Fair Deals
in the Search for New Natural Products
Written by Sarah A.
Laird
People and Plants is a
joint initiative of WWF, UNESCO (United
Nations Educational. Scientific and
Cultural Organization), and the Royal
Botanic Gardens, Kew, UK. The views
expressed in this paper are not
necessarily those of WWF, UNESCO, or Kew.
Any inaccuracies remain the
responsibility of the author.
Author's address:
P O Box 4004
Westport
MA 02790 USA
or
Limbe Botanic Gardens
P O Box 437
Limbe South West Province
Cameroon
The following
documents have been produced to accompany
the present report and are available (in
printed form and on diskette [basic text
only] in WordPerfect 5.1) to WWF National
Organizations, Affiliates, and Country
Offices, upon request:
Research agreements
for projects, institutions and
communities in tropical countries
Commercial agreements for biodiversity
prospecting
Sustainable sourcing of raw materials for
natural products: weighing the benefits
Related publications
available from WWF International:
Ethics,
Ethnobiological Research, and
Biodiversity. Report as part of the
WWF/UNESCO/Kew People and
Plants Initiative, April 1993.
Reprinted as Ethics, Biodiversity, and
Natural Products Development,
September 1996.
Fair Play, Fair Pay:
laws to Preserve Traditional Knowledge
and Biological Resources. Research
Report, May 1995.
Beyond Intellectual
Property Rights: Protection,
Compensation, and Community Empowerment.
A joint
WWF/International Development Research
Centre (IDRC) report, endorsed by COICA
(Indigenous Peoples Organization),
IDRC, Ottawa (in press).
Patents, Genes and
Butterflies. Are plants and indians
becoming raw materials for the gene
industry? Proceedings of
WWF-Switzerland, WWF International and
Swissaid International Symposium, Berne,
20-21 October 1994, Intermediate
Technology, London.
Editing and layout by
Tim Davis
ISBN 2-8X0X5-172-6
Originally published
May 1995 by WWF-World Wide Fund For
Nature, CH-1196, Gland, Switzerland.
Any reproduction in
full or in part of this publication must
mention the title, and credit the
above-mentioned publisher as the
copyright owner
Contents
Executive Summary
1.
Biodiversity prospecting and
conservation
2.
What is biodiversity prospecting?
3.
Local communities and biodiversity
prospecting
4.
Benefits resulting from biodiversity
prospecting
5.
Legal and policy tools for promoting
conservation, development, and the
equitable sharing of benefits
6.
Biodiversity prospecting:
Recommendations at WWF Field Project,
Country Office, and International
level
References
Executive
Summary
Biodiversity prospecting is the
exploration of biodiversity for genetic
and biochemical resources of commercial
value. Typically, samples of organisms
are collected in countries which are rich
in biodiversity, but financially poor,
and dispatched for evaluation to
laboratories in industrialized countries.
Local knowledge may be used to guide this
research, for example regarding
traditional uses of plants as medicines.
Following the Convention on Biological
Diversity (CBD), biodiversity prospecting
should be carried out in ways which
promote the capacities within source
countries to conserve biodiversity,
including through sustainable utilization
or the development of relevant technical
abilities. Biodiversity prospecting is an
extractive use of natural resources, and
as such has some unusual features: the
quantities of material collected are
generally very small (at least
initially), and the chance of a new
commercial product arising from any
particular sample is very low, although
benefits can be huge if this happens.
Benefits to source countries can accrue
not only when a new commercial product
emerges - which is likely to be many
years after collection of the initial
sample - but also during the phases of
initial collection, screening, and
product development.
From the conservation perspective, the
most significant categories of potential
beneficiaries within source countries are
local communities and national
institutions concerned with the
conservation of biodiversity and related
development. Biodiversity prospecting
should take place within a framework of
agreements and regulations that are
already in existence at the time when
initial samples are collected.
This paper describes how WWF can help
promote such agreements and regulations
at project, national, and international
levels.
Principal conclusions for the project
level are:
- WWF can play a valuable role to
ensure that biodiversity
prospecting results in benefits
to conservation and development.
WWF should not itself be a party
to agreements concerning the
collection of samples for
biodiversity prospecting.
- Agreements should be between the
collectors of the samples (or
their sponsoring organizations)
and those who are the
gatekeepers to
biodiversity (e.g. Local
communities, government
agencies). WWF should avoid being
a party to agreements because of
the potential criticism that WWF
is exploiting biodiversity for
its own benefit. Suitable roles
for WWF are rather as advisor,
facilitator, or monitor.
- There should be agreements which
specify benefits for conservation
and development for all
types of research -carried out on
WWF field projects.
- Agreements should be required
even if the research seems to be
of a totally uncommercial nature.
The boundaries between academic
and commercial research are by no
means always clear-cut. The
manner in which research is
conducted within a conserved area
creates a framework of control
over resource use (by community,
project, or government) which is
often carried over into
commercial agreements, if these
develop.
- Ethnobiological knowledge.
