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Part II - Geographical Indications at the Crossroads of International and National Trade

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 June 2017

Irene Calboli
Affiliation:
Singapore Management University
Wee Loon Ng-Loy
Affiliation:
National University of Singapore
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

6 Geographical Indications and Mega-Regional Trade Agreements and Negotiations

Susy Frankel Footnote *
1 Introduction: The Excesses of the Trade-Related Approach

In the presentation of this chapter in draft form, I asked the following question, ‘how do you spot a dodgy international intellectual property claim?’ One possible answer to that question is that those who own intellectual property (IP) rights in one jurisdiction, where those rights have developed from local or regional policies, want those locally grounded rights exported to other legal systems in order to protect IP-related products exported to those jurisdictions. That proposition alone cannot be the only way to spot a ‘dodgy IP claim’ because that is a description of many international IP negotiations where there are attempts to gain at least some international agreement on minimum standards of protection. The ‘dodgy’ aspect arises when incumbents want more protection (without convincing evidence that more protection is needed), and in seeking that greater protection, those incumbents suggest that newcomers will gain immeasurable bounty. This is exactly how the European Union presents its geographical indications (GIs) policy to its trading partners. The argument usually involves three steps. First, multiple GIs have worked in Europe. Second, there are one or two instances of GIs working for developing countries. The following statement from the European Commission illustrates these first two steps:

The protection of geographical indications matters economically and culturally. They can create value for local communities. Over the years European countries have taken the lead in identifying and protecting their geographical indications. They support rural development and promote new job opportunities in production, processing and other related services.

For example: Cognac, Roquefort cheese, Sherry, Parmigiano Reggiano, Teruel and Parma hams, Tuscany olives, Budějovické pivo, and Budapesti téliszalámi.

Geographical indications are becoming a useful intellectual property right for developing countries because of their potential to add value and promote rural socio-economic development. Most countries have a range of local products that correspond to the concept of geographical indications but only a few are already known or protected globally.

For example: Basmati rice or Darjeeling tea through products that are deeply rooted in tradition, culture and geography.Footnote 1

The third step proffered to complete this argument is that because GIs ‘with commercial value are exposed to misuse and counterfeiting’,Footnote 2 GI protection EU style should be the global legal norm in order to prevent this misuse and counterfeiting.

While there is plenty of truth in these statements – after all no one doubts the value of using the origin of a product to sell it when that origin has cachet – there is also a considerable weakness in the logic that purportedly links the three propositions. This weakness is because the success of GIs (as a legal model for exploiting the value in origin of goods) from one territory does not mean that success can be easily replicated in other territories. First, what makes GIs valuable, at least initially, is the place with which the GI-branded product is associated. Such associations (if they are genuine) are not identically replicable. More importantly, the success of GIs is dependent on multiple factors, including investment and infrastructure around the business, industry, place and communities concerned. The legal framework alone, for GIs, is unlikely to create development of the local industry without those other factors being present. Some chapters in this book suggest positive uses of GIs in Asia for those other than Darjeeling tea and Basmati rice,Footnote 3 but a remarkable amount of literature (including the above-quoted statement from the European Union) pinpoints these as examples of how developing countries could succeed in improving their agricultural economy with GIs. This sort of statement is often proffered without an appropriately corresponding analysis of the transferability of the GI mechanism to other communities and other products. In fact, as developing countries repeatedly have shown, the removal of agricultural subsidies in the developed world would make a real difference and enable developing countries to compete in world markets for agricultural products. In a manner prescient of an EU-directed path with GIs, most developed countries have not removed agricultural subsidies (with the notable exception of New Zealand) and, in order for developing countries to compete with developed countries, large developing countries now also subsidise agriculture.Footnote 4 The losers are those countries that cannot afford subsides, particularly the small developing countries, which may agree to implement GI regimes when they are in trade negotiations. This is the kind of outcome that happens when the ‘weak bargain with the strong’.Footnote 5

Just as the GI policy of one country may not be a good fit for another country, evidence that GIs have been effective as a development tool in one community is not evidence that the same model of GIs will be effective in all communities.Footnote 6 As William van Caenegem, Peter Drahos and Jen Cleary have discussed, the success of GIs as a tool in certain parts of the Australian wine industry, for example, is attributable not only to GIs but to certain other factors which are not simply replicable by enacting GI laws.Footnote 7 Their research demonstrates that certain industries have benefited from investment accompanied by GIs in Australia.Footnote 8 This research reveals that a careful calculus is required. The authors suggest that if that benefit of GIs is to be replicated, then Australian autonomy over the design of any law to extend GI protection is crucial.

The international minimum standards for GIs should not be moulded on a legal regime that cannot accommodate appropriate differences between different countries and even different communities in those countries. The benefits of GIs to local communities are only possible with appropriate legal framing to meet and enhance local needs. GIs can be part of a package to enhance development, but a legal mechanism without associated investment cannot effectively function as a source of development. GIs being “part of a package” means exactly that rather than a top-down imposition through trade agreements of a framework and detailed laws designed for the economic conditions of others. Put differently, there is no 100 per cent right or wrong position on GIs even though the debate is polarized. The reality is that one size does not fit all, but several sizes may fit some or possibly even many.

Perhaps the most significant argument against the export of EU-style GI law to developing countries is that while such export has been going on for some time, there are relatively few success stories in developing countries. This would seem to be because a successful sui generis GI regime requires infrastructure and related investment in development, which may be missing. Just as pharmaceutical patents are predominantly a cost to those who do not produce pharmaceuticals, establishing a GI protection regime is largely a cost to those who lack the resources and infrastructure to exploit the origin of goods, in the form of an IP right, in the global economy. In such places, registered GIs will largely be foreign-owned.Footnote 9

The approach of trying to force a one-size-fits-all model is certainly not the exclusive domain of the European Union in its trade agreements.Footnote 10 While the United States does not seek to export GI laws through its trade agreements, it does export its view of how trademark law should dominate and how GIs, if and where they exist, should not trump trademarks, but rather trademarks should prevail over GIs.Footnote 11 Much of the global GI debate is thus characterized by a trans-Atlantic debate and the dominant parties in that debate seek to recruit support for their respective positions in countries around the world through bilateral and mega-regional trade agreements.

The Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS Agreement) GI requirements are minimum standards.Footnote 12 In other words, members of the TRIPS Agreement can implement GI-style protection in a variety of ways. This flexibility around implementation is reinforced by the general provision in the TRIPS Agreement that allows for countries to implement the obligations in their own legal system in a manner they deem appropriate.Footnote 13 It is well documented that since the TRIPS Agreement came into force there has been a proliferation of free trade agreements (FTAs).Footnote 14 These FTAs were initially predominantly bilateral and now frequently involve multiple parties and so are plurilateral, such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).Footnote 15 Plurilaterals are often mega-regional agreements. Even though negotiations such as the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) are between the European Union and the United States rather than multiple parties, because of the size of the economies of those two parties, such an agreement is mega-regional in terms of the volume of trade it could cover. Geopolitically, the mega-regionals seem to be in competition with each other. The TPP did not include the European Union or China, and the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) plus six parties negotiation for the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) does not include the United States, for example.Footnote 16 While at the time of this writing, the TPP will likely not come into force because of the United States withdrawal from it, the TPP IP chapter is emerging in other trade negotiation forums as proposals for negotiation. The text of the TPP relevant to this chapter was introduced into the RCEP negotiations. There is much opposition to such proposals.Footnote 17

Some bilateral FTAs designed and entered into by large economies, particularly the United States or the European Union (known as economic partnerships), articulate one of those major economies’ stance on GIs. Both the United States and the European Union through these FTAs recruit as many countries as possible to one GI stance or another. The trans-Atlantic rivals are dealing with this policy and legal framework collision in the TTIP.Footnote 18 At the political level, the rhetoric captures the difficulty:Footnote 19

Wisconsin Republican Paul Ryan, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, which has jurisdiction over matter of trade policy, condemns European GIs as trade barriers and vows that ‘for generations to come, we’re going to keep making gouda in Wisconsin. And feta, and cheddar and everything else’.Footnote 20

At the same time, the EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmström laments that Italian cheeses are being ‘undermined by inferior domestic imitations’ in the United States and vowed to solve the problem through TTIP by ‘getting a strong agreement on geographical indications’.Footnote 21

In Section 2, certain approaches to GI protection in mega-regionals and bilateral FTAs are discussed. Section 3 considers some of the incompatibilities between the EU-dominated and US-dominated approaches. Section 4 raises questions about countries that purport to trade in both regimes, which include Singapore, Korea, Australia and New Zealand. The chapter concludes that unless a compromise is worked out in ongoing trade agreements such as the TTIP and the RCEP (or the proposed Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP)),Footnote 22 the GI debate will worsen, and as it does, the casualties will be small and medium-developing countries and those whose trade agreements have obligated them to both regimes.

2 Mega-Regional Agreements

The European Union is a large region. Its policy on GIs is summarized above.Footnote 23 In contrast, the TTP takes a trademark-centric approach. The TPP was signed on 4 February 2016,Footnote 24 and, as noted above, it is unlikely to come into force. It does, however, provide a detailed example of United States’ GI trade policy and the text is not dead as it is being used in other trade negotiation forums, most notably RCEP. This part refers to the TPP text as it is public, and at the time of this writing the exact state of the RCEP negotiations in relation to the same text is not publicly known. The TPP required that the parties to it protect country names from misuse in a misleading manner.Footnote 25 In addition, the text defined a GI as

an indication that identifies a good as originating in the territory of a Party, or a region or locality in that territory, where a given quality, reputation or other characteristic of the good is essentially attributable to its geographical origin.Footnote 26

This definition is substantively identical to the definition in the TRIPS Agreement and thus immediately flags that the TPP would have gone no further than the TRIPS Agreement in the extent of its protection of GIs.Footnote 27 The TPP did, however, delineate a relationship between GIs and trademarks that the TRIPS Agreement does not. The part of the TPP dealing with GIs sets out what might broadly be described as the United States’ preferred approach. In particular, GIs may be protected through trademarks, a sui generis system or other legal means.Footnote 28 Significantly, there was a requirement that ‘each Party shall also provide that signs that may serve as geographical indications are capable of protection under its trademark system’.Footnote 29 This would have required parties to the TPP with sui generis GI regimes to ensure that the trademark regime provides the same protection. This was a significant gain for the United States, as under the TRIPS Agreement it is quite possible for parties to have a GI system that does not accommodate trademark registrations for protection within the same regime. The various EU GI systemsFootnote 30 are a quintessential example of non-trademark-embracing GI systems. So while the TRIPS Agreement allows for the recognition of GIs in trademark regimes, the TPP required it.

