TPP Negotiations – US Tables Intellectual Property Text; Members of US Congress Push for Strong IP Protections; Civil Society Asks for Protection of TRIPS Flexibilities

The fifth Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiating round was held in Santiago, Chile, last week. The US tabled text for an intellectual property chapter, which is not public.  Sources have reported that sections relating to patent extensions, data exclusivity, linkage and for pharmaceuticals has been left blank to be filled in later.  Inside US Trade reports that the US proposal would “give a copyright holder the authority to… stop importation of its copyrighted goods from another country” and “to prohibit temporary reproductions of copyrighted works.”

Eighteen Members of Congress have written President Obama asking for strong IP protection in the TPP.  They quote PTO Director David Kappos saying that “the appropriate starting point for the Trans Pacific Partnership Negotiations is the Korea FTA.  It is a great starting point.”  The IP provisions in the US-Korea FTA are the strongest IP provisions in any US trade agreement.

39 civil society groups asked all negotiating countries to “establish TRIPS as the maximum standard of substantive protection required by the TPP and preexisting trade agreements in the region; and assist the effective implementation of TRIPS flexibilities.”

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  • Mike Palmedo

    Mike Palmedo is the admin for infojustice.org, and he manages interdisciplinary research on copyright exceptions at American University College of Law's Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property. He has Masters degrees Economics and in International Affairs, and is an economics PhD candidate.

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