Special care must be taken over the
collection of ethnobiological knowledge,
for example, regarding the uses of plants
medicinally. Once such knowledge is
released into the public domain (as
through publications and databases),
communities lose forever any prospects of
control over its commercialization.
Background information on the
following subjects is available. upon
request, from WWF International to WWF
National Organizations and Country
Offices:
- Research agreements (with
examples)
- Commercial agreements (with
examples)
- Sustainable sourcing of
biological materials.
Attention is also drawn to the WWF
International publication Ethics,
Ethnobiological Research, and
Biodiversity by Dr A B Cunningham
(April 1993; reprinted as Ethics,
Biodiversity, and Natural Products
Development, September 1996), which
describes the processes involved in
biodiversity prospecting and gives
guidelines for both national regulations
and the behaviour expected of collectors
and their sponsoring organizations.
1.
Biodiversity prospecting and conservation
Once regarded as distinct entities,
conservation and development are now seen
as inextricably linked. Conservation
programmes now often incorporate the
use values of biological
resources into their plans, leaving to
the marketplace the more rapid
realization of many objectives such as
sustainable income-generation
and increased value for intact
ecosystems. Where once conservationists
might have stressed existence values, or
the ecological functions provided by
intact ecosystems, attention is now more
pragmatically leveled at the direct and
option values held within biologically
rich areas. The harvest of timber, fuel
wood, medicinal plants, wild foods, or
genes and biochemicals are seen as
potentially valuable contributions to the
conservation of an area rich in
biological diversity. The object now is
to ensure that these activities are
carried out sustainably, and
to assist in the development or increase
of the direct value of a larger number of
species or products.
Natural products have proven of
special interest in the latter category.
The scale of revenues generated from a
single natural pharmaceutical product
transform the economic arguments for
conserving biodiversity. How many public
information programmes run by
conservation organizations speak of the
undiscovered wealth of
species in tropical forests?
Concurrently, advances in screening
technologies have brought a resurgence of
interest in the natural products research
programmes of the pharmaceutical
industry. With this increased interest
have come collections of plant, insect,
fungi, and bacteria in the
biologically-rich tropical countries, and
so a demonstration of their value.
Expectations for the returns to
conservation that biochemical and genetic
resources can provide are probably raised
above the realistic. However the process
of collecting and researching as well as
commercializing natural products can
produce a number of important benefits in
the short, medium, and long term.
Biodiversity prospecting should not be
seen as a panacea of any kind, and should
always be considered as only one part of
a package of economic activities
contributing to conservation and
development objectives. It is in this
context that its benefits as well as
costs should be measured.
2. What is
biodiversity prospecting?
The term biodiversity
prospecting describes the
collection, screening, and
commercialization of natural products.
Although it has been used to cover a wide
range of commercial uses of biodiversity,
it refers in fact to a fairly narrow area
of activity, defined, in the 1993
publication Biodiversity Prospecting
as "the exploration of biodiversity
for commercially valuable genetic and
biochemical resources" (Reid et
al. 1993).
These genetic and biochemical
resources might come from plants,
insects, fungi, bacteria, or marine
organisms, and are generally supplied for
research purposes to the pharmaceutical
and agricultural industries.1
Advances in research techniques have
allowed these industries to conduct
large-scale natural products screening
programmes, which over the past decade
have increased demand for natural product
samples, many collected from the
biologically-rich tropical countries. The
bulk of these samples are collected by
sub-contracted collectors, most of whom
are based in developed countries.2
The collection of biological samples
for industry generally involves two or
sometimes three direct relationships:
- That between the company and the
contracted collector (usually
described in a contract which is
legally binding under the law of
the country in which the company
is situated)
- That between an outside collector
and in-country collaborators3
(usually more informally defined,
although increasingly detailed in
agreements of some kind, and
regulated by national
legislation)
- That between an ethnobotanical
collector and local communities
that provide traditional
knowledge on collected samples
which will subsequently be
supplied to commercial companies4
(rarely defined in any agreement
or regulated by national
legislation).
The transfer of samples from a
collector to a company is the most direct
path by which biological and cultural
diversity travels to commercial
interests, and generally the most direct
path upon which benefits return. However,
there are many other groups that are
indirectly involved in and affected by
this exchange that are not written into
two-party arrangements, but are
increasingly addressed in international
and national law and policy:
- Communities that live in
biodiversity-rich areas where
samples are collected
- National governments which, as
written into the CBD, now claim
national sovereignty over their
countrys genetic and
biochemical resources
- The international community
which, through documents and
agreements such as the CBD, have
expressed interest in the
conservation and sustainable and
equitable use of biodiversity.
3. Local
communities and biodiversity prospecting
Local communities play a number of
indirect and direct roles in biodiversity
prospecting activities. For example:
- Biological samples might be
collected from communally-held
lands, the product of generations
of stewardship
- Traditional knowledge might be
recorded and published in
academic publications or
databases, which are subsequently
consulted by industry researchers
for leads on promising species5
- Intermediary collectors might
conduct ethnobotanical studies
for commercial companies or
research institutions, such as
the National Cancer Institute in
the US, the products of which are
destined for commercial
development.
