Minutes - TRIPS Council - View details of the intervention/statement

H.E. Ambassador Lundeg Purevsuren
7 NON-VIOLATION AND SITUATION COMPLAINTS
168.   Our delegation's position is well-known among Members. During the current week's session of the General Council, our delegation and others proposed that we should begin discussions on the renewal of the moratorium on this topic, taking into account the timeline provided within the mandate of the Buenos Aires Ministerial Conference. 169.   Formal and informal talks on this subject in the Council, have pointed, in our view, to the need to take more time to try to forge common understandings and consensus on the various aspects contained in the mandate of Article 64 of the TRIPS Agreement. 170.   To that end and considering the historical positions of the countries regarding this topic, our delegation proposes that the Council for TRIPS recommend to the next General Council that it extend the moratorium until the Twelfth Ministerial Conference and continue to study the scope and modalities for this type of complaint. 171.   As far as our delegation is concerned, with our long history of participation in Ministerial Conferences, this is one of the significant topics, and this is why we believe it is important to maintain a constructive dialogue between delegations and to give ourselves time to pursue our quest for common understanding.
The Council so agreed.
32.   The Chair recalled that, at the 11th Ministerial Conference, in December 2017, Ministers had directed the Council to continue its examination of the scope and modalities for complaints of the types provided for under subparagraphs 1(b) and 1(c) of Article XXIII of GATT 1994 and to make recommendations to the next Ministerial Conference. It was also agreed that, in the meantime, Members would not initiate such complaints under the TRIPS Agreement. At the General Council meeting of 26 July 2018, the Chair had also noted that the 2019 deadlines for the two moratoria on Electronic Commerce and on TRIPS non-violation and situation complaints would be maintained, notwithstanding the decision to hold the 12th Ministerial Conference in June 2020.
33.   At the TRIPS Council's meetings held since MC11, there had been some encouraging signs. A number of delegations had indicated their readiness to engage in a constructive discussion on scope and modalities in case non-violation and situation complaints were to apply to TRIPS. Also, at the Council's meeting in June 2019, some delegations had given examples of what such modalities could look like. Since that meeting, the Chair had consulted with delegations in various formats, including at an informal meeting the previous Monday, to see whether there was any appetite to discuss a possible recommendation; however, there had been no signs of engagement at this time.
34.   The issue had also been discussed at the General Council meeting, on 16 October. At the request of Chile, Colombia, New Zealand and Panama, the General Council had considered a recommendation to extend the moratorium until the 12th Ministerial Conference in Nur-Sultan, in order "to continue discussing this issue among the WTO Members within the TRIPS Council". The cosponsors had suggested that the General Council should take such a decision at its December 2019 meeting. The Chair of the General Council had encouraged Members to engage in substantive discussions in the TRIPS Council.
35.   The Chair said that since the October meeting was the last regular TRIPS Council meeting of 2019, it would be the right moment for the Council to make a recommendation on how the Ministerial Conference should decide on TRIPS non-violation complaints. He encouraged delegations to engage in a constructive examination of scope and modalities for such complaints. A constructive discussion would help to move beyond the binary question of whether or not nonviolation and situation complaints should apply to TRIPS at all. He opened the floor for any concrete suggestions regarding the possible way forward, particularly, proposals on what a permanent solution to this issue could look like, and what recommendation the Council should make.
36.   The representatives of Chile; Bangladesh; Colombia; Thailand; Mexico; Nigeria; Panama; Indonesia; Ecuador; New Zealand; India; the Russian Federation; Canada; Brazil; Singapore; Guatemala; Norway; Argentina; the European Union; Hong Kong, China; Chinese Taipei; Plurinational State of Bolivia; Switzerland; China; South Africa; and the United States of America took the floor.
37.   The Chair noted that the Council was not yet ready to agree on a recommendation. He suggested that the agenda remain open, while he continued to consult Members. Once there was an indication that Members were in a position to reach consensus, he would reconvene the Council at short notice, so that a recommendation could be made to the General Council, and through it to the Ministerial Conference, in a timely manner.
38.   The Council so agreed.
39.   The Chair said that the last General Council meeting of 2019 was scheduled for 9-11 December. Therefore, any recommendation, which could be included in the TRIPS Council's Annual Report or its addendum, would need to be submitted to the General Council in time for that meeting. He asked delegations to bear that in mind.
IP/C/M/93, IP/C/M/93/Add.1