The TPP also included several grounds for opposing the registration of GIs. These grounds included where the GI applied for causes confusion with a trademark which is the subject of an existing registration or even a pending application.Footnote 31 Significantly, GIs could be opposed when the GI is a ‘term customary in common language as the common name for the relevant good’, i.e., the name is generic.Footnote 32 The agreement included guidelines for determining what amounts to customary in the common language, in particular ‘how consumers understand the term’.Footnote 33 Again, this approach was required under the TPP but is a permissible approach under the TRIPS Agreement.Footnote 34 The United States’ potential gain in the TPP had the effect of standing in the way of the EU approach of clawing back generic names, because arguably any list of required names for clawback purposes in future agreements will be inconsistent with the TPP. Some parties to the TPP (and RCEP) have existing GI obligations with the European Union. There is potential for conflicting obligations among the various agreements and so these countries and others will have had to work out (and no doubt will also have to do so as disputes arise) which obligations apply. Australia has already agreed to some EU clawbacks.Footnote 35 Vietnam has agreed to recognize and protect certain EU GIs.Footnote 36 Singapore has agreed with the European Union to review whether the EU GI list should be registered in Singapore.Footnote 37 Further, as one commentator notes, ‘by exporting the principle of co-existence between geographical indications and trade marks the EU is chipping away at regulatory diversity in the area of geographical indications’.Footnote 38 That ‘chipping away’ will likely be harder, if not impossible, in some countries depending on what happens to the mega-regional trade agreements.

In order to have made the TPP compatible with other agreements, it attempted to set other trade agreements in a TPP-aligned framework. There was a general clause relevant to all of the TPP agreement and applicable to FTAs that bind at least two parties that provided that

[i]f a Party considers that a provision of this Agreement is inconsistent with a provision of another agreement to which it and at least one other Party are party, on request, the relevant Parties to the other agreement shall consult with a view to reaching a mutually satisfactory solution.Footnote 39

The above article did not, however, deal with the significant overlaps with agreements made with one TPP party and a non-member of the TPP, such as the European Union. However, as noted above, the TPP parties (and RCEP parties) included several parties who have either existing agreements with the European Union (such as Singapore and Australia) or negotiations with the European Union (such as Canada) that include provisions about GIs. For GIs, there was an explicit regime to deal with the overlap of agreements between TTP parties and non-parties. The result of this was a somewhat complex two-page clause which in essence seeks to make contradictory and opposing approaches to GIs functionally compatible.Footnote 40 The central rule was that

[n]o Party shall be required to apply this Article to geographical indications that have been specifically identified in, and that are protected or recognised pursuant to, an international agreement involving a Party or a non-Party, provided that the agreement:

  1. (a) was concluded, or agreed in principle, prior to the date of conclusion, or agreement in principle, of this Agreement;

  2. (b) was ratified by a Party prior to the date of ratification of this Agreement by that Party; or

  3. (c) entered into force for a Party prior to the date of entry into force of this Agreement for that Party.Footnote 41

The remaining parts of this article explained how information must be provided and how other parts, relating to opposition and administrative procedures, should apply even to prior protected GIs. Under the terms of the TPP, parties must have made available procedures to oppose and review GI registrations. It also required that analogous procedures were applicable to GIs that precede the TPP, even where that GI protection arises under other agreements.Footnote 42 The details of procedures required are somewhat complex.

The irony of this complexity is that the TPP was supposed to make trade easier. The practical results of the relationship between the above-described provisions (and an array of additional side-letters relating to GIsFootnote 43) remain to be tested.

To illustrate some of the complexity, consider an agreement made between South Korea and Australia. Australia was part of the TPP and South Korea is not yet a party.Footnote 44 A side-letter to navigate the differences between Australia’s and the European Union’s approaches to GIs, when South Korea has agreements with both, provides that

[f]inally, I confirm that Korea will allow third parties to oppose any proposal to designate any term as a GI, whether these proposals are made pursuant to the Korea-EU FTA, or to any other future agreements with other trading partners. In addition, before Korea identifies additional terms as GIs under the Korea-EU FTA, it will provide, by published administrative guidelines, that designations of asserted GIs may be opposed in Korea on the grounds that would include: (1) the term is generic in Korea; (2) the term is confusingly similar to a pre-existing trademark or geographical indication that was either previously applied for or registered or established through use; (3) the term is confusingly similar to a well-known trademark; and (4) the term does not meet the definition of a GI.Footnote 45

As mentioned above, another mega-regional trade agreement of particular importance to the Asia Pacific region is RCEP.Footnote 46 The general negotiation principles of RCEP state that

[t]he text on intellectual property in the RCEP will aim to reduce IP-related barriers to trade and investment by promoting economic integration and cooperation in the utilization, protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights.Footnote 47

A purported working draft of the negotiations dated October 2014Footnote 48 proposes protection of trademarks that pre-date GIsFootnote 49 and more broadly provides that

[e]ach Party recognises that geographical indications may be protected through various means, including through a trademark system, provided that all requirements under the TRIPS Agreement are fulfilled.Footnote 50

As noted above, South Korea and Japan are reputed to have introduced equivalent proposals to those that are found in the TPP IP chapter as a possible model for negotiation in RCEP.Footnote 51

It is important to include in this group of trade agreements that have been negotiated after the TRIPS Agreement, the mega-economy bilaterals, particularly as these are significant in the GI debate. As noted above, the negotiations between the European Union and the United States in the TTIP are significant. If those trading blocs can reach a workable compromise, then much of the rest of the world may also be able to do so.

The Canada-EU Trade Agreement (CETA) negotiation shows a kind of complicated compromise.Footnote 52 In CETA, GIs are defined as

an indication which identifies an agricultural product or foodstuff as originating in the territory of a Party, or a region or locality in that territory, where a given quality, reputation or other characteristic of the product is essentially attributable to its geographical origin.Footnote 53

Notably, this definition explicitly excludes the application of GI rules to non-agricultural and foodstuff products, which the European Union extends some GIs to and proposes to extend GIs even further.Footnote 54

The CETA text provides a general requirement for the protection of GIs that are listed in annexes to the agreement.Footnote 55 The protection must still be provided even where the true origin of the product is indicated or when the GI is used in translation or accompanied by expressions such as kind, type, style and the like.Footnote 56 The parties must also ‘determine the practical conditions under which the homonymous indications … will be differentiated from each other’.Footnote 57

There are some detailed exceptions, including that Canada shall not be required to provide laws to prevent the use of some terms including asiago, feta, fontina, gorgonzola and Munster, when such terms are accompanied by expressions such as kind, type, style and imitation.Footnote 58 The combination of names and terms, e.g. ‘feta style’, must be both legible and visible.Footnote 59

Overall CETA is a well-developed – even if complex – compromise between the extremities of the GI debate. At one extreme of the debate is insistence on the necessity of a sui generis GI system and at the other extreme the view that only trademarks are appropriate and necessary. There is some considerable detail required to reach CETA’s compromise and these details accentuate some of the incompatibility of the approaches found in the other mega-regionals.

3 Policy Incompatibilities of Approaches to Geographical Indications in Trade Agreements

This section does not discuss the various technical differences between GI and trademark systems, but rather focuses on some of the policy incompatibilities that have arisen and arguably are becoming entrenched in the mega-regional framework. As a starting point, the extension of local success to the global arena raises questions about the normative basis for so doing and the consistency between local policy and globalization of that policy.

The origins and justifications for GIs, which are linked to local conditions such as the terroir,Footnote 60 risk distortion when linked to other parts of the world through the global trading. The overall basis for the claim for greater global harmonization of GIs is to protect the products that are ‘genuinely’ GI-labelled, not just in the domestic market, but also in foreign markets. As noted above, it is in export markets (both existing and potential) that the European Union claims its GI products are unfairly imitated. Notably, however, there can be no claim over making equivalent products,Footnote 61 and the complaint is about applying the GI to them. While there are some notoriously bad products which draw on GI products and their names, there are plenty of high-quality products which compete with GI products, both nationally and internationally, but that have not used GIs to acquire a market share.Footnote 62 The GI approach assumes that such products may be better off with GIs, but that is not necessarily so.Footnote 63 Moreover, until appropriate analysis of local conditions, including investment and infrastructure, is in place, such claims are mere assertions calculated to push the GI export agenda rather than to encourage quality local-made food.

A localized reputation (even if extensive) is not, however, the same as a globalized reputation and so the need for export protection for many GI products is not necessarily obvious to the importing markets. The ubiquitous example of champagne is exactly on point. The value of the GI is intimately connected to the geographical region as both product and production factors are dependent on features of the Champagne region.Footnote 64 International protection, outside of the European Union, of champagne (and other GI products) occurs under various regimes. These include sui generis recognition of GIs on similar grounds to the European Union, clawback provisions in trade agreements that have made ‘ungeneric’ the genericFootnote 65 and claims to distinctive reputation in the local market that can give rise to either a certification or collective trademark and in some jurisdictions grounds for action under a common-law doctrine such as passing off.Footnote 66 The latter two approaches can include geographical and place-based arguments as relevant to reputation and consumer perceptions; however, neither trademarks nor passing off necessarily depends on any direct connection to place for any protection.Footnote 67

One might even argue that calibrations of local law, which are framed and developed to meet local needs (that is exactly what GIs represent), are the antithesis of the case for globalization. The framework of IP that utilizes minimum standards and domestic discretion, including modes of implementation, within the minimum standards framework creates the mechanism through which the global is reflected in the local and vice versa. The question, in relation to GIs (and all IP), is how prescriptive should the minimum standards be and thus how much autonomy is left to local discretion and how much is governed by international rules. The greater the level of prescription at the international level, the less room for national discretion and the more likely that the international obligation will be based on models designed for the conditions of some, but not all, economies. This is the top-down approach (edging towards a one-size-fits-all approach), which the trade agreements, discussed in Section 1 of this chapter, exemplify. The TRIPS Agreement, on the other hand, leaves much GI detail to national autonomy. However, neither the European Union nor the United States are prepared to stop at the TRIPS Agreement minimum standards level of protection, but rather seek to globalize their own agendas.