There are generally two main issues as
stake in the relationship between local
communities and biodiversity prospectors:
- The right of local communities to
control over their land and the
resources on those lands
- The right of local communities to
control over and the receipt of
benefits from the recording and
use of their knowledge.
Of primary importance is local
communities right to
self-determination and the establishment
of land and resource rights. Following on
this, traditional knowledge must be
recognized as an intellectual creation of
communities and not the heritage of
mankind. In addition, communities
must be given control over the process by
which their knowledge is recorded and
used (including the choice of whether or
not to participate), and the nature of
benefits that will be returned to them.
There are a number of international and
national laws which might be used to do
this, including human rights law,
environmental law, intellectual property
law, transnational business regulation,
and national or local tort and property
law, although in each case a fundamental
choice must be made between public or
private law, national or international
law, and state responsibility or
corporate/individual liability (Shelton
1993). In many cases, western systems of
law may not be appropriate to a
particular community, and may not best
protect communal systems of knowledge
(Brush 1994; Pinel and Evans 1994;
Shelton 1993; Posey et al. 1994).
A number of communities, such as the Kuna
in Panama, and the Awa in Ecuador, have
designed research agreements and codes of
conduct for visiting researchers, or have
entered into commercial agreements, which
require respect of cultural norms, prior
informed consent, and transfer of
technology and expertise.
4. Benefits
resulting from biodiversity prospecting
There are numerous benefits that can
result from biodiversity prospecting, and
can accrue to a variety of players within
biodiversity-rich countries. For
biodiversity prospecting to maximize its
contributions to both conservation and
development, however, a wide spectrum of
individuals and groups must benefit,
often in distinctly different ways, and
this must occur in the short, medium and
long term. Royalty payments into a global
fund ten years down the road, no matter
what the magnitude, will never have as
great an impact as benefits scattered
both spatially and temporally. It is in
the wide and creative disbursal of
benefits throughout the research and
development (R&D), as well as the
commercialization, phase that
biodiversity prospecting will have the
most lasting effect. One must look at the
process by which samples are collected,
chemicals extracted, and R&D
conducted, in order for the many spin-off
benefits for biodiversity science,
medicinal plant research, conservation,
and overall development to become fully
apparent.
For example, we need look no further
than medicine. The pharmaceutical
industry is one of the major
international players in biodiversity
prospecting. This largely developed
country based industry spends more than
US$200 million to develop each
pharmaceutical drug, devoting its
energies to isolating compounds.6
Traditional and international herbal
medicine, on the other hand, rely on a
combination of compounds contained within
a single plant, or a combination of
plants, to treat disease. Plant-based
pharmaceutical drugs were estimated to
make up 25 per cent of all
pharmaceuticals sold and to generate
sales of US$15.5 billion in the United
States in 1990 (Principe in Reid et al.1993).
Traditional medicine, on the other hand,
will not generate any hard currency
revenues. Yet according to the World
Health Organisation, traditional, largely
plant-based, medical systems continue to
provide primary health care to over 80
per cent of the world's population. For
most biodiversity-rich countries,
therefore, traditional medicine is
central to national health care,
particularly in light of the drain made
on national economies from expenditures
on imported pharmaceuticals.
On the surface, pharmaceutical drug
development appears remote from
traditional medicine, however the
research conducted by the pharmaceutical
industry into local plant medicines, and
the technology and expertise that can be
transferred to biodiversity-rich regions
through biodiversity prospecting
collaborations, can have immediate
benefits for local primary health care
based on traditional medicine. Many of
the tropical country research
institutions that collaborate on
biodiversity prospecting research also
conduct programmes to record,
scientifically study, and distribute
medicines based upon traditional uses of
medicinal plants. These programmes shore
up and build upon local knowledge of
medicinal plants and existing medical
systems in order to develop more
effective and affordable health care
systems within the context of local
health, economic, and social conditions.
Most of these tropical country research
institutions are desperately in need of
the type of assistance biodiversity
prospecting collaborations can provide,
including funds, and the transfer of
technology and expertise, and many do not
have access to the type of screening and
research techniques available in research
and commercial laboratories in developed
countries.
Agricultural resea.ch institutions and
botanic gardens might benefit from
biodiversity prospecting through
collaborations on the development of
sustainable supplies of raw materials for
commercial products. The US National
Cancer institute, for example, has
recently invested in the research and
development of a sustainable supply of Ancistrocladus
korupensis in Cameroon (a rainforest
climber which has yielded a chemical lead
for the possible treatment of HIV
infection). Ideally, the funds and
expertise supplied for this research will
help build expertise and capacity within
in-country institutions, and will assist
in the development of sourcing strategies
for other plants of commercial
importance.
Biodiversity prospecting can build
important collaborations between tropical
country researchers and communities and
researchers in developed countries.
Tropical country researchers and
communities must always structure their
relationships with commercial partners
with care, but the focus of these
relationships should not be solely on
monetary gains, since many of the
spin-off benefits achieved through the
research process might prove more
significant. It is important for research
and conservation organizations to
approach biodiversity prospecting with an
eye towards the gains that might be
achieved from the process of
biodiversity prospecting, and not merely
from a commercial product that may, or
may not, appear at the end of a lengthy
R&D phase.
