- Knowledge Ecology International - https://www.keionline.org -

KEI comments on inconsistencies between USTR proposal for the TPPA and current US law

As KEI has discussed previously, USTR’s proposal for the IP chapter [1] of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) raises numerous concerns for human rights [2], access to medicines [3], and access to information, among other issues. Not only would USTR’s proposal greatly impact those living in the countries of the TPPA negotiating partners–currently Australia, Brunei, Chile, Malaysia, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam–but many provisions of its February 10, 2011 text would be inconsistent with U.S. law, requiring changes to our domestic laws.

On Tuesday, KEI provided additional comments to USTR, several focusing on the inconsistencies between the leaked USTR’s proposal on IPR and existing US legal norms and legislative proposals.

Copyright:

Patents:

Data Protection:

Civil Enforcement:

Border Measures:

Enforcement in the Digital Environment:

Pharmaceutical Pricing:

Areas Potentially Impeding Legislative Reform Efforts:

Considering the large number of inconsistencies between the US proposal for the TPPA and current US law, USTR’s decision to keep these texts secret is inexcusable. We note that USTR proposed several provisions in ACTA that were similarly inconsistent with US law and prompted Senator Wyden to request the an analysis of these inconsistencies [4] from the Congressional Research Service. KEI’s April 2010 research note on ACTA and inconsistencies with US law as they relate to injunctions and damages is available here [5]. The fact that many of these mistakes are replicated in the TPPA is highly concerning and given the impact that the proposals, if accepted, will have on our domestic law, we urge USTR to make these documents public.

As we have noted previously, the lack of access to information also quite unequal as some corporate interests have special access to information about the negotiations not made available to the general public. Industry representatives who sit on Industry Trade Advisory Committees (ITAC) such as the ITAC on Intelelctual Property Rights or ITAC on Chemical, Pharmaceuticals, Health Science Products and Services, for example, are heavily represented by large private trade associations and pharmaceutical companies. This set up allows industry to have greater access to information and shape the negotiating positions to conform to their private interests while the general public is not afforded the same opportunities.

Our full paper analyzing these inconsistencies is attached below.

[6] [7] [8]