Green Technology Should be Shared
By Mark Weisbrot
The Guardian (UK)
May 20, 2009
Big business is gearing up to fight the use of green technology by
developing countries seeking to reduce carbon emissions.
>
> The battle over intellectual property rights is likely to be one of
> the most important of this century. It has enormous economic, social
> and political implications in a wide range of areas, from medicine to
> the arts and culture - anything where the public interest in the
> widespread dissemination of knowledge runs up against those whose
> income derives from monopolising it.
>
> Now it appears that international efforts to slow the pace of
> worldwide climate disruption could also run up against powerful
> interests who advocate a fundamentalist conception of intellectual
> property
>
> According to Inside US Trade, the US chamber of commerce is gearing up
> for a fight to limit the access of developing countries to
> environmentally sound technologies (ESTs). They fear that
> international climate change negotiations, taking place under the
> auspices of the United Nations, will erode the position of
> corporations holding patents on existing and future technologies.
>
> Developing countries such as Brazil, India and China have indicated
> that if - as expected in the next few years - they are going to have
> to make sacrifices to reduce carbon emissions, they should be able to
> license some of the most efficient available technologies for doing
> so.
>
> Big business is worried about this, because they prefer that patent
> rights have absolute supremacy. They want to make sure that climate
> change talks don't erode the power that they have gained through the
> World Trade Organisation.
>
> The WTO is widely misunderstood and misrepresented as an organisation
> designed to promote free trade. In fact, some of its most economically
> important rules promote the opposite: the costliest forms of
> protectionism in the world.
>
> The WTO's rules on intellectual property (Trade-Related Aspects of
> Intellectual Property, or Trips) are the most glaring example. These
> are designed to extend and enforce US-style patent and copyright law
> throughout the world.
>
> Patents are monopolies, a restriction on trade that creates
> inefficiency in exactly the same way that tariffs, quotas or other
> trade barriers do. The economic argument for relaxing patent rules is
> therefore the same as that for removing trade barriers, only times 50
> or 100 or even 1,000 - since the average tariff on manufactured or
> agricultural goods is quite small compared to the amount by which
> patent monopolies raise the price of a pharmaceutical drug.
>
> These restrictions cost US consumers an estimated $220bn a year
> compared to competitive pricing - many times the gains from trade
> liberalisation that we could even hope to get from a successful
> completion of the current Doha round of negotiations in the WTO that
> began in 2001 in Qatar.
>
> It took years of struggle by non-governmental organisations to loosen
> the big pharmaceutical companies' stranglehold on the WTO, to the
> point where the organisation's 2001 Declaration on Trips and Public
> Health reaffirmed the rights of member countries to produce generic
> versions of patented drugs in order to promote public health.
>
> But this was just a first step, and seven years later these rights
> have been applied almost exclusively to anti-retroviral drugs for the
> treatment of Aids, in just a handful of developing countries. The
> power of the pharmaceutical companies, with their governments in the
> United States and Europe as advocates, still keeps life-saving
> medicines priced out of reach for hundreds of millions of the world's
> poor.
>
> The legal procedure that has been used - although very infrequently -
> to allow for the production of generic drugs for the treatment of Aids
> is called a compulsory license. This means that a government can
> legally authorise the production of a generic version of a drug that
> is currently under patent, provided that this is done for public
> health purposes. A royalty is paid to the patent holder, but this is
> generally not very expensive.
>
> Developing countries such as Brazil, India and China want to make sure
> that such possibilities are open for new environmentally sound
> technologies, eg in the areas of renewable energy, that might enable
> them to meet future targets for reducing carbon emissions. A Brazilian
> official noted that his country had only issued one compulsory
> license, for the anti-Aids drug Efavirenz, produced by Merck.
>
> But big business doesn't want to take any chances.
> Today they are launching a new coalition called the Innovation,
> Development and Employment Alliance (Idea).
> (You've got to love the Orwellian touch of those marketing
> consultants). Members include General Electric, Microsoft and Sunrise
> Solar. They will reportedly also be concerned with intellectual
> property claims in the areas of healthcare and renewable energy.
>
> For the intellectual property fundamentalists, the income claims of
> patent holders are property rights, seen as analogous to a homeowner's
> right to her house.
> But the framers of the US constitution (article I, section 8) didn't
> it see that way, and neither, for the most part, have US courts.
>
> Our legal system has long taken into account that protection for
> patent and copyright monopolies must reflect an important tradeoff
> between rewarding innovation and creativity, on the one hand, and
> allowing for the dissemination of knowledge and the development of new
> technologies.
>
> The WTO rules, driven by the protectionist interests of powerful
> corporations, have gone far to advance the fundamentalist view of
> intellectual property, at the expense of the world's economy and
> public health. Now our corporations fear that negotiators at the
> United Nations, under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change,
> might not share these fundamentalist views, especially when the future
> of the planet is at stake.
>
> Ten years ago environmentalists played a major role in exposing the
> built-in prejudice of WTO rules, which tend to strengthen commercial
> interests against environmental regulation. A tipping point was
> reached when they helped organise large-scale protests that shut down
> the WTO negotiations in Seattle in 1999, raising alarm bells and
> building opposition worldwide.
>
> Environmental awareness and a sense of urgency with regard to climate
> change are much more broadly shared today. The Obama administration
> should take note of this and place itself squarely on the side of
> promoting the spread of environmentally sound technologies.
Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Centre for Economic and Policy
Research, in Washington, DC.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2009/may/19/wto-cli
> mate-change-intellectual-property
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