Examples of
benefits resulting from
biodiversity prospecting Local
communities
- Funds for legal battles
related to land and
resource rights
- Improved income
generation from forest
resources through
sustainable sourcing
programmes
- Assistance with the
establishment of
value-added industries,
including processing of
extracts from plants for
local and regional use,
and improved access to
markets
- Funds for infrastructure
assistance, such as
road-building and schools
Health care providers and
essential medical
supplies Management,
legal, scientific, and
administrative training
useful to the development
of future commercial
collaborations A
community trust fund for
future needs as
determined by community
associations.
National research
institutions
- Education and training in
collection and laboratory
techniques
- Sharing of laboratory
results for use in
research institution
programmes, including
those that might have
immediate local use such
as the standardization of
local traditional
medicine
- The transfer of
technology and
institutional
infrastructure-building
- Contributions of
expertise and information
to institutional research
programmes, such as
country floras, national
databases, and the
deposit of herbarium
specimens in national and
local herbaria
- Field and laboratory
equipment Scientific
literature Educational
materials Research
exchanges with companies
and academic institutions
Collaboration on research
programmes which assist
scientists in
participating more fully
in the international
scientific community,
including travel to
conferences,
co-authorship on
publications, and
research exchanges with
other tropical country
institutions
- Management, legal, and
administrative training
useful to the development
of future commercial
collaborations.
National governments
- Contributions to national
biodiversity science,
inventories, protected
area management, etc.
- Scientific contributions
in the area of medicinal
plant research which can
be applied to national
primary health care
programmes, many of which
build in part on local
medicinal plant knowledge
- Assistance with research
on tropical country
diseases
- Licenses for the
manufacture and sale of
commercial products
within the country, or
region
- Distribution of drugs at
cost, or as part of a
donation programme
- Transferof technologies
and expertise useful to
developing national
research capabilities and
industries that utilize
local biodiversity
- Funds for a national
protected area system and
conservation and
development programmes.
|
5.
Legal and policy tools for promoting
conservation, development, and the
equitable sharing of benefits
Research agreements
The technologies, expertise, and
changes in thinking resulting from
biodiversity prospecting will likely far
outweigh in importance the commercial
revenues. What this means is that a great
deal more attention must be paid to the
R&D phase of biodiversity prospecting
relative to the commercial phase.
Although the appropriate commercial
relationships must be in place, a
research relationship reflecting the best
possible terms for local communities and
tropical countries must be established
long before commercialization.
Tropical country research institutes
and conservation projects have long
collaborated with outside scientists, and
have relied heavily on their expertise to
develop their research and knowledge
base, and management plans for conserved
areas. Tropical countries will continue
to depend upon outside expertise, but
increasingly this will be done on terms
set by tropical country institutions. In
order to set these terms, research
agreements must be put in place which
clearly outline the responsibilities and
expectations of each party. The point is
not to burden researchers with
unnecessary bureaucracy, or to tax
research programmes to the point that
they cannot function. Rather, it is to
create a framework in which all research
- whether academic or commercial -
contributes in some way to conservation
and development activities in the areas
in which it takes place, and to transfer
the power to determine the nature of
these contributions from researchers to
local communities, projects, research
institutes or, in some cases,
governments. These two elements form the
basis of research agreements: control
by local projects and communities over
the nature of research projects, and the
use of resulting information, whether
commercial or academic (including the
choice not to commercialize); and the contribution
of research programmes to the management
costs or needs of conserved areas, and
the equitable return of benefits to local
projects and communities from any
commercial activity.
It is important for conservation and
development projects to tackle the
implementation of research agreements as
a precursor to any biodiversity
prospecting-related programme. The manner
in which research is conducted within a
conserved area creates a framework of
community, project, or government control
over resource use which is often carried
over into commercial resource use. If
communities or other interested parties
are not consulted and do not have control
over the manner in which academic
research is conducted, then they are
unlikely to have any say in the extension
of this research into commercial areas,
or any control over the indirect
commercialization that often occurs
through academic publications, databases,
and other forms of distribution common to
pure research.
Commercial Agreements
Commercial collections are distinct
from research collections, although the
division between the two can sometimes
blur, and research agreements can form
the basis of a relationship which
subsequently develops into a commercial
relationship under renegotiated terms.
Commercial agreements reflect a
previously agreed upon relationship,
generally between collectors and
companies. Biodiversity prospecting
contracts are typically structured around
the supply of services relating to
biological samples. Collectors might
agree to collect, taxonomically identify,
process, resupply, and in some cases
conduct further research in the
laboratory on a supply of samples, which
are then shipped to soliciting companies
for screening. Companies, in turn, might
provide collectors with per-sample fees,
advance payments, their best efforts to
screen samples, reports on the results of
their research, training for
collaborating scientists, and royalties
on any compounds commercialized from the
collected samples. Commercial agreements
will include provisions not generally
part of research agreements, for example
advance payments, intellectual property
rights, exclusivity, royalties, and
future supplies of raw materials.