The fundamental objection to too much global harmonization or inflexible rules is the risk that GIs, rather than protecting genuine culturally anchored outputs, function as barriers to trade. As the development of globalized IP rules has shown, particularly in other areas such as patents, globalized rights tend to favour incumbents over new entrants. So how much protection is enough protection? Put differently, what protection of GIs globally is a legitimate use of IP as a non-tariff trade barrier and what level of GI protection exceeds that level?Footnote 68

Internationally, IP is protected in different jurisdictions on the basis that the promise of exclusivity can provide an incentive for innovation and creativity. There is much commentary about the effectiveness and ineffectiveness of incentives and in which arenas they work and when they do not.Footnote 69 The argument that GIs can assist with rural development that is consistent with cultural and sustainable practices is a kind of incentive argument. The counterargument is that GIs can sometimes be used to disincentivize innovation because they require production processes to conform to rules that do not allow for innovative alterations.Footnote 70 Neither representation of GIs is true all of the time, but both are true sometimes.

In most areas of IP, both incentivizing and disincentivizing goes on. Balancing these tensions is core to how the IP regime (and some quasi-property IP rules) functions. It is known that exclusivity restricts third-party users and, thus, IP rights block immediate follow-on innovation, but temporal restrictions justify the imposition of exclusive rights.Footnote 71 Trademarks and GIs are different because they do not have temporal restrictions (unless fees are not paid) and so their overreach can cause disincentivizing effects with no possibility of change. In trademark law, this takes the form of trademarks substituting for copyright (and in some jurisdictions, design) after expiry of the copyright.Footnote 72 With GIs, the danger is that the GI protects too much both in the jurisdiction of origin and in export markets. As far as export markets are concerned, the issue is whether GI protection in the export market really incentivizes local development that is consistent with cultural and sustainable practices. In the jurisdiction of origin, consider, for example, the quintessential example of a GI protecting a product created through local practice. If that protection is extended to protect the method of production, then, in fact, the GI is protecting know-how (as opposed to innovation). This know-how is an area that copyright and patent protection, in particular, are supposed to not cover.Footnote 73 Copyright protects original works. Patents are granted for processes and products, provided they are inventions that are new, involve inventive step and are useful.Footnote 74 There is a fine line between protecting these things and protecting know-how. The cumulative effect of both protecting the know-how of process and production methods through GIs, by extending the GI justification relating to the commodification of products, and requiring protection of GIs when they are used beyond their locality in export markets, means that GI protection is all encompassing. At that point, what is left? Where is the space for innovation in and around existing IP? Unless GIs are appropriately framed, they will become the latest mechanism for IP overreach.

The preference for property or property-style rules to govern IP is based on the proposition that property comes after (ex post) creation or innovation and so the potential grant of property rights incentivizes creativity and innovation. Put differently, IP rights are a goal to reach and a reward when that goal is reached.Footnote 75 Subsidies are thought to do the opposite because they are ex ante to creativity and innovation. This is why the World Trade Organization (WTO) system allows subsidies to be challenged where they amount to trade barriers. The details of impermissible subsidies, for WTO members, are found in the WTO Subsidies and Counterveiling Measures Agreement (SCM).Footnote 76 In that framework, the issues of particular interest to the relationship between IP and subsidies, is the rules around research subsidies. In the early stages of the SCM the rules allowed subsidies for research and development without questioning them (these were known as green light subsidies). The SCM contained a provision that later moved these ‘green light’ subsidies to amber status. This made such subsidies actionable, rather than permissible simply because they were connected to research.Footnote 77 In other words, research subsidies could be challenged under the SCM rules.

When IP rights overprotect, they take on the economic characteristics of subsidies.Footnote 78 Too many incentives can lead to a lack of innovation. When it is ‘raining carrots’,Footnote 79 one hardly needs to pursue costly innovation if substantive reward can be obtained from the existing regime. Expanded GI protections in foreign markets for products that do not necessarily retain their initial reputation in those foreign markets are, therefore, arguably overprotected. If the rationale for GIs is protection of the local to generate rural development, then that rationale does not simply slip over into export markets. In the export market, the desirability of protecting the local may simply disappear if the local product cannot compete with exports. The local product may, however, be cheaper and as the GI product is a speciality good it is often higher priced. That price may be justified on the assumption, which is perpetrated by both producers and consumers, of better quality. Global GI rules do not require proof of quality and they should probably not be formulated to do so because the necessary administration and resources to retain such a system are very costly and totally impractical for many countries.

Irene Calboli argues that the connection between the GI and the terroir should be strictly enforced so as to maintain the proper scope of GI protection.Footnote 80 In many ways, this argument is attractive because it is an attempt to decouple overprotection, for what she calls ‘market-strategies’, from deeply held place-based cultural claims. Further, there are numerous examples where local culture cannot sustain global markets and attempts to do so undermine local traditions and can create sustainability and development issues. These sorts of issues will vary from place to place, just as the effectiveness of GIs varies.

If Calboli’s argument is correct, then it is also an important reason why GIs are not often a good fit for traditional knowledge, especially where the claimants of traditional knowledge have been dispossessed of their land at one time or another or permanently, which is often the case with indigenous peoples.

I have argued elsewhere that the GI framework is not a good framework for protecting many aspects of traditional knowledge.Footnote 81 The argument is multifaceted, but in essence rejects the similarities between GIs and claims to traditional knowledge (collective nature of ownership and possibility of indefinite protection) as for the most part superficial similarities. GIs enable the commodification of tradition, and claims for protection of traditional knowledge are often not about commodification.Footnote 82 In addition, the resources that are needed for the development of communities seeking traditional knowledge protection will not be achieved through having to pay for the costs of a GI framework and registration without investment in real development and infrastructure.Footnote 83

That said, there is a similarity between what might be an appropriate GI framework of minimum standards and the appropriate framework for protecting traditional knowledge. If both frameworks are aligned with their normative underpinnings, which ought to be primarily about local communities, then any global minimum standards of protection should enable some considerable flexibility in implementation. This flexibility allows for appropriately calibrated domestic application based on local needs and rural development. Such drivers of GI policy are unlikely to be realized by detailed harmonized norms, but through a framework of minimum standards. The same case for a pluralistic approach to traditional knowledge can be made. To be clear, however, the appropriate framework for traditional knowledge is not the GI commoditization framework, but the similarity may be that pluralistic approaches need to be incorporated into the respective legal frameworks if the systems remain true to their normative drivers.Footnote 84

It is important to remember that GIs, as intangible IP rights, are separate legal entities from the goods to which they attach. Using IP analogies, extensive GI protection has a parallel to some aspects of well-known trademarks. Well-known trademarks receive significant worldwide protection.Footnote 85 Small- and medium-sized businesses cannot hope for this level of protection globally and often this means the businesses of small and medium countries cannot rival large economies on the international stage. Well-known GIs are not those of small- and medium-sized businesses either.

If the normative underpinning of GIs is the drive for local culture and sustainability, then that alone does not obviously require global rules. In fact, such aims may be more achievable without global rules. To the extent that minimum standards in GIs around the globe can be sufficiently broad to allow for local differences, such as the CETA compromise discussed above, the regime may work. The normative basis for harmonized rules is, however, somewhat hazy outside of the need to strike a trade deal. It may, therefore, be that not only are the multifaceted approaches to GIs well and truly here to stay; they may have to learn to function better together and support both legal and cultural diversity.

4 Trading in Both the EU and the US Geographical Indications Regimes

As noted in Section 1 of this chapter, there are several countries with trade agreements, with both the European Union and the United States, that purport to operate (one might say with prodigious care) under both trade regimes and other countries that are poised to do so. Carefully calibrated local laws might be able to meet the demands of both frameworks, but as noted above, such approaches are complex, expensive and require legal ingenuity and perhaps even fictions on some occasions.

Trade agreements are not only about GIs (or IP rights); they are also about goods and often include considerable negotiation, even if not resolution, about dairy products and the reduction of subsidies and market access. The European Union uses GIs to protect dairy products whereas the United States, Australia and New Zealand for the most part do not. That is not to suggest that other IP rights such as trademarks do not play an extensive role in the dairy sector. They most certainly do, and dairy products are one of the most contentious sectors in the international GI debate.

To illustrate further the problem of complex overlaps and potential incompatibilities of GI provisions in trade agreements, consider the following. New Zealand exports not only dairy products but also commodities used in dairy products such as milk. Imagine a product made in Australia and called ‘parmesan’ (and trademarked with other names) that includes New Zealand milk products. That product is made by an Australian company with New Zealand owners and is marketed under a label that alludes to Italian culture. It does not use the protected GI (or certification trademark in Australia and New Zealand) ‘Parmigiano-Reggiano’. Instead, the packaging utilizes techniques to suggest ‘Italian style’, such as green and red colouring. Under Australia’s and/or New Zealand’s trade agreements with Singapore (and other countries) that product has market access to Singapore. Under some trade agreement rules, such a product uses what is described as a common name (which is not recognized as a GI) and the mere use of colour does not give rise to protectable rights. It is arguable that this use of ‘geography’ could raise a GI issue in countries that have GI regimes. For the avoidance of doubt, it is not clear that Singapore’s GI regime will allow such concerns to be raised in a dispute, but it may. Another point of the example is to show that when Singapore (and other countries in analogous positions) agreed to create a sui generis GI regime with the European Union, it already had trade and market access obligations in relation to goods that it had to take into account and will have to continue to take into account when implementing and enforcing its GI regime.

