to address environmental, sustainable development and 
food security challenges. It is time we realised commercial benefits derived 
through sharing of biodiversity and the associated traditional knowledge are 
insignificant in the face of vital issues such as food security. Benefit 
sharing can neither be a substitute for innovation nor a sustainable source of 
income for rural communities.A plausible change in the intellectual property 
regime to address the concerns of the developing world in addition to 
North-South collaborations in research, development and commercialisation of 
biodiversity is worth pondering. However, the South is left with few options as 
the global economic scenario warrants intellectual property protection. The 
developing world, in its own interest, should
 forgo benefit sharing to facilitate free exchange of genetic 
resources.Moreover, biological resources are truly renewable. Their use at one 
place does not mean they can’t be used elsewhere.
Priyadarsanan Dharma Rajan is with the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and 
the Environment. K D Prathapan is at the Kerala Agricultural University, 
ThiruvananthapuramSource URL: http://www.downtoearth.org.in/node/2012



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