National policy and legislation
National policy and legislation forms
the framework in which research and
commercial agreements function. Contract
law defines the scope of agreements, how
they are formed, and how they are
enforced, and creates the background for
biodiversity prospecting agreements.
However, biodiversity prospecting may be
subject to numerous national policies and
laws, including intellectual property
law, environmental, and natural resource
laws (Gollin et al. 1994).
Following on the Convention on
Biological Diversity, signatory nations
will design national legislation to
promote the goals of conservation,
sustainable development, and the
equitable sharing of the benefits from
biodiversity prospecting. As an
international treaty, the Convention
nationalizes all genetic and biochemical
resources, and national legislation will
determine the extent to which control
over these resources is shared with
regional or local governments and local
communities, and will include terms for
access, and determine rights to
commercialization. These laws will
generally require collectors to obtain
prior informed consent through some type
of permit process, and will require
payment or other consideration to the
government or local population as a
condition of obtaining a collection
permit. Although each country will likely
emphasize different policies in its laws,
each will prove critical to the creation
of incentives and disincentives for
research and commercialization of
biological and genetic resources, and the
return of benefits to local communities
and other stewards of biodiversity.7
International policy and
legislation
There are a number of international
legal standards which will affect
biodiversity prospecting activities in
the future. Most relevant is the
Convention on Biological Diversity, which
provides a blueprint for
commercialization of biodiversity based
on the objectives of conservation of
biodiversity, sustainable development,
and the fair and equitable sharing of
benefits, resources, and technologies.
The Convention reflects the principle of
reciprocity between access to genetic
resources and the transfer of relevant
technology, recognizing national
sovereignty over these resources. The
Convention calls on countries to develop
plans, programmes, and policies for
conservation and sustainable use (Article
6), to conduct inventory and monitoring
of biodiversity (Article 7), and to
promote in situ and ex situ
conservation (Articles 8 and 9).
Countries are directed to analyze and
minimize the impact of development on
biodiversity (Articles 10 and 14), and to
conduct research, training, and education
in relevant areas (Articles 12 and 13).
Article 15 directs countries to
facilitate access, not to "shut the
greenhouse door", although access
shall be on mutually agreed terms and
subject to the prior informed consent of
the contracting party (Gollin et al.
1994). Other international legal
standards that will influence
biodiversity prospecting activities
include Agenda 21, the Framework
Convention on Climate Change, GATT (now
WTO, the World Trade Organization),
GATT-TRIPS, and intellectual property
treaties such as the Paris Convention and
Patent Cooperation treaty on patents, the
Berne Convention on copyright, the Madrid
Convention on trademarks, and WIPO. In
addition, international human rights law,
in conjunction with other international
law, can provide a framework for the
protection of the cultural and
intellectual creations of indigenous
peoples.
6.
Biodiversity prospecting: Recommendations
at WWF Field Project, Country Office, and
International level
Field project level
1. Design and implement research
agreements for field projects
Because field projects operate at the
point of collection, it is of primary
importance that field managers are
well-informed of the implications of
research and commercial activities in the
areas they manage. Building on this
understanding, each field manager should
develop research agreements that clearly
define the needs and expectations of the
project and each visiting researcher. The
CBD calls for the development of national
conservation strategies, establishing
systems of protected areas, and the
inventory and monitoring of biodiversity.
Over the coming years there will
presumably be an increase in research of
importance for the management of
biodiversity-rich areas. It is important,
however, that the most is made of these
and other research activities in both the
short and long term. All research,
whether academic or commercial, should
contribute in some way to conservation
and development activities in the areas
in which it takes place. Subsequently,
the power to determine the nature of
these benefits should be transferred from
the researchers to local communities,
ecosystem managers, research institutes
or, in some cases, governments. With both
research and commercial agreements, it is
important that an understanding is
reached prior to the initiation of
a workplan, since it is very difficult to
adequately address many potential
complications after they have arisen.
Field managers should be particularly
careful about ethnobotanical collections
undertaken in collaboration with WWF.
Although ethnobotanical information can
be extremely useful for protected area
management and a wide range of
conservation and development activities,
field staff must carefully control the
collection, dissemination, and use of
this knowledge should local communities
not undertake these responsibilities
themselves. Once released into the public
domain, such as through publications and
databases, communities lose forever what
control they might once have had over its
use and commercialization. Although
western law, science, and commercial
traditions might be foreign to some
communities living in these areas, a
programme introducing the dynamic of a
potentially commercial relationship to
communities must also attempt to
introduce systems to control and monitor
this dynamic.
2. Assist in the development of
community institutions
The Convention on Biological Diversity
nationalizes biological and genetic
resources, and refers only generally to
the participation and benefit sharing of
local communities. In order to maximize
the positive impact of biodiversity
prospecting activities on conservation
and development, however, communities
living in and around biodiversity-rich
areas must provide informed consent and
share significantly in the benefits
resulting from any commercialization of
biological resources. The manner in which
this occurs will vary by case, and will
depend upon local cultural, social,
political, and economic conditions.