In relation to GIs alone, the need to take into account existing trade agreements is evident in the text of the US-Singapore and EU-Singapore trade agreements.Footnote 86 The agreement with the United States embodies a first-in-time-first-in-right principle.Footnote 87 The later EU-Singapore agreement provides, therefore, that a GI that conflicts with a prior existing trademark in Singapore is capable of being registered only with the existing consent of the trademark holder.Footnote 88 Whatever can be said about the ingenuity of Singaporeans to try to navigate the conflicting interests of its trading partners, such a complex regime requires extensive legal knowledge and resources, which will not be a solution available to many countries, and particularly developing countries.

This sort of balancing of interests is precisely why the CETA rules look as detailed as they do, but it is not at all clear that Singapore’s rules or indeed those in CETA and potential regimes, like the text of the TPP, are compatible. At a high level, they may appear to be so, but that remains to be tested. It is difficult to see how countries that have signed up to several regimes can easily make their obligations compatible.

5 Conclusion

On a case-by-case basis, incompatibilities in GI frameworks may be ironed out if and when disputes are resolved. The tug of war between the European Union and the United States to control the international GI framework is, however, costing other trading nations too much in the negotiation and implementation process. The complex hybridized systems are imposed via top-down models rather than generated locally on a fit-for-purpose basis.

Incumbents of the GI system seek international harmonization rather than any flexible minimum standards that would allow various cultures to calibrate and adjust their laws according to local needs. At the same time, the major opponent of the GI system, the United States, seeks its version of trade-mark requirements as a way to ‘correct’ EU policy. Neither approach is satisfactory. In both scenarios, the only likely winners are those whose products are well known.

7 Geographical Indications as Property: European Union Association Agreements and Investor–State Provisions

Anselm Kamperman Sanders Footnote *
1 Introduction

Under European Union (EU) law, geographical indications (GIs) are protected under three guises: the protected GIs (PGI), the protected designations of origin (PDOs), and the traditional specialities guaranteed (TSGs). For the EU, the protection of its GIs in and outside of Europe is a very relevant economic issue, as the value of GI products in 2010 was estimated at €54.3 billion, of which the sale of wines accounts for more than half.Footnote 1 It is no surprise that the EU is vigorously trying to obtain protection for its GIs in major trade partner nations. However, in the context of the World Trade Organization (WTO), New World nations, most notably the North Americas, Australia and New Zealand, have consistently rejected the notion of a multilateral register for GIs that is dominated by European claims. Thus, it comes as no surprise then that in the context of the WTO negotiation mandate contained in the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)Footnote 2 under Article 23,Footnote 3 no significant progress has been made or can be expected in the near future.

As a result of this stalemate at the multilateral level, the strategy of the EU has been to place the protection of GIs at the heart of its intellectual property (IP) chapters in bilateral trade and investment agreements (BTIAs). In particular, Article 3(1)(e) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU)Footnote 4 provides the EU with the exclusive competence to deal with common commercial policy.Footnote 5 According to Article 207(1) of the TFEU,Footnote 6 this includes commercial aspects of IP. Not surprisingly, the number of EU BTIAs is quickly growing and the EU-South KoreaFootnote 7 and EU-SingaporeFootnote 8 Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), the recent Canada-EU Trade Agreement (CETA)Footnote 9 and the EU-Vietnam Trade AgreementFootnote 10 all contain annexes listing the GIs that are to be protected in the partner countries as part of the trade deal.

The nature of BTIAs, however, is that these are mixed agreements dealing with issues of tariffs and trade, but also with investment protection and, increasingly, investor–state dispute settlement (ISDS). In the context of the ongoing negotiations ISDS has become a highly controversial issue, including in the negotiation surrounding the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership Agreement (TTIP).Footnote 11 The controversy lies in the fact that the policy freedom of a signatory state to an agreement containing ISDS may become limited on account of investor expectations that have to be honoured. The controversy is remarkable to the extent that ISDS has been a prominent feature in international trade and investment frameworks since the mid-1970s. In fact, the proliferation of ISDS in bilateral agreements is so widespread and affects so many trading nations globallyFootnote 12 that it is almost surprising that relatively few cases have been brought so far claiming violations under these provisions. Also regional trade agreements like the North American FTA (NAFTA)Footnote 13 and the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP)Footnote 14 contain ISDS clauses.

However, the concept of ISDS is relatively new in the field of IP. This is due to the fact that IP only became a global trade issue relatively recently through the integration of IP standards and IP enforcement in the WTO framework. That said, IP is also peculiar in the sense that the valuation of IP as an object of property that can be viewed as an investment is also a relatively new concept. Even now, various approaches to valuation according to income-based, market-based and review of cost-based approaches, coupled with diverging reporting standards, yield different results.Footnote 15 Still, the number of ISDS complaints is rising and the first cases involving core issues of IP expropriation are currently pending.

Of all IP rights, the EU regime on the protection of GIs invites a substantial involvement of public authority in defining GI specifications, as well as the quality maintenance thereof. This means that any change in the specification may give rise to an investor–state dispute. This chapter charts the likelihood that GIs may become a bone of contention under constitutional expropriation protection laws, WTO disputes and ISDS, and concludes that given the nature of GI protection’s inclusion of specifications, there is a higher state involvement, and accordingly, a higher likelihood that measures negatively affecting a GI proprietor’s rights can be attributed to a state.

2 Geographical Indications and Specifications in the European Union

The EU PGI, PDO and TSG schemes operate on the basis of registration in the Database of Origin and Registration (DOOR).Footnote 16 There are also product-specific regimes and databases, such as the E-BACCHUSFootnote 17 for wines and E-SPIRIT DRINKSFootnote 18 for spirits. EU law also protects GIs for aromatized wine products.Footnote 19 Generally, EU law applies to products originating from EU Member States and third countries that comply with EU rules. Alongside the existing public registries, there are several certification schemes for agricultural products and foodstuffs in the EU. These range from compliance obligations with compulsory production standards to additional voluntary requirements relating to environmental protection, animal welfare, organoleptic qualities, etc. Also, all kinds of ‘fair trade’ or ‘slave free’ epithets fall within these voluntary regimes. All these regimes should, however, be in compliance with the ‘EU best practice guidelines for voluntary certification schemes for agricultural products and foodstuffs’,Footnote 20 in order to be in compliance with EU law.

In 2005, the United States (the US) and Australia successfully challenged the legitimacy of EC Regulation 2081/92Footnote 21 on GIs for agricultural products and foodstuffs, which was the regulation in force at the time, before the WTO. The regulation contained a number of contentious provisions, namely on (1) the equivalence and reciprocity conditions in respect of GI protection; (2) procedures requiring non-EU nationals, or persons resident or established in non-EU countries, to file an application or objection in the European Communities through their own government, but not directly with EU Member States; and (3) a requirement on third-country governments to provide a declaration that structures were in place on their territory enabling the inspection of compliance with the specifications of the GI registration. On all three points, the WTO PanelFootnote 22 found violations of Article 3(1) of TRIPSFootnote 23 and Article III(4) of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 (GATT),Footnote 24 and that the GATT violations were not justified by Article XX(d) of GATT.Footnote 25 In the Australian Report, the WTO Panel further found that these inspection structures did not constitute a ‘technical regulation’ within the meaning of the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT).Footnote 26 As a result, the EU changed its regime in March 2006 to ensure compliance with the WTO regime, currently primarily through the Foodstuffs Regulation,Footnote 27 and corresponding provisions in the other Regulations.Footnote 28 The scope or protection extends to consumer deception;Footnote 29 commercial use in comparable products;Footnote 30 commercial use exploiting reputation;Footnote 31 and misuse, imitation or evocationFootnote 32 in relation to the registered GI. The enforcement of a GI is, however, a private law issue.

More interesting, for the purpose of this chapter, however, is the product specification – its establishment, inspection and enforcement – as this requires the involvement of public authority. The definition of the product according to precise specifications and its analysis by national authorities is a process integral to the registration of the GI at the EU level.

The definition of the product comprises the following elements: the product name, applicant details, product class, the name of the product, the description of the product, a definition of the geographical area, proof of the product’s origin, a description of the method of production, the linkage between the product and the area, the nomination of an inspection body and labelling information.Footnote 33 For PDOs, all production steps must take place within the geographical area, whereas for PGIs at least one production step must take place within the geographical area. It is also at this point where specific rules concerning slicing, grating, packaging and the like of the product to which the registered name refers may be stated and justified. Given the fact that these types of conditions on repackaging or slicing result in geographical restrictions having strong protectionist and anticompetitive effects, they are among the most controversial specifications.

In 1997, the Consorzio del Prosciutto di Parma,Footnote 34 the Italian trade association of 200 traditional producers of Parma Ham, sought injunctions against Asda Stores in the United Kingdom to restrain them from selling pre-sliced packets of prosciutto as ‘Parma Ham’, a protected PDO. The ham was sliced by a supplier of Asda outside the production region, and pre-packaged without supervision by the inspection body responsible for enforcing EU production regulations. The slicing of the ham itself cannot be problematic as such,Footnote 35 but the question is whether slicing the ham away from the consumer’s eyes and offering them as a pre-packaged product not bearing the Consorzio’s mark would be infringing upon the PDO. The Consorzio’s argument was that the consumer could not verify the origin, and the quality of the ham could not be guaranteed. The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEUFootnote 36) heldFootnote 37 that protection conferred by a PDO did not normally extend to operations such as grating, slicing and packaging the product. The CJEU, however, stated that those operations were prohibited to third parties outside the region of production only if they were expressly laid down in the specification, and if this condition was brought to the attention of economic operators by adequate publicity in Community legislation. The latter was not yet the case under the old regime.Footnote 38 Under Article 8.2Footnote 39 of Regulation 1151/2012, the product specification is now to be included in the single document that is contained in the DOOR register, and the Consorzio can now enforce its slicing and packaging rules.

