Friday, April 27, 2012

Geographical Indications Bill Kenya

Business Daily reports that Kenya's Industrialization Ministry along with the Kenya Industrial Property Institute (KIPI) are currently reviewing the Geographical Indications Bill (GI) which will provide a legal framework for safeguarding products like tea, coffee, and handicraft by expressly attributing them a sign or appellation of origin.

A geographical indication is a sign used on goods that have a specific geographical origin and possess qualities, reputation or characteristics that are essentially attributable to that place of origin. Most commonly, geographical indications include the name of the place of origin of the goods such as agricultural products which typically have qualities that derive from their place of growth/production and are also influenced by specific local factors, such as climate and soil. Geographical indications may be used for a wide variety of products, whether natural, agricultural or manufactured.
Meanwhile an appellation of origin is a special kind of geographical indication. It generally consists of a geographical name or a traditional designation used on products which have a specific quality or characteristics that are essentially due to the geographical environment in which they are produced.  The concept of a geographical indication encompasses appellations of origin.

Whether a sign is recognized as a geographical indication is a matter of national law and as such geographical indications are protected in accordance with international treaties and national laws under a wide range of concepts, including trademark laws in the form of collective marks or certification marks, laws against unfair competition, consumer protection laws, or specific laws or decrees that recognize individual GIs.

The GI Bill is expected to help certify Kenyan products and market them exclusively in the speciality market, a strategy that will help distinguish Kenyan goods from those of other countries.  The likely scenarios once the Bill is enacted include marketing of origin-specific Kenyan exports such as Kericho tea, Mt Kenya coffee, Maasai jewellery, and Kisii soapstone carvings.
The draft GI Bill also proposes that producers and regulatory firms can apply to be custodians of a location specific trademark. Thus, the Kenya Tea Development Agency may apply to register tea variety trademarks.  Certification trademark of Kenyan products will avoid situations where foreign parties attempt to register such goods in other countries.
GI's are protected at the international level through a number of treaties mostly administered by World Intellectual Property Organization WIPO which provides for the protection of geographical indications, most notably the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property of 1883, and the Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and Their International Registration. In addition, Articles 22 to 24 of the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) deals with the international protection of geographical indications within the framework of the World Trade Organization (WTO).

Meanwhile Article 43 of the EAC Common Market Protocol has provisions on co-operation in Intellectual Property Rights of which geographical indications are included (Art 43.2(f)).

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