A number of questions arise when
considering the practical manner in which
benefits will be distributed (in
what form? and to whom?
are two of the most often cited), but
some communities and groups have begun to
answer these questions, and there is much
to learn from analyzing their efforts
(e.g. the Kuna in Panama, the Awa in
Ecuador, the Aguaruna in Peru, and the
cases resulting from the NSF-NIH-AID
international Cooperative Biodiversity
Groups in Africa and Latin America).
WWF field programme staff can provide
communities with information on the
efforts of WWF and other international
groups. In cases where it is needed, WWF
staff might also act as a catalyst for
discussions on the development of
creative mechanisms and institutions for
the assertion of control over and return
of benefits from research and commercial
activities, such as community
associations, trust funds, and escrow
accounts; staff might also provide
training and assistance in drafting model
codes and agreements, linking communities
with scientific, business, and legal
expertise, and facilitating and
monitoring resulting research and
commercial relationships. Each case will
vary and it is certain that there is no
blueprint for the sharing of benefits
with communities. However, specific
community initiatives and field projects
will play an important role in
fine-tuning and defining the parameters
of this debate, and WWF staff might be
well-positioned to assist in this
process.
3. Assist local communities and
national research institutions in the
development of sustainable sourcing
strategies for species of commercial
interest
The resupply of samples for research
purposes and, subsequently, industrial
scale collection or cultivation of plants
of the manufacture of commercial products
might form one part of a package of
economic activities undertaken by groups
living in or around biologically-rich
areas. The sustainable supply of
materials in this form has featured
prominently in discussions of the
benefits that biodiversity prospecting
might produce. It is worthwhile for
project managers to critically examine
this assumption in light of local
conditions. However, should local
communities and research institutions
choose to proceed, WWF might serve as a
useful collaborator, supplying incountry
scientists with advice, access to outside
experts, and playing a monitoring role in
the future production of the product,
ensuring environmental and social
standards. It is unwise for WWF projects
to actively produce and sell raw
materials for pharmaceutical or
agrochemical companies, but their role as
advisor, facilitator, and monitor for
local communities and researchers could
prove invaluable.
4. Develop collaborations between
field projects and national research
institutions
Biodiversity prospecting activities
are by nature multi-disciplinary,
combining a variety of research
disciplines, as well as legal and
commercial interests, not commonly united
on a given project. Unfortunately,
research institutes do not generally form
multi-disciplinary collaborations; in
tropical countries this could prove a
major obstacle to the development of
in-country biodiversity prospecting
capacity. Field projects with specific
needs for sciences related to
biodiversity prospecting, such as botany,
ethnobotany, natural products chemistry,
pharmacology, horticulture, and agronomy,
can serve an important role in bringing
together national researchers in
collaboration on projects. Each
individual field project will be
ill-equipped to develop its own
herbarium, natural products laboratory ,
and team of botanists and
horticulturalists, and this would be a
waste of limited resources. Projects
should make every effort to use
in-country expertise and in-country
research institutions, building on
existing structures, rather than starting
from scratch to develop biodiversity
prospecting related capability within
each project.
5. Assist local communities and
research institutes in adding value to
biodiversity prospecting samples
Ideally, all biodiversity prospecting
samples would be processed to some degree
in-country. In order to achieve this most
effectively, field projects should work
with in-country research institutions to
either establish small-scale processing
facilities on-site (which might also be
used for other programme activities), or
in shipping samples to research
institutes for processing and further
study. Value-added samples
also include the contributions of
traditional knowledge and initial
scientific studies conducted by
in-country researchers (although this is
highly dependent upon the country in
question, as there is an enormous range
between countries of expertise in natural
products chemistry and pharmacology).
Country office level
6. Build capacity within the
organization.
Country offices should build expertise
within their staff relating to the
commercialization of biological
resources, including biodiversity
prospecting. All field staff should be
well-briefed on the implications of
collections of both biological materials
and traditional knowledge, and
information should be provided for
discussion among their colleagues in the
field.
A working group on issues surrounding
commercialization should be established
within the country office, so that
specific issues might be addressed as
they arise, and so that staff will remain
abreast of this quickly moving field.
This group should formulate a country
office policy relating to biodiversity
prospecting-related issues, which can be
distributed to all country staff and
collaborating governmental and
non-governmental institutions. Since
country offices vary significantly in
size and resources, they will not all be
able to achieve the same objectives.
However, at the very least, a few staff
members should be designated contacts for
biodiversity prospecting-related
information.
7. Educate the scientific community
and government officials
Many researchers and government
officials that are directly or indirectly
involved in biodiversity prospecting
activities do not have access to even
basic information on the issues raised by
this work, the manner in which other
groups and governments in the tropics
have become involved in biodiversity
prospecting, and the real weight of the
many costs and benefits involved. WWF
country offices could hold informal
workshops with various groups involved in
biodiversity prospecting. These should
include natural products researchers,
government officials, local plant
medicine companies, national herbaria and
botanic garden staff, and conservation
and development programme staff.