The specification also contains the names of the inspection bodies responsible for enforcing EU production regulations.Footnote 40 In each Member State, public authorities or government agencies are entrusted with this task. When it comes to defining or redefining the specification, however, quite a lot of state involvement can be observed. A case on point is the enlargement in 2009, actively supported by the Italian government, of the area of production for ‘Italian Prosecco’.Footnote 41 The production of this sparkling wine has been traditionally confined to the Veneto Region around Venice, but it was suddenly ‘strategically’ expanded to include the town of Prosecco, which is located in the Friuli-Venezia Giulia Region near Trieste and the Slovenian border. This is the place where the Prosecco grape variety is believed to have originated from. Yet, upon accession to the EU in 2013, Croatia found that its sweet Prošek dessert wine, which is different from Italian Prosecco in all aspects of methods of production and grapes used, could no longer coexist in the EU with Italian Prosecco.Footnote 42

In short, GIs are peculiar in the sense that they constitute a type of IP right where a lot of state involvement can be observed, especially in the drafting, maintenance and alteration of the GI’s specification. This may lead to the consortium of GI producers, or the (semi-)state authority itself to alter a GI specification after the GI has been registered. As a consequence, this may give rise to investor–state disputes by private parties that may consider themselves affected by these changes or the recognition of GIs in general (in that they may no longer be able to market their products under the same or similar names), since many of these measures leading to the definition of the GI’s specification can be directly or indirectly attributed to the state.

3 Geographical Indications as Property

Like other IP rights, GIs are protected as proprietary interests. This becomes apparent from the WTO Panel report in EC – Trademarks and Geographical Indications,Footnote 43 but even more so in the context of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).

In the case of Anheuser-Busch v. Portugal, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) held that the protection provided for by Article 1 of the Protocol No.1 to the ECHR,Footnote 44 which guarantees the right to property,Footnote 45 is applicable to IP as such.Footnote 46 This means that the owner of an intellectual ‘possession’ is protected in respect of (1) the peaceful enjoyment of property; (2) deprivation of possessions and the conditions thereto; and (3) the control of the use of property by the state in accordance with general interest. Inherent in the convention is the recognition that a fair balance needs to be struck between the demands of the general interests of society and the requirements of the protection of the individual’s fundamental rights.Footnote 47

Since 2000 the EU Charter on the Protection of Fundamental Human RightsFootnote 48 recognized similar principles that EU citizens can rely on. In Scarlet Extended v. Sabam,Footnote 49 the CJEU held:

The protection of the right to intellectual property is indeed enshrined in Article 17(2) of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (‘the Charter’). There is, however, nothing whatsoever in the wording of that provision or in the Court’s case-law to suggest that that right is inviolable and must for that reason be absolutely protected … The protection of the fundamental right to property, which includes the rights linked to intellectual property, must be balanced against the protection of other fundamental rights.

Opinions on how this balance should be struck, however, naturally differ, depending on one’s perspective. In a European case, British American Tobacco,Footnote 50 involving challenges to restrictions on advertising, branding and trademark communication in relation to tobacco products, the CJEU held that restrictions on trademark use requiring labels to display health warnings by taking up 30 per cent of the front and 40 per cent of the back of a cigarette packageFootnote 51 amount to a legitimate restriction that still allows for a normal use of the trademark. The tobacco companies had argued that there is a de facto expropriation of their property in the trademark. A similar argument was made in the well-publicized constitutional challenge case to the Australian Tobacco Plain Packaging Act 2011.Footnote 52 The High Court of Australia in BAT v. Commonwealth of AustraliaFootnote 53 held that there was no acquisition of property that would have required so-called ‘just terms’ protection under the Australian constitution. Yet it is the Australian Tobacco Plain Packaging Act 2011 that has also produced two WTO challenges to tobacco plain packaging, by UkraineFootnote 54 and by a number of other states.Footnote 55 Although Ukraine suspended its proceedings on 28 May 2015, the litigation by Honduras, Cuba, Indonesia and the Dominican Republic remains unaffected. Plain packaging also sparked investor–state disputes.Footnote 56 These cases raise questions on the remaining policy freedom that nation states have in regulating the use or exercise of IP in light of societal interests, such as public health, in the context of multilateral and bilateral trade agreements, and investment protection agreements.

4 Investor–State Dispute Settlement and WTO Law

Bilateral free trade and investment agreements may provide additional protection to investors in relation to their investments that are then considered to be ‘possessions’ in the state where such investments have been made. The question is then to what extent protection granted by means of bilateral agreements changes the legal relations between WTO Members. Although the annexes to EU BTIAs list GIs that are to be protected under the agreement,Footnote 57 it remains to be examined what their effect under the WTO Dispute Settlement Understanding (DSU) is.

The WTO Appellate Body, in Mexico – Taxes on Soft Drinks,Footnote 58 rejected the notion that parties can modify WTO obligations by means of an FTA, whereas the WTO Panel in Peru – Additional DutyFootnote 59 was not so categorically opposed. In the latter case, there are numerous references to Peru’s freedom to maintain a price range system (PRS) under an FTA with complainant Guatemala. The WTO Panel, however, observed that the FTA in question was not yet in force, and that its provisions should therefore have limited legal effects on the dispute at hand. Peru’s arguments in respect of the FTA were that, even assuming that Peru’s PRS was WTO-inconsistent, Peru and Guatemala had modified between themselves the relevant WTO provisions to the extent that the FTA allowed Peru to maintain the PRS. Upon appeal, the Appellate Body stated:

[W]e are of the view that the consideration of provisions of an FTA for the purpose of determining whether a Member has complied with its WTO obligations involves legal characterizations that fall within the scope of appellate review under Article 17.6 of the DSU.Footnote 60

However, it also considered that WTO Members cannot modify WTO provisions such that these become WTO-inconsistent, even if these changes ‘merely’ operate bilaterally inter partes and not amongst all WTO Members. In particular, the Appellate Body held:

We note, however, that Peru has not yet ratified the FTA. In this respect, it is not clear whether Peru can be considered as a ‘party’ to the FTA. Moreover, we express reservations as to whether the provisions of the FTA (in particular paragraph 9 of Annex 2.3), which could arguably be construed as to allow Peru to maintain the PRS in its bilateral relations with Guatemala, can be used under Article 31(3) of the Vienna Convention in establishing the common intention of WTO Members underlying the provisions of Article 4.2 of the Agreement on Agriculture and Article II:1(b) of the GATT 1994. In our view, such an approach would suggest that WTO provisions can be interpreted differently, depending on the Members to which they apply and on their rights and obligations under an FTA to which they are parties.Footnote 61

In the case at hand, this means that Peru under the FTA is only allowed to maintain a WTO-consistent PRS, which should meet the requirements of Article XXIVFootnote 62 of the GATT 1994, which permits certain specific deviations from WTO rules. All such departures require that the level of duties and other regulations of commerce applicable in each of the FTA members to the trade of non-FTA members shall not be higher or more restrictive than those applicable prior to the formation of the FTA.Footnote 63

In Turkey – Textiles,Footnote 64 the Appellate Body held that the justification for measures that are inconsistent with certain GATT 1994 provisions requires the party claiming the benefit of the defence provided for by Article XXIV GATT 1994 lies in closer integration between the economies of the countries party to such an agreement. It is clear that Peru’s PRS measure cannot be interpreted as a measure fostering closer integration; rather, it results in the opposite. The GI ‘claw-back’ annexes to EU BTIAs can arguably be held to contain obligations that approximate the economies of the parties to the agreement, providing the holder of such a GI legal certainty not only as to the protection and enforcement of the GI but also as to the protection of an ‘investment’ in terms of production and marketing of a GI product.

The WTO Dispute Settlement Body has meanwhile established dispute settlement panels in relation to Australia’s tobacco plain packaging measure. GIs are part of the property package on which the claim is based. The five complainants are arguing that the measure is inconsistent with Australia’s WTO obligations under TRIPS,Footnote 65 TBTFootnote 66 and the GATT 1994.Footnote 67 In respect of trademarks and GIs, the claim is that restrictions on their use amount to an expropriation of property. There is only one caveat that will be of relevance to a decision in these casesFootnote 68 in the context of TRIPS, and that is that in EC – Geographical Indications, the panel held:

[T]he TRIPS Agreement does not generally provide for the grant of positive rights to exploit or use certain subject matter, but rather provides for the grant of negative rights to prevent certain acts. This fundamental feature of intellectual property protection inherently grants Members freedom to pursue legitimate public policy objectives since many measures to attain those public policy objectives lie outside the scope of intellectual property rights and do not require an exception under the TRIPS Agreement.Footnote 69

5 Investor–State Dispute Settlement and Geographical Indications

The ISDS case of Philip Morris Asia v. AustraliaFootnote 70 shows that investor–state disputes can be brought in support of, or as an alternative to, constitutional and WTO challenges. In this case, Philip Morris Asia challenged the tobacco plain packaging legislation under the 1993 Agreement between the Government of Australia and the Government of Hong Kong for the Promotion and Protection of Investments. The arbitration was conducted under the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) Arbitration Rules 2010.Footnote 71 In a decision of 18 December 2015, the Tribunal hearing the case ruled that it had no jurisdiction to hear Philip Morris Asia’s claim.

However, it is important to realize that the proliferation of ISDS clauses in bilateral trade agreements is increasing. Investor–state dispute settlement revolves around the question of whether expropriation, directly or indirectly, has been conducted according to the principles of Fair and Equitable Treatment (FET). FET is determined through applying principles of (1) reasonableness, (2) consistency, (3) non-discrimination, (4) transparency and (5) due process. In this context, the legitimate expectations of an investor are taken into consideration in order to assess whether the state has expropriated in bad faith, through coercion, by means of threats or harassment. Due to the fact that there is no true harmonized multilateral dispute settlement system in relation to investment disputes, the interpretation and application of these principles are not uniform. Due to the confidential nature of arbitration, not all arbitration reports are public. The most concrete expressions of what legitimate investor expectations are can be found in statements made in published cases that seem to indicate that a balance must be struck.

