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Big Pharma battle threatens to delay Pacific trade pact

SINGAPORE (AFP) – A US-led Pacific free trade pact faces  further delays as a row between Big Pharma and activists supporting access to  generic drugs erupts ahead of an October deadline, officials say.

Negotiators from the United States and 10 other countries are holding  closed-door talks in Singapore from March 4-13 on the proposed Trans-Pacific  Partnership (TPP) as they race to seal an accord.

“It’s getting tougher and more challenging towards the end. There might be  some problems in meeting that deadline, October 2013,” Malaysian Trade Minister  Mustapa Mohamed told the Foreign Correspondents Association of Singapore after  the talks opened.

Activists pushing for greater public access to cheap generics are sparring  with the pharmaceuticals industry, which was worth $355 billion in 2010 among  the 11 countries involved in the talks, with US firms accounting for 80 per cent  of the market.

The dispute illustrates the complexity of the TPP, which has already missed  a 2012 deadline due to differences over non-tariff issues like labour  standards, environment protection, government procurement and intellectual  property rights.

Some countries are also keen to impose protection for sensitive sectors  like agriculture and cars.

On pharmaceuticals, humanitarian group Medicins Sans Frontieres (Doctors  Without Borders) asked negotiators from developing countries to reject what it  claimed are patent provisions being pushed by Washington restricting access to  generic drugs.

MSF cited what it said was a leaked draft of the US negotiating position  threatening to keep “monopoly protections that keep medicine prices high”.

It warned that if other countries in the Asia-Pacific region eventually opt  into the TPP, tighter patent protection may make new medicines out of reach to  a wider number of people.

US President Barack Obama has mooted the TPP as a centrepiece of renewed  American engagement in Asia.

The talks currently involve Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Malaysia,  Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam.

Japan has said it wants to join the process, but is expected to face strong  domestic opposition against opening up its farm sector.

China is not involved in the talks, preferring to concentrate on other  Asian trade pacts that analysts say require less stringent commitments.

MSF said one provision advocated by US negotiators in the TPP is the grant  of new 20-year patents for modifications of existing medicines, making it  harder to make cheaper generic versions.

Another provision makes it “more expensive and cumbersome to challenge”  invalid patents, while another would add more years to a patent term to  compensate for administrative processes, MSF added.

Pharmaceutical companies argue that copyright protections are necessary to allow them to recover investments and continue research on new cures.

The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), which  sent representatives to monitor the Singapore talks, urged negotiators to adopt  robust intellectual property (IP) protections.

“A weak IP framework within TPP would create uncertainty at a time when we  need to be doing more to champion researchers and innovators who rely on strong  protections,” said Jay Taylor, PhRMA vice president of international affairs.

Taylor told AFP that PhRMA wants a provision that will give companies 12  years of data protection on new “biologic” medicines, which are made with  living tissues in contrast to drugs made by compounding chemicals.

They are already being used to treat cancer and diabetes and are crucial in  developing new cures, he said.

The 12-year protection should start from the time the new medicine is  approved by regulators for release into the market, he said.

Taylor added that it takes an average of 10-13 years and more than $1.0  billion in investments to develop a new cure, but not all research projects are  successful and some could lead to financial losses.

Medicine patents currently last 20 years, but Taylor said that research and  development eat up more than half of the period as the coverage starts from the  time the molecule is identified.

© 2013 Borneo Bulletin Online - The Independent Newspaper in Brunei Darussalam, Sabah and Sarawak

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