In addition to providing individuals
with a general background on the issues
involved, WWF could supply groups, as
needed, with sample research agreements,
commercial contracts, national
legislation, information on
ethnobotanical collections and the
sustainable sourcing of medicinal plants,
and case studies from other regions of
the world. WWF International might supply
country offices with the materials
necessary for this, including the reports
on Research agreements for
projects, institutions and communities in
tropical countries,
Commercial agreements for
biodiversity prospecting,
Sustainable sourcing of raw
materials for natural products: weighing
the benefits, and other related
publications such as those listed inside
the front cover of this report.
8. Hold training workshops for
selected members of staff, local
communities, and researchers in the
development and negotiation of commercial
relationships
In many cases, the lack of business
and legal, rather than scientific, skills
limits a country's ability to more
actively engage in biodiversity
prospecting activities. While attention
has been paid to the need for a transfer
of technology and expertise necessary for
tropical countries to better utilize
their biodiversity, little has been
directed at the importance of developing
business and legal skills. Knowledge of
industry, the resource market, and legal
precedents in these industries, which
will often guide negotiations in the
newly established area of biodiversity
prospecting, are critical to the
development of equitable
relationships. WWF might hold training
workshops specifically on business and
legal aspects of biodiversity prospecting
for local lawyers, government officials,
community representatives, and
researchers. Should specific cases arise,
WWF, as part of its facilitator role,
might link in-country parties and lawyers
with pro bono lawyers from outside the
country (e.g. INBio relies on lawyers
from the United States) who can
complement their expertise.
9. Advise the government on the
drafting of national legislation and
policy
Although a variety of national laws
and policies will influence the manner in
which biodiversity prospecting is
conducted in a country, of most immediate
importance in biodiversity-rich countries
is the drafting of legislation to
implement the objectives of the CBD:
conservation of biodiversity, sustainable
development, and the equitable sharing of
benefits. Most developing country
governments are not in a position to
draft such legislation, whether from a
chronic lack of information, confusion
within ministries as to responsibility
for this work, or the greater immediate
importance of other social, political, or
economic concerns. In conjunction with
other nongovernmental and governmental
bodies, WWF country offices could assist
governments, as needed, in collecting
relevant information, meeting to discuss
key issues, and drafting and reviewing
legislation.
As governments become more involved in
biodiversity prospecting, they are likely
to create or delegate responsibility to,
for example, a national
biodiversity board. Such a board
might develop and implement a system to
monitor and regulate biodiversity
prospecting activities nationwide.
Whether these duties are delegated or
remain in existing government ministries,
a great deal of advice and outside
assistance will be needed by the
government, some of which WWF could
provide.
10. In conjunction with
governments, provide a facilitating,
advisory, and monitoring service for
biodiversity prospecting activities
Biodiversity prospecting is an
extremely sensitive area, and one which
raises numerous concerns regarding
national sovereignty and commercial
interests. WWF country offices and field
projects are not well-suited and are
therefore advised not to engage directly
in biodiversity prospecting activities.
Rather than trying to assemble the
natural products, agronomic, business,
and legal expertise necessary to properly
engage in biodiversity prospecting, WWF
is better suited to a position as
advisor, facilitator, and monitor of
these relationships.
National research institutions,
universities, herbaria and botanic
gardens are the natural beneficiaries of
many of the benefits resulting from
biodiversity prospecting. Rather than
supplanting the potential contributions
of these largely under-funded and
'under-networked' institutions, WWF
should support and strengthen them
through an advisory and facilitation
role; a role which few organizations have
assumed, even though there is a demand
for it within tropical country
institutions. There are numerous
researchers and research institutions
within tropical countries capable of
actively participating in biodiversity
prospecting relationships. Often, it is
the lack of access to potential
collaborators, and the type of
infrastructure-building assistance that
biodiversity prospecting relationships
can provide, rather than a lack of
expertise, that limits their involvement.
Linking tropical country research
institutions with outside collaborators,
advising these institutions on these
relationships, and monitoring the future
activities of these collaborators to
ensure that maximum benefits accrue to
conservation, research, and local
communities, is a role that well suits
WWF' s organizational mission.
In many countries governments will
monitor biodiversity prospecting
relationships. In these cases, WWF should
work closely with government officials in
the design and implementation of
monitoring programmes, to which the
international WWF community could
contribute a check on the activities of
collectors and companies based outside
the region.
International level
11. The type of activities
described above, at. both the field and
country office levels, will require a
great deal of support from staff at WWF
International. Biodiversity
prospecting is constantly growing
and evolving to include a wide range and-
variety of issues relevant to field and
country office staff, and at such a rapid
rate that in-country staff may have
difficulty following developments without
outside assistance. Furthermore, the bulk
of research and commercial parties
actively involved in biodiversity
prospecting, and the NGO and governmental
community analyzing and meeting to
discuss these issues, are based in
developed countries. In order to
facilitate and monitor biodiversity
prospecting relationships effectively,
WWF in-country staff will require the
multi-disciplinary (scientific, legal,
business, and human rights) expertise of
a WWF International staff actively
involved in a rapidly evolving dialogue.