For example, in International Thunderbird v. Mexico,Footnote 72 a NAFTA dispute conducted under UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules, the panel held:

[A] situation where a Contracting Party’s conduct creates reasonable and justifiable expectations on the part of an investor (or investment) to act in reliance on said conduct, such that a failure by the NAFTA Party to honour those expectations could cause the investor (or investment) to suffer damages.Footnote 73

Conversely, in Saluka v. Czech Republic,Footnote 74 an investor–state dispute also conducted under UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules, the panel held:

No investor may reasonably expect that the circumstances prevailing at the time the investment is made remain totally unchanged. In order to determine whether frustration of the foreign investor’s expectations was justified and reasonable, the host State’s legitimate right subsequently to regulate domestic matters in the public interest must be taken into consideration as well.Footnote 75

There are few ISDS cases involving IP.Footnote 76 These are cases that have been argued under the rules of the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), which is an independent branch of the World Bank.

First, there was a failed attempt at arguing a trademark infringement case under investor–state dispute settlement in AHS v. Niger.Footnote 77 In this case, although a concession to service Niger’s national airport had been terminated, there was continued use of seized equipment and uniforms bearing the trademarks of the complainant. The panel held that it had no jurisdiction, as IP enforcement is a civil matter that cannot be raised in the context of the ISDS expropriation complaint.

Second, there is the ongoing case of Philip Morris v. UruguayFootnote 78 that is argued under the Uruguay-Switzerland FTA,Footnote 79 and where the legitimacy of plain packaging tobacco products is challenged. In this case jurisdiction has been established and proceedings on the merits are to follow.

Third, there is a NAFTAFootnote 80 case argued under UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules. In Eli Lilly v. Canada,Footnote 81 pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly sought damages for $100 million CAD and challenged changes to the patentability requirements in respect of utility or industrial applicability, leading the Canadian patent office to invalidate two of Eli Lilly’s patents for the Strattera attention-deficit disorder pill and the Zyprexa antipsychotic treatment. Eli Lilly argued that the interpretation of the term ‘useful’ in the Canadian Patent Act by the Canadian courts led to an unjustified expropriation and a violation of Canada’s obligations under NAFTA on the basis that it is arbitrary and discriminatory. Canada conversely argued that Eli Lilly’s claims were beyond the jurisdiction of the Tribunal. Ultimately, in March 2017, the Tribunal dismissed Eli Lilly’s claims and confirmed that Canada was in compliance with its NAFTA obligations.Footnote 82

Cases involving IP can be and are clearly brought if measures negatively impacting upon the ‘investment’ can be attributed to a state that has submitted to ISDS. Issues such as IP enforcement or thresholds for patentability as such appear to be outside of the remit of ISDS, as these are civil or administrative matters where access to judicial review is usually provided. However, complaints over (arbitrary or discriminatory) denial of justice may not be. In the cases described above, one can argue that the general measures taken are neither of an arbitrary nor discriminatory nature. GI specifications, on the other hand, are discriminatory by nature since they are always specifically targeted, and this characteristic exceeds the already exclusionary nature of an IP right. This is because, as we have seen, the definition of the product comprises not only the product name and related labelling but also the description of the product, a definition of the geographical area, proof of the product’s origin, a description of the method of production, the linkage between the product and the area, the nomination of an inspection body empowered to police the specification.

This means that there are a number of actions that may have an immediate impact, not only on the existence and exercise of a GI, but also on its value and costs. The example of the Italian Prosecco DOC reformFootnote 83 comes to mind, as an enlargement of the geographical area, but also a possible reduction thereof has immediate effects for producers within and outside of the area. Production methods may also be subject to changes. Changes to production requirements resulting from a raise in food safety standards may be legitimized within the context of the WTO Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS).Footnote 84 Many of the GI production requirements are, however, steeped in a tradition and culture that solicit the demand for a particular product. If one, for example, orders Limburg Grotto Cheese,Footnote 85 one expects the cheese to have been ripened through completely natural processes by exposure of the cheese to the atmosphere of a limestone cave that contains the Brevibacterium Linens that produces a cheese with a pungent odour. The cheeses ripen on oak wooden boards and need to be turned regularly. This is a delicate operation as the fungi growing on the cheeses are poisonous. The result of food safety standards (no oak, stainless steel racks, etc.) has been that the traditional production for the traditional connoisseur consumer has now moved literally and figuratively underground. As a result, only the more industrial producers remain around to sell a product that is compliant with legal standards. They are selling a product that may be safer (although this is often disputed) but is certainly far less traditional than the consumer is led to believe. Phasing-out rules concerning slicing, grating, packaging, etc. stem from a desire to free the market from anticompetitive restrictions, but arguably these could also be measures that have a negative impact on the investments made by producers benefitting from GI specifications containing such rules. These forms of proprietary protection of GIs via individual regulations are also open to non-European entities, as we have seen above. So, a US association that holds an EU GI, such as the Idaho Potato Commission,Footnote 86 could then also sue before the special ISDS courts envisaged under the TTIPFootnote 87 for a weakening or strengthening of protection standards in Europe. In most cases, after all, the measure can be attributed to the state, and despite attempts by EU Member States to deny private parties the right to invoke international treaties, the CJEU has affirmed the direct effect of international treaties that bind the EU.Footnote 88

6 Conclusion

More than any other IP, a GI displays a very high level of state involvement in relation to specifications that do not directly concern the exercise of the IP right in terms of protection against consumer confusion and the like, but that very much influences the value of the GI for its owner. Definitions of territory, methods of production, sanitary and phytosanitary standards, and other more nefarious rules concerning slicing, grating, packaging, etc. can be changed at the behest of members of the consortium, but also of (semi-)state authorities or agencies. Insofar as these lead to a negative impact on members of the consortium, or third parties, there appears to be an increase in the options to challenge such measures under domestic constitutional and WTO rules, or bilateral and regional trade and investment agreements containing ISDS. These ISDS clauses are commonly included in recent US and EU trade and investment agreements, also those with Asian partners. To date, only a limited number of such cases that have been brought involve IP rights. The likelihood of success appears limited, but several key cases are still pending. In ISDS complaints over IP enforcement, tribunals seem hesitant to accept jurisdiction over these cases. In the plain packaging tobacco cases, the question will be the extent to which WTO Members have policy freedom in articulating exceptions to WTO obligations.

EU GI specifications are very targeted and individual in nature, so that any measure affecting them may be considered arbitrary or discriminatory much more easily as compared to general policy measures affecting the use, grant or scope of a trademark, design, copyright or patent right. Furthermore, many specifications are rooted in culture and custom rather than in science and utility, which raises the chances of a dispute over arbitrariness and discrimination in standards imposed when determining issues of culture and custom. Finally, measures affecting GI specifications are often attributable to a public authority or agency. This combination increases the likelihood of success of claims for protection of GIs as property and investments. If, for example, an EU company takes over (i.e., invests) a business located in Vietnam or Korea that is involved in the production of a GI product, and the Vietnamese or Korean authority redefines the geographical area in such a way that the EU company can no longer use that GI, this could give rise to an ISDS case. The same could be true for a US company making investments in Asian jurisdictions. This should be taken into consideration when drafting or changing GI product specifications.

8 How Would Geographical Indications from Asia Fare in Europe?

Christopher Heath Footnote *
1 Introduction and Structure

Asian countries are discovering geographical indications (GIs).Footnote 1 There are two reasons for this. First, the recognition that GIs can serve as an advantageous identifier for the marketing of domestic products abroad. Second, a system for the protection of GIs has become an obligation under bilateral and multilateral agreements. The question of how GIs from Asia can be protected abroad thereby becomes of interest. This chapter analyses how Asian GIs would fare in Europe.Footnote 2 ‘Would’, because as of yet there is very little actual experience in this respect. Very few GIs from Asia have been registered in Europe, be it as GIs or trademarks, and even fewer have been litigated. The examples used in this chapter demonstrate how ‘foreign’ GIs can, did or did not find protection in Europe, either at the level of European Community law or the domestic laws of individual European Union (EU) Member States.

This chapter is divided into four sections. Section 2 gives a brief overview of the interplay between social, economic and legal considerations when approaching the topic of protecting domestic GIs abroad. Section 3 discusses the possibilities for Asian GIs to obtain protection in Europe, be it under the sui generis protection offered by EU law or on the basis of bilateral or international agreements. Section 4 discusses protection under EU trademark law in different contexts: protection against registration of geographical names by third parties, protection based on trademark registration, protection based on the registration of a collective mark and protection once a trademark has received well-known status. Section 5 discusses non-proprietary protection in the context of unfair competition prevention law, namely as a guarantee of the ‘freedom to operate’ and market access.

2 Geographical Indications at the Crossroads of Culture, Law and Economy

Try to discuss GIs in a country with a strong heritage in food and beverages such as Italy, and tempers flare. Most consider it a huge injustice that Americans sell ‘Parmesan’ cheese that does not originate from Italy (and often tastes like grated wood), but would readily admit that neither ‘Parmesan’ nor ‘Parmigiano’ are protected indications in Italy itself (only Parmigiano Reggiano is). ‘Tokaj’ and ‘Prosecco’ are considered local indications by most Italians, yet few know or acknowledge that the fame of Tokaj is based on Hungarian Tokaj being sold to the Tsars of Russia, and even fewer know that ‘Prosecco’ is a place (let alone where it is on a map).Footnote 3 If they did, they would discover that this little village up the Karst region of Triest belonged to the Habsburg monarchy for almost 600 years, and the fame of the sparkling wine owes more to the Austrian Empire than to Italy. Particularly when it comes to national heritage and history, there is often a mismatch between local and global perception, and GIs are no exception. While for many, ‘Pilsener’ beer comes from Pilsen, ‘Budweiser’ beer from Budweis (Ceske Budejovice) and Bavarian beer from Bavaria, others take the view that ‘Pilsen’ is generic, ‘Budweiser’ comes from Anheuser Busch and Bavarian beer may come from Bavaria, or is generic, or may come from the Dutch brewery ‘Bavaria’. The same issues are discussed in the Asia-Pacific region. Australians strongly feel that ‘Ugg’ boots are Australian; Indians insist that ‘Basmati’ rice must originate from India (or, maybe, from Pakistan); and Thais feel the same about ‘Jasmine’ rice, while for many European consumers, these indications sound just as generic as Afghan dogs, bone China or Singapore Sling. Things are not helped by the fact that well-reputed indications often face an erosion from piggybackers: ‘Kobe beef’ produced in the United States and Australia is an example.Footnote 4

All this of course also has financial implications. Particularly, the European Union makes mantra-like claims about the financial benefits that GIs bring to producers (and paid for by consumers, of course).Footnote 5 Whether the figures are correct or inflated, it is certainly true that business identifiers through proper marketing can turn into extremely valuable brands and premium prices for products. ‘Champagne’ may be the most prominent example, but also the recognition of ‘Café de Colombia’, a relatively recent indication, should not be underestimated.Footnote 6

The question is then how and to what extent the cultural and financial interests in GIs can be safeguarded and enforced by legal means. In this respect, one should distinguish three different levels of legal protection. First, the freedom to operate; second, non-proprietary protection of an indication based on the principles of unfair competition (that is, protection against misleading use); and, third, proprietary protection based on registration, against the use of the indication for either similar or, at the highest level of protection, dissimilar goods.

