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Introduction to geographical indications Tokyo, 12 December 2014 Lionel MESNILDREY European Commission DG Agriculture and Rural Development Unit A2 – Asia and Australasia

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  • Introduction togeographical indications

    Tokyo, 12 December 2014

    Lionel MESNILDREYEuropean Commission

    DG Agriculture and Rural DevelopmentUnit A2 – Asia and Australasia

  • Content

    • Legal framework• Benefits• IP Protection• Overview registrations and figures• Third countries GIs protection

    2

  • Legal framework• TRIPS Agreement

    • Agricultural products and foodstuffsRegulation(EU) No 1151/2012

    • Wines & Aromatised winesRegulation (EU) No 1308/2013 Regulation (EU) No 251/2014

    • SpiritsRegulation (EC) No 110/2008

    3

  • Geographical Indications in the EU2 logos – 1 single (high) level of protection

    Recognised by consumers

    1. geographicalarea + + =2. specific product 3. causal link 4. PGI or PDO4

  • PDO and PGI

    PDO: • Closer link “essential or exclusive”• Raw materials and all stages of production in the

    area

    Appellation of origin (Lisbon Agreement)

    5

  • PDO and PGI

    PGI: • Specific quality characteristics or

    reputation• One of the stages of production

    process must take place in the area

    TRIPS definition

    6

  • Benefits / producer• Name reserved to products respecting the

    specification and produced in a delimitedgeographical area (IP protection)

    • Administrative protection by public authorities• Name used by all producers• Differentiation on the market

    • better price• better share of the added value

    7

  • Benefits / consumer

    • Guarantee on• Origin of the product• Quality of the product (specification) • Authenticity of the product (no imitation)

    • Controls on production site and on the market

    8

  • Other benefits

    • GIs encourage the preservation of:• Biodiversity: plant, animal, …• Local know-how and tradition• Agro-tourism

    • GIs vs. standardised food• Wider choice• Cultural heritage, social cohesion, rural communities

    9

  • IP protection

    • Protection of the NAME, not of the product.• Right to use: applies to ‘any operator’ respecting product specification • Protection indefinite in time

    10

  • IP protection

    Protection against wrongful uses: • direct or indirect use for non-originating product • misuse, imitation or evocation, even if true origin is indicated or if name is translated • any other false or misleading indication or other practice liable to mislead consumer

    11

  • IP protection - Relation with trademarks

    • Prior GI prevents the registration of a trademark → relation with TM offices.• Prior trademark which has been applied or registered, or established by use, in good faith, before the date of protection in the country of origin, or before 1/1/1996 may continue to be used → coexistence• Renown TM prevents GI registration - if risk to mislead the consumer as to the true identity of the good 12

  • Overview PDO/PGI per country (n=3292)(all sectors – Food: 1199; Wines: 1752; Spirits: 336; Aromatized wines: 5)

    13

    910

    743

    348268

    199151

    82 71 69 62 54 44 42 39 31 23 23 20 14 14 13 11 33 19 90

    100200300400500600700800900

    1000

    Registered GIs by Country  November, 2014

  • Non-EU countries GIs

    • 19 names registered• Andorra (1) • China (10)• Colombia (1)• Guatemala (1)• India (1)• Norway (1)• Peru (1)• Thailand (1)• Turkey (1) • Vietnam (1)

    • Many others / bilateral agreements 14

  • Sales destinations• 60% of sales take place on the domestic market, 20% on the EU market and 20% in third countries

    • 663 GIs sold only in their MS of production

    • 1525 GIs exported (1224 wines, 231 agri products, 70 spirits)

    • Wines + spirits = 90% of total GI exports (in value)

    15

  • Protection through international agreements (FTAs or Stand alone)• … A more comprehensive process (more GIs

    protected in a shorter period of time)• EU's basic expectations concern:

    - High level of protection; (TRIPS art 22 is INSUFFICIENT)- Ex officio protection;- Co-existence with prior Trade marks- Protection through the Agreement

    • EU-Japan FTA a common interest

    16

  • Examples of evocation (imagination is endless!!)

    17

    Evocation of "Côte-Rôtie" and "Bordeaux" for South-African wine and Feta

  • Exemples of wrongful uses of GIs

    18

  • More information

    • Quality policy web-pages: http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/index_en.htm

    • GI Databases:• Spirits http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/spirits/• Foodstuffs http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/door/• Wines http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/markets/wine/e-bacchus/

    19

    http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/index_en.htmhttp://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/spirits/http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/door/http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/markets/wine/e-bacchus/

    Introduction to�geographical indicationsContentLegal frameworkGeographical Indications in the EU�2 logos – 1 single (high) level of protection�Recognised by consumersPDO and PGIPDO and PGIBenefits / producerBenefits / consumerOther benefitsIP protectionIP protectionIP protection - Relation with trademarksOverview PDO/PGI per country (n=3292)�(all sectors – Food: 1199; Wines: 1752; Spirits: 336; Aromatized wines: 5)���� Non-EU countries GIsSales destinationsProtection through international agreements (FTAs or Stand alone)Examples of evocation �(imagination is endless!!)Exemples of wrongful uses of GIsMore information