It is too much to expect each country
office to acquire or track down the
necessary background and expertise each
time a crisis arises, or a group asks for
advice. Far better for there to exist,
somewhere within the WWF
family, a group that could
more systematically educate, train, and
develop policy relating to biodiversity
prospecting, as well as address the
specific queries and concerns of field
and country staff as they arise. This
might initially take the form of an
advisory group, but would ideally develop
into a working, multi-disciplinary team.
There is a great need for such a group to
serve both WWF and the
conservation-development community at
large.
Footnotes
- The main
industries involved in
biodiversity prospecting are the
pharmaceutical, which generally
searches for new chemical leads,
and the agricultural, which
generally seeks out new genes for
breeding programmes or genetic
engineering. There is a great
deal of overlap in the area of
agrochemicals, and a number of
companies are involved in both
pharmaceutical and agrochemical
research and development
(R&D). Some areas of
biotechnology distinct from these
industries, such as oil-spill
clean-up, mining, wastewater
treatment, and bioremediation,
will prove important outlets for
natural products in the future
(Reid et al. 1993).
- In large
companies, such as Merck and
SmithKline Beecham, natural
products researchers will form a
distinct research group within a
much-larger R&D programme. In
some smaller companies, such as
Shaman Pharmaceuticals and
Phytopharmaceuticals, the entire
R&D strategy of the company
is natural products based. It is
important to note this
distinction because natural
products research programmes
within large companies must
justify their work in relation to
the success of other research
programmes - there exists no
built-in commitment to natural
products within the company.
Companies are increasingly
involved in natural products
research because they see it as a
promising and cost-effective area
of R&D, although it must
continue to prove itself as such.
- Most companies
will not have in-house natural
product collecting programmes and
will subcontract with reputable,
or sometimes not so reputable,
collectors. Collectors are
generally one of the following:
- · individuals who
collect samples for spot payments
· universities with
plant collection programmes
· botanical
gardens that supplement field
research budgets with funds from
industry collections;
· private
for-profit brokers
· developing
country private and public
research institutes.
- The parties to the
vast majority of existing
contractual agreements for
biological samples are developed
country companies and collectors.
Developed country collectors tend
to have long-lived relationships
with incountry collaborating
collectors, most of whom are
affiliated with scientific,
usually botanical, institutions.
In some cases, however,
in-country collaborators are
private individuals or
businesses.
- Communities can be
written into agreements between
collectors and companies as
collaborators, or collectors can
sign side agreements (as
described in Appendix C of Biodiversity
Prospecting, Reid et al
1993) with communities that
outline the nature of the
company-collector relationship,
the communities role in the
collection process, and the
benefits that will accrue should
a product be developed from their
knowledge. Even where formal
legal agreements will not be
appropriate, communities should
be consulted and collectors
should clearly specify
beneficiaries in written
institutional policy before any
ethnobotanical information is
collected, published, or supplied
to databases or companies.
- For example,
research into Catharanthus
roseus did not grow out of
ethnobotanical surveys conducted
by Eli Lilly staff in Madagascar,
from where the plant originates,
nor even in the Philippines,
where its recorded use first
interested researchers. Catharanthus
roseus was first investigated
because researchers in
laboratories in North America,
conducting a literature search
for plants from the Australasian
area with "folkloric usage
of believable quality and the
reported presence of certain
types of plant ingredients"
read of its traditional use in
the Philippines as an insulin
substitute (Svoboda 1992).
- di Masi et al.
(1991) estimate that it costs US
$ 231 million on an average to
develop a marketable
pharmaceutical drug, if research
failures are factored in.
- In some areas, a
regional approach to the drafting
of national legislation following
on the Convention of Biological
Diversely might make the process
easier and the final laws more
effective. The Andean Pact
prepared a regional model law in
April 1994 titled Access to
Genetic Resources of the Andean
Pact. This document provides
for access agreements
which would cover both in situ
and ex situ generic
resources, and would have a
public interest
review that would require
the responsible agency to
consider the national interest
and views of potentially affected
parties. Member states may
subject access to conditions such
as benefit sharing, restrictions
on transfer to third parties,
reporting obligations,
obligations related to
intellectual property,
exclusively, and confidentiality,
recognition of the resource in
publications, and conservation
measures. The parties are
directed to adopt common
guidelines for access agreements
and access determinations,
including notification of intent,
participation of affected
parties, applications, granting
of access, and enforcement
measures, penalties, and
remedies. Various provisions
ensure consideration of
indigenous peoples rights.
Members are directed to
strengthen capacity for
conservation and sustainable use
of biodiversity, and for
inventory and management. The
proposal calls for a regional
fund to be fed by a share of
royalties, and to be disbursed by
members as they agree. The Andean
Pact sets forth a regional
approach to implementing model
national legislation, which makes
the process of drafting laws
easier, and the likelihood of
competition between neighbours
smaller (Gollin et al.
1994).
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