The freedom to operate is normally guaranteed where the marketing of goods under an indication does not infringe third-party rights and is not considered misleading. Third-party rights may become an issue either where the GI in question has been registered by someone else (rare but possible, e.g., where two countries use the same indication, such as Ginseng in North and South Korea) or, more common, where conflicting trademark rights exist. The latter has been a particularly contentious issue in trade negotiations (see Section 3). Although unlikely, it may be that in accordance with local consumer perception even a true GI is considered misleading, e.g., where two different locations sharing the same name produce similar goods. Wines from ‘Cordoba’ could originate in Argentina or Spain.

The freedom to operate guarantees market access but does not allow the exclusion of others. In case the indication is considered generic, proprietary protection may not be available at all, nor would an action for misleading use succeed (e.g., ‘Pilsener beer’ would be considered generic in most countries). In order to avoid such genericide, significant efforts and investment are often necessary so as to prevent generic use. The example of ‘Greek Yoghurt’Footnote 7 demonstrates that this is possible, and producers of Basmati rice, Jasmine rice or Kobe beef may well consider a proactive enforcement strategy in Europe. Different from the laws on trademarks and GIs, remedies under unfair competition law can only be obtained at a national level based on domestic consumer perception. Such course of action may be the only avenue where the indication in question cannot be protected in its home country (as was the case for Greek Yoghurt).

3 The Framework of Geographical Indications Protection in Europe
3.1 Regulations 2081/92 and 1151/2012

The first laws that allowed for European Community-wide protection of agricultural products were Regulations 2081/92 of 14 July 1992,Footnote 8 2082/92Footnote 9 and 1848/93,Footnote 10 while Regulation 1234/2007Footnote 11 was limited to wines and spirits. No protection is available, to date, for non-agricultural and non-food items (carpets, porcelain, crystal, etc.). In particular, GIs are divided, under EU law, into protected designations of origin (PDOs), protected GIs (PGIs) and traditional specialties guaranteed (TSGs).Footnote 12 PDOs have the strongest geographical link, and, with (notable) exceptions, must meet three requirements. The product must originate from a certain place, must essentially derive its characteristics from the geographical environment or local human factors, and must be processed in the area itself.

Initially, non-EU indications could only be registered upon reciprocity, that is, as long as the countries at issue permitted GI registration in their jurisdiction. However, the obligations under the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)Footnote 13 by the World Trade Organization (WTO) required an amendment of the reciprocal arrangements envisaged under EU law, in that national treatment obligations under TRIPS did, amongst others, not permit a registration of non-EU indications only upon reciprocal possibilities of protection for EU indications abroad. The amendment followed a complaint by Australia and the United States to the WTO.Footnote 14 Following the WTO ruling on the case, the European Union amended the text of the Regulations and allowed foreigners to register their indications under conditions comparable to those of EU nationals.Footnote 15 The currently applicable Regulations 1151/2012Footnote 16 (agricultural products) and 1308/2013Footnote 17 (alcoholic beverages) no longer require reciprocity in order to register non-EU GIs.

In particular, the following GIs from Asia have already been registered, or have been applied for registration to the European Commission as of 1 April 2016:Footnote 18

  1. 1. Mrech Kampot ‘Poivre de Kampot’ (Cambodia) (registration)Footnote 19

  2. 2. Kafae Doi Tung / กาแฟดอยตุง (Thailand) (registration)Footnote 20

  3. 3. Kafae Doi Chaang / กาแฟดอยช้าง (Thailand) (registration)Footnote 21

  4. 4. ข้าวสังข์หยดเมืองพัทลุง Khao Sangyod Muang Phatthalung (Thailand) (application)Footnote 22

  5. 5. ข้าวหอมมะลิทุ่งกุลาร้องไห้ Khao Hom Mali Thung Kula Rong-Hai (Thailand) (registration)Footnote 23

  6. 6. 东山白卢笋 Dongshan Bai Lu Sun (China) (registration)Footnote 24

  7. 7. 平谷大桃 Pinggu Da Tao (China) (registration)Footnote 25

  8. 8. Phú Quốu (Vietnam) (registration)Footnote 26

  9. 9. 盐城龙虾, Yancheng Long Xia (China) (registration)Footnote 27

  10. 10. 镇江香醋Zhenjiang Xiang Cu (China) (registration)Footnote 28

  11. 11. 金乡大蒜 Jinxiang Da Suan (China) (registration)Footnote 29

  12. 12. Darjeeling (India) (registration)Footnote 30

  13. 13. 龙井茶, Longjing cha (China) (registration)Footnote 31

  14. 14. 琯溪蜜柚 Guanxi Mi You (China) (registration)Footnote 32

  15. 15. 陕西苹果 Shaanxi ping guo (China) (registration)Footnote 33

  16. 16. 蠡县麻山药 Lixian Ma Shan Yao (China) (registration)Footnote 34

  17. 17. Kangra Tea (India) (application)Footnote 35

  18. 18. Kopi Arabika Gayo (Indonesia) (application)Footnote 36

Still, compared to the number of registered EU GIs, the number of Asian applications or registrations is quite small.Footnote 37 This is not surprising given the fact that comparable systems of registration for GIs have been introduced in Asia quite recentlyFootnote 38 or have still not been adopted.

3.2 Scope of Protection

Article 13(1) of Regulation 1151/2012Footnote 39 prohibits any direct or indirect commercial use of a protected indication, any imitation or evocation, or any other practice that misleads the consumer. Particularly, the notion of ‘evocation’ is relatively broad and includes translations and alliterations.Footnote 40 This is of particular importance where GIs are known in a number of linguistic varieties, depending on the transliteration or historical connotation. As noted below, the issue of transliteration has been expressly stipulated in the EU-South Korea Free Trade Agreement (FTA),Footnote 41 and is a sensible addition in all cases where the GIs originate from a country with a non-Latin alphabet.

Different from trademark law, also as noted below, there is no specific provision that would protect well-known or well-reputed indications against the use for dissimilar goods, although one could argue that the concept of ‘evocation’ under Article 13(1) of the Regulation is broad enough to prevent the use of non-similar goods.Footnote 42 One should be aware, though, that there is no case law on this point.

Conflicts between GIs and similar trademarks used on identical or similar products are resolved on the basis of priority of registration. Even where the trademark registration precedes the registration for a GI and there are no grounds for invalidating such marks, the GI may be registered and used so that both coexist.Footnote 43

3.3 Bilateral Agreements

The European Union has concluded a number of agreements that address the protection of GIs with countries outside Europe. The first was the wine agreement concluded with AustraliaFootnote 44 in 1994. Subsequent agreements, specifically for wine, were concluded with South AfricaFootnote 45 and the United States,Footnote 46 while the agreements with Canada,Footnote 47 ChileFootnote 48 and MexicoFootnote 49 contain GI protection only as part of a broader framework of free trade.Footnote 50

The agreements vary in scope and approach, yet are generally guided by the principle of reciprocal protection of GIs contained in an annex to the agreement,Footnote 51 and protection against the expressions ‘kind’, ‘type’, ‘style’, ‘imitation’, ‘method’ or the like. Further, the use of conflicting trademarks must be ceased, an obligation that may give rise to conflicts not only with existing trademark rights but also with other bilateral FTAs that may envisage obligations that cannot be reconciled with each other.Footnote 52 As of yet, the European Union has concluded one FTA with an Asian country – South Korea.Footnote 53 Under this agreement, in Annex 1 Part B, the European Union is obliged to protect sixty-three Korean indications of origin for food and one for an alcoholic drink.Footnote 54

The scope of protection under bilateral agreements is normally stipulated in the agreement itself. Article 10.21 of the EU-South Korea FTAFootnote 55 extends the protection against ‘type’, ‘style’, etc. to all registered indications and provides safeguards against the use in transliteration.Footnote 56 While the extended scope of protection is limited to those indications expressly listed under the agreement, there is a provision that allows a regular update of this list.

Conflicts with registered trademarks are either solved in favour of the GI or, where this is not possible, by way of a coexistence (while problematic cases were filtered out during the negotiations).

3.4 International Multilateral Agreements

The Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property (Paris Convention) in Article 1.3 lists GIs (‘indications of source or appellations of origin’) as one form of industrial rights.Footnote 57 Article 10 concerns a rather obsolete provision to prohibit the use of a false indication of origin when linked to a fictitious commercial name,Footnote 58 and Article 10bis, the general provision against all acts of unfair competition, requires protection against confusing or misleading use of an indication and thereby depends on the perception of domestic consumers.Footnote 59 These remedies have not proved very efficient.Footnote 60

The same holds true for the provisions of the TRIPS Agreement (section 3)Footnote 61 that, although pretty detailed, ultimately does not offer protection that goes further than to prevent misleading use.Footnote 62 Protection beyond this is only offered for wines and spirits.Footnote 63

The Madrid Agreement for the Repression of False or Deceptive Indications of Sources of Goods (Madrid Agreement)Footnote 64 protects against the use of false or misleading ‘indirect’ indications,Footnote 65 or false or misleading indications with such additions as ‘system’, ‘type’ or the like.Footnote 66 In Article 4, it also tries to contain the generic use of a foreign indication, yet leaves it to ‘courts of each country’Footnote 67 to decide whether an indication has become generic:

The position under which the tribunal of any country may decide that an appellation of origin has become generic creates insecurity and also contradiction. An appellation of origin protected by legislation or jurisprudence in a certain country may not be used by producers or manufacturers of such country and yet may be used freely by producers or manufacturers in a contracting country.Footnote 68

Membership to the Madrid Agreement is limited even amongst European countries, and the Agreement has never played any role in decisions concerning the protection of GIs.

