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

H.E. Ambassador Dr. Lansana GBERIE
7 NON-VIOLATION AND SITUATION COMPLAINTS
97.   Chile again welcomes the Ministerial Decision to extend the existing moratorium for this type of matters. Indeed, this extension reflects the fact that this topic has not generated consensus in the past revealing the need to continue dialogue and seek consensus-based responses on this matter bearing in mind all potential repercussions, including the link between the moratorium and other issues in this house. Chile, like other delegations, believes that this type of complaint should not apply at multilateral level within the TRIPS Agreement bearing in mind the lack of legal certainty that it generates for users and creators of an innovation ecosystem.
The Council took note of the statements made and agreed to revert to this matter at its next meeting.
25. The Chair recalled that the examination of scope and modalities for non-violation and situation complaints under TRIPS was in line with the initial mandate in Article 64.3 of the TRIPS Agreement, which had required recommendations to be submitted to the Ministerial Conference in 1999.
26. He recalled that at the 12th Ministerial Conference, Ministers had adopted a Decision on TRIPS non-violation complaints (document ), which directed the TRIPS Council to continue its examination of the scope and modalities for non-violation and situation complaints, and to make recommendations to the 13th Ministerial Conference. The Decision also provided that, in the meantime, Members would not initiate such complaints under the TRIPS Agreement.
27. He said that, during recent meetings of the TRIPS Council, a few delegations had signalled openness to return to substantive discussions in this area. In March 2021, his predecessor had suggested that Members could identify areas of agreement in the non-violation discussions. He had suggested that identifying such areas, or elements, of agreement on the nature of non-violation and situation complaints could help delegations focus their engagement on the areas of disagreement and thus make at some progress in framing the relevant questions for discussion.
28. The Chair inquired whether delegations were more at ease now to consider this or any other approach that might help identify common ground, in order to get some movement in this long-standing debate.
29. The representatives of Tanzania; India; Bangladesh; Brazil; Indonesia; Sri Lanka; Argentina; Chile; China; and South Africa took the floor.
30. The Council took note of the statements made and agreed to revert to this matter at its next meeting.
IP/C/M/105, IP/C/M/105/Add.1, IP/C/M/105/Corr.1