OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES TRADE REPRESENTATIVE
Executive Office of the President
Washington, D.C.
20508
For Immediate Release:
September 20, 2002
U.S. and Other Trade Partners Present Positions and Proposals
to Prevent Unauthorized Use of Geographic Names
WASHINGTON - During World Trade Organization (WTO) negotiations
today, the United States joined other trade partners in proposing
a voluntary notification system to further facilitate existing protections
for geographic names for wines and spirits, such as wine from California's
Napa Valley, from unauthorized use. In separate discussions earlier
this week on rules to protect geographic indications for other products,
the United States joined Argentina, Australia, Canada, Guatemala,
and other trade partners in affirming that current trade rules provide
adequate rights and effective protections for property owners.
"I'm pleased that so many other key WTO Members have joined
us in this proposal to facilitate existing protection for geographic
names for wines and spirits with an efficient and flexible system,"
U.S. Trade Representative Robert B. Zoellick said. "Like copyrights,
patents, and trademarks, geographic indications play an important
role in protecting distinctive and specialized wine and spirits
products and ensure that consumers have consistent quality."
Geographic names or "indications" (GIs) are considered
intellectual property, like trademarks, and their unauthorized use
is currently prohibited. Global trade rules (Trade Related Aspects
of Intellectual Property, or the TRIPS Agreement) provide for two
types of geographic indications, one for wines and spirits, and
one for other all other types of GIs. The Doha Development Agenda
(the current series of ongoing multilateral trade negotiations)
requires negotiations on a notification system for geographic indications
for wines and spirits to be completed by September 2003.
With respect to the separate discussions earlier in the week, Zoellick
said, "For GIs other than wines and spirits, the Doha mandate
does not call for negotiations. We believe the current system works
well, and we share the concerns of many in the developing world
that we don't need to burden everyone with a large and costly new
framework, as some have suggested."
Joint Proposal on GIs for wine and spirits:
The joint proposal for wines and spirits builds on the strengths
of the international framework that currently protects such terms,
and, if adopted, would fulfill the mandate of the Doha Development
Agenda set by WTO Ministers last November to establish improvements
and complete negotiations by September, 2003. Joining the United
States were Argentina, Australia, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa
Rica, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras,
Japan, Namibia, New Zealand, the Philippines, and Taiwan.
Some WTO Members, such as the European Union, have made an alternative
proposal which may greatly burden the multilateral trading system
by expanding international bureaucracies and imposing complicated
procedures.
"The developing world played a key role in making Doha a success
and making their priorities everyone's priorities. The developing
world is concerned about the over-expansion of global trade rules
that will burden them with excessive red tape," added Zoellick.
"The United States and many WTO Members, including those in
the developing world, believe the current system can be improved
without creating a massively bureaucratic, expensive, and inefficient
system, and our proposal reflects that approach."
The joint proposal on wines and spirits has the following elements:
- Provides a non-burdensome, low-cost, and effective system for
notification, and protection of the geographical indications for
wines and spirits that are recognized in the national systems of
individual WTO Members. Members would notify their respective registered
or recognized geographic indications to the WTO, which would provide
all other WTO Members with a complete compilation of GIs.
- Facilitates the existing protection for wine and spirit geographical
indications under TRIPS without imposing new substantive obligations
on Members. This is in contrast to proposals tabled by other Members
which would impose new obligations and would prejudice existing
rights provided by the Agreement. In the U.S.-supported proposal,
consistent with intellectual property/trademark regimes, the burden
of enforcement would remain on the right holder, not on governments.
- Recognizes the special needs of certain developing and least
developed countries. The proposed system is consistent with the
TRIPS Agreement, is voluntary and will only place obligations on
those Members choosing to participate in the system.
- Maintains the WTO's commitment to full transparency, by making
the information generated by the system available to all Members.
- Follows the clear mandate of the TRIPS Agreement which stipulates
that WTO Members are free to determine their own appropriate method
of implementing the Agreement within their own legal system, the
proposal does not require WTO Members to change their domestic systems
for protection of geographical indications.
The European Community and Hungary have also made proposals. However,
in contrast to the proposal led by the United States, these proposals
would impose new obligations on all Members, even those that would
prefer not to be involved in the system, would require Members to
analyze and raise objections to hundreds of wine and spirit names
within an 18-month period or be required to protect these terms,
and would take away existing flexibility under the Agreement allowing
the long-standing use of common names.
These proposals demonstrate further the United States' leadership
and cooperation within the WTO on the issue of geographical indications.
In 1999, Canada, Chile, Japan and the United States tabled the first
proposal for a notification and registration system that complied
with the TRIPS Agreement mandate in Article 23.4. The proposal announced
today reflects comments made by a number of Members to improve the
structure of the 1999 text, but the fundamental elements of the
1999 proposal are maintained.
Ministers, in paragraph 18 of the Doha Ministerial Declaration,
directed the TRIPS Council to complete, by the Fifth Ministerial
Conference, the negotiations ongoing in the TRIPS Council pursuant
to Article 23.4, on the establishment of a multilateral system of
notification and registration for geographical indications for wines
and spirits. Article 23.4 states: "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."
U.S. supported joint paper for GI's other than wines and spirits:
Some WTO Members are proposing to alter international standards
on GIs for products other than wine or spirits. These proposals
may impose significant new costs on WTO Members, especially developing
and least developed Members, which will far outweigh any potential
benefits.
"Geographic terms are an important part of the intellectual
property system and are often a key part of a product's value. The
current global trade framework utilizes the domestic laws of individual
WTO Members and provides efficient and effective protection for
geographic terms," said Zoellick. "The United States and
other WTO Members strongly believe that before Members advocate
burdening developing and least-developed Members with excessive
new obligations, they should first strive to fully realize the existing
protections available under global trade rules."
"We need to make sure that we maintain the right balance -
protecting against unauthorized use of geographic terms, without
upsetting the current efficient and non-burdensome system,"
Zoellick added.
Joining the United States and Guatemala in the paper were Argentina,
Australia, Canada, Chile, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala,
New Zealand, Paraguay, the Philippines, and Taiwan.
Some proposals from other WTO Members could result in developing
nations having to fund and operate large regulatory systems to protect
global GIs for products other than wine or spirits, mostly from
the developed world, in exchange for supposed added protection for
relatively few names of interest for developing Members.
The joint paper submitted Wednesday in the WTO TRIPS Council identifies
numerous reasons why additional protection for geographical indications
for products is unnecessary given the strong protection already
provided to geographical indications for these products under TRIPS.
The joint paper also details how the costs associated with increasing
protection would far outweigh the benefits, particularly for developing
and least-developed countries.
In the United States, geographical indications such as "Stilton"
for cheese, "Parma" for ham, and "Rocquefort"
for cheese, already receive TRIPS protection as "certification
marks" administered under U.S. trademark law. The owners of
these GIs have successfully used this protection to prevent unauthorized
uses of their GIs in the U.S.
Thus, the French GI "Rocquefort," which identifies an
indigenous cheese from France, can be asserted to prevent unauthorized
use of the term "Rocquefort" (or a similar term) for any
cheese - or related product - that falsely suggests a connection
to the "Rocquefort" cheese from France.
Unfortunately, not all WTO Members have implemented the level of
protection provided under the TRIPS Agreement, including some of
the Members (such as the European Union) that are demanding new
negotiations to increase protection. Implementing the existing protection
available under the Agreement would not only ensures protection
for the geographical indications used by their own producers but
also the geographical indications of other WTO Members.
Both the joint proposal on GIs for wine and spirits, and the joint
paper for GIs other than wines and spirits are available on the
USTR website, www.ustr.gov.
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