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The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture The Multilateral System of Access and Benefit-sharing 3 September, Brasilia. http://www.planttreaty.org. http://www.planttreaty.org. Background (1). Adopted in 2001 In force since 2004
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The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and AgricultureThe Multilateral System of Access and Benefit-sharing3 September, Brasilia http://www.planttreaty.org http://www.planttreaty.org
Background (1) • Adopted in 2001 • In force since 2004 • Treaty Systems made operational since 2007 • Membership: 125 Contracting Parties, open-ended
Background (2): some benefits to members • Facilitates access to 1,3 million accessions of key food crops • Facilitates benefit-sharing for genetic material: • provides benefit-sharing projects for farmers in developing countries • Technology transfer • Exchange of information • Recognizes farmers’ rights • Reduces transaction costs and gives support for managing PGRFA • Ensures dispute resolution on transfers of genetic material • Capacity Building Programme for Developing Countries • International legal framework for conservation, exchange and benefit-sharing for PGRFA
The scope of the Treaty is all plant genetic resources for food and agriculture J. T.Esquinas J.T.Esquinas J. T.Esquinas J. T. Esquinas
The conservation and sustainable use of plant genetic resources for food and agriculture The fair and equitable sharing of benefits derived from their use, in harmony with the Convention on Biological Diversity, for sustainable agriculture and food security What are the Treaty’s objectives?
The Multilateral System of Access and Benefit-sharing The Treaty establishes a multilateral system, both to facilitate access to plant genetic resources for food and agriculture, and to share, in a fair and equitable way, the benefits arising from their use.
The Multilateral System ... • ... consists of genetic material of a set of crops, listed in Annex 1 to the International Treaty, and other crops; • Those crops provide about 80% of our food from plants.
The Multilateral System “pools” these plant genetic resources • They are available for research, training and breeding under a Standard Material Transfer Agreement (SMTA); • Recipients must continue to make the materials received available; • “Intellectual property or other rights that limit access to the plant genetic resources for food and agriculture, or their genetic parts and components, in the form received from the Multilateral System” may not be claimed.
Material is put into the MLS by ... • Contracting parties and the institutions they control; • International Institutions that conclude agreements with the Governing Body under Article 15 of the Treaty; • Natural and legal persons—anyone, that is—within the jurisdiction of Contracting Parties.
The MLS does not cover ... • ... Genetic material of Annex I crops exchanged before the entry into force of the International Treaty; • ... Only Annex I crops: there are non-Annex I accessions that are shared at MLS conditions (e.g. those of the International Agricultural Research Centers).
Voluntary contributions PrivateSector The genepool R&D info MLS mechanisms under direct control of GB Others The benefit-sharing fund 0,77% of net sales SMTA3 100,000+ transfer/year PrioritiesCriteria Operational Procedures R2 SMTA2 R1 GB Recipients: farmers in developing countries who conserve and sustainably utilize PGRFA SMTA1 P1 On-farm conservation Information exchange & tech.transfer Sustainable use Others CP Int’l org Natural and legal person
Benefits of the Multilateral System MLS is a day-to-day functional system; Low transaction costs; Provides public and private breeders with a wide range of plant genetic resources; Supports farmers in developing countries; Provides stakeholders with a clear framework within which to plan investments.
Key MLS Implementation Issues Ensure dispute resolution for transfers of genetic material; Apply Treaty’s provisions and SMTA clauses in the light of users’ experience; Ensure a transparent, efficient and effective utilization of financial resources.
Instruments and intersessional mechanisms • Ad Hoc Third Party Beneficiary Committee • Third Party Beneficiary Procedures • Ad Hoc Technical Advisory Committee on the Standard Material Transfer Agreement and the Multilateral System • Opinions • Ad Hoc Advisory Committee on the Funding Strategy • Annexes to Funding Strategy and Strategic Plan for Benefit-Sharing Fund
Recap The Treaty implements a binding ABS system that operates at three levels: - international (GB guidance) - national (genebanks, in situ) - users (SMTA); Provisions of the Treaty impact upon daily operations of genebanks, plant breeders and farmers; The Treaty has specialized & in-built mechanisms to guide its evolution.