Biopiracy new battleground between rich and poor nations
January 4th, 2010 - 7:20 pm ICT by IANSNew Delhi, Jan 4 (IANS) After climate change, biopiracy is becoming the new battleground between rich and poor nations, because rich countries are opposing a legal framework for use of biological resources, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said here Monday.
In this International Year of Biodiversity, India and other developing countries are pushing for a protocol on Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) “that will provide an opportunity to biodiversity-rich countries such as India to realise benefits for its people from the use of the biodiversity”, Ramesh said.
But industrialised countries — whose drug companies have often been accused of using traditional biological resources without payment — are opposing it, and there is little chance of the protocol being finalised by the next summit of the Convention on Biodiversity in Nagoya, Japan, this October.
India is hosting the summit after that, in 2012 in New Delhi. Ramesh pointed out that this would be 20 years after the convention was signed at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro.
But with little sign of the protocol being finalised, India will have to find its own way to safeguard its traditional knowledge, especially of medicinal plants, and for that a Traditional Knowledge Digital Library has been created with over 200,000 entries already, the minister informed.
He talked about recent successes in fighting attempts by western drug firms to patent medicines based on traditional knowledge, and hoped episodes like the patenting of neem and haldi (turmeric) could be avoided.
“An important next step is to set up a People’s Register of Biodiversity, so that traditional knowledge passed down through the oral tradition can also be documented and protected,” Ramesh said. “Kerala and Karnataka have already started doing this.”
- Cabinet approves Nagoya Protocol on access and benefit sharing - Apr 20, 2011
- India facilitating global plan to save animals and plants - Oct 28, 2010
- Big challenge to get US on board biodiversity meet: Ramesh - Oct 15, 2010
- Seminar on prevention of bio-piracy begins Tuesday - Mar 21, 2011
- Bio-piracy is biggest concern, says Jairam Ramesh - Sep 06, 2010
- Rich reluctant to pay for medicines, biodiversity deal stuck - Oct 26, 2010
- UN biodiversity summit hopes for a diluted agreement - Oct 27, 2010
- India signs Nagoya Protocol on genetic resources - May 12, 2011
- Jairam Ramesh calls for convergence on reducing biodiversity loss - May 22, 2010
- India focusing on sustainable use of bio-resources - Feb 17, 2010
- International conference on utilization of TKDL kicks off tomorrow - Mar 21, 2011
- Kerala seeks tighter laws to prevent bio-piracy - Sep 14, 2011
- Don't let frustration paralyse climate talks: UN environment chief (Interview) - May 25, 2010
- India plays mediator at biodiversity summit - Oct 25, 2010
- 'Multinationals seeking to control global farming' - Oct 25, 2010
Tags: battleground, benefit sharing, biodiversity, biological resources, climate change, earth summit in rio, environment minister, finalised, haldi turmeric, industrialised countries, jairam ramesh, legal framework, little chance, medicinal plants, nagoya japan, oral tradition, patent medicines, rich countries, rio de janeiro, traditional knowledge