The above weaknesses of the Madrid Agreement clarify the motives for concluding the subsequent Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and their International Registration (Lisbon Agreement):Footnote 69

  1. (1) To prevent the tribunals of any member state from holding an indication generic. In other words, no indication of origin should be exempt from protection because it is considered generic.

  2. (2) To set up a system whereby protection was not decided by the member whose indication was the object of a dispute, but by the member from which the indication originated.

Both conditions are vital for understanding the Lisbon Agreement, as both limit the competence of national courts. National courts (‘tribunals’) should neither be entitled to hold an indication generic nor should they be entitled to question the validity of an indication once that indication has been protected in the country of origin, communicated to the international bureau and examined by the other countries.

The Lisbon Agreement came into force in 1966 with the original member states of Cuba, Czechoslovakia, France, Haiti, Israel, Mexico and Portugal. Subsequently, the following countries acceded to the Agreement: Hungary (1967), Italy (1968), Algeria (1972), Tunisia (1973), Bulgaria (1975), Burkina Faso (1975), Gabon (1975), Togo (1975), Congo (1977), the Czech Republic and Slovakia (1993), Costa Rica (1997), Yugoslavia (1999, subsequently Serbia and Montenegro), Moldova (2001), Georgia (2004), North Korea (2004), Iran (2005), Peru (2005), Nicaragua (2006), Macedonia (2010) and Bosnia (2013).Footnote 70

The protection under the Lisbon Agreement is of proprietary nature and works as follows:

Every member state of the Paris Convention that also adheres to the agreement undertakes to protect in its own territory all appellations of origin of other member states for those products registered on the express condition that protection is also afforded in the home countries. The expression ‘qualified’ means that the right of an appellation of origin first of all needs to be recognised in the country of origin. The agreement thereby imposes on all member states a uniform set of rules, yet without separating this from national rules … Registration of an appellation of origin under the agreement can only be demanded by the country of origin … Protection must thus be granted against all attacks of the exclusive rights given to those entitled to use the appellation, be it against the unlawful use … be it against the fraudulent imitation of an appellation.Footnote 71

Article 4Footnote 72 clarifies that an indication protected under the Agreement cannot be considered or become generic.

As of yet, the only country in East Asia that can profit from the protection offered under the Lisbon Agreement is North Korea, which (as of 1 January 2016) has registered six indications:Footnote 73

No. Appellations

1.866개성고려인삼
2.867백두산
3.881고려신덕산샘물
4.884강서약수
5.886백두산들쭉술
6.887평양랭면

Table 8.1 Indications registered by North Korea

The Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement was agreed on 20 May 2015Footnote 74 by the twenty-seven Member States of the Lisbon Union and (as of 1 January 2016) signed by fourteen of these.Footnote 75 The Geneva Act provides different rules for indications considered generic in a Member State, and for the invalidation of a registered indication. Particularly, in the case of conflicting trademark rights, the courts of a Member State are entitled to an invalidation of the indication. Whether this is possible under the original Lisbon Agreement is disputed.Footnote 76

4 Geographical Indications and European TradeMark Law

In contrast to GIs that confer a geographical origin, trademarks confer a commercial origin of an enterprise. The registration of names considered to indicate a geographical origin as a trademark should thus not be possible where such mark would be considered descriptive (of the geographical origin of the goods for which the mark is registered or applied) or misleading (as to its geographical origin). Such a bar to registration is also an important safeguard for all those using the name as an indication of geographical origin, and thus in a descriptive manner. Still, registrations of geographical names have been allowed in Europe either for goods or services different from those for which the geographical name is known (‘Darjeeling lingerie’, as elaborated below), in cases where the name is not known to consumers as conferring a geographical connotation (a significant problem for indications from Asia, as these tend not to be known) or (most questionable) where the applicant was an official body or even the state (‘Sidamo’, also as elaborated below). GIs can be registered as collective marks in Europe, however.

4.1 Registrability and Use of Geographical Terms for Ordinary Marks

First, it should be noted that trademarks ‘which consist exclusively of signs or indications which may serve, in trade, to designate the … geographical origin … of the goods or services’Footnote 77 cannot be registered under European law. This provision expresses a general principle that a mark perceived to indicate a geographical origin cannot serve the trademark function to distinguish the goods or services of one enterprise from those of another. In other words, a geographical origin is not a commercial origin.

The leading case of the European Court of Justice (ECJ, now renamed Court of Justice of the European Union, CJEU), the decision in Chiemsee,Footnote 78 has interpreted the provision as follows:

  1. 25. Article 3(1)(c) of the Directive pursues an aim which is in the public interest, namely that descriptive signs or indications relating to the categories of goods or services in respect of which registration is applied for may be freely used by all, including as collective marks or as part of complex or graphic marks. Article3(1)(c) therefore prevents such signs and indications from being reserved to one undertaking alone because they have been registered as trade marks.

  2. 26. As regards, more particularly, signs or indications which may serve to designate the geographical origin of the categories of goods in relation to which registration of the mark is applied for, especially geographical names, it is in the public interest that they remain available, not least because they may be an indication of the quality and other characteristics of the categories of goods concerned, and may also, in various ways, influence consumer tastes by, for instance, associating the goods with a place that may give rise to a favourable response.

  3. 29. Article 3(1)(c) of the Directive is not confined to prohibiting the registration of geographical names as trade marks solely where they designate specified geographical locations which are already famous, or are known for the category of goods concerned, and which are therefore associated with those goods in the mind of the relevant class of persons, that is to say in the trade and amongst average consumers of that category of goods in the territory in respect of which registration is applied for … [but also for those indications which] designate(s) a place which is currently associated in the mind of the relevant class of persons with the category of goods concerned, or whether it is reasonable to assume that such an association may be established in the future.Footnote 79

The Court thereby highlights a principle of public policy that geographical names should not become subject to private trademark rights. The provision is thus broad as regards the indication (‘may serve to designate’; ‘association may be established in the future’Footnote 80). Yet it is at the same time narrow as it only concerns marks that exclusively consist of a geographical name. A combined word/device mark including a geographical name does not fall under this provision, and a disclaimer for the geographical term is not required. As elaborated below, this is important to notice and, for example, is allowed for the registration of ‘Darjeeling’ as a combined word and device mark.

However, as mentioned above, these principles are often not adhered to in practice. Evidence is the story of Sidamo, a coffee-growing area in Ethiopia, about which the World Intellectual Property Office (WIPO) (no less) reports:

The government of Ethiopia decided that instead of trying to protect Ethiopian coffee’s geographical origin, it would be better to protect its commercial origin, which it would do through registering trade marks. This was seen as a more direct route of protection because it would grant the government of Ethiopia the legal right to exploit, license and use the trade marked names in relation to coffee goods to the exclusion of all other traders. Unlike a GI, a trade mark registration does not require a specific coffee to be produced in a specific region or have a particular quality in connection with that region. Using trade mark registrations, the government of Ethiopia could then produce greater quantities of specialty coffees from all over the country. Rural producers outside the Sidamo region could grow Sidamo coffee, as it would not need to have a characteristic that is unique to the Sidamo region.Footnote 81

This summarises about everything that is legally wrong with registering geographical names as trademarks – the mark would inevitably be either descriptiveFootnote 82 or deceptiveFootnote 83 (or, as the text reads, both). Yet, the mark has been duly registered in Japan,Footnote 84 the European UnionFootnote 85 and the United StatesFootnote 86 and applied for in Canada.Footnote 87 Another example is the registration of ‘Tabasco’ for chilli sauce on behalf of a US enterprise.Footnote 88 After all, Tabasco is a Mexican state where chilli is widely cultivated, and the product or its ingredients do not even originate from Mexico.

Last, but not least, the protection against the use of misleading indications comes into play both at the stage of registration and at the stage of use (independent of whether the indication has been registered or not). In the long-running Budweiser battle,Footnote 89 the Italian Supreme CourtFootnote 90 held that a registration of ‘Budweiser’ on behalf of Anheuser Busch (a US company) could cause Italian consumers to assume that the beer came from Bohemia (Budweis is the German name of what is now Ceske Budejovice, a town with a renowned tradition for brewing beer):

After all, for a trade mark that consists of a geographical indication to be considered misleading it is sufficient that there exists a link between the indicated place and the quality of the labeled products. Only if this is not the case, the geographical mark would simply be of imaginary nature and therefore legitimate. According to the facts of this case, such connection is undeniable here.

The importance of this decision also lies in the fact that protection against misleading use and registration is not limited to official place names, but any place name associated by the public with a certain geographical origin. This may find application for Asian place names such as ‘Ceylon’ (nowadays Sri Lanka), ‘Bangkok’ (officially Krung Thep) or ‘Saigon’ (officially Ho-Chi Minh City).

4.2 Scope of Protection

The scope of protection for European trademarks is determined by Article 9(1) Community Trade Mark Regulation (CTMR),Footnote 91 and for similar signs and/or similar goods, infringement requires a showing of confusion. In particular, an infringement can only be established once the allegedly infringing sign is perceived as an indication of commercial origin. In fact, use of a registered trademark as a geographical origin is a defence to trademark infringement under Article 12 CTMR, as long as it is used in accordance with honest practices.Footnote 92

In this respect, reference is made to the above observations for possible conflicts with (earlier or subsequent) registrations of GIs.Footnote 93

4.3 Collective Marks

Apart from the registration of ordinary trademarks, EU law also allows for the registration of collective marks. Different from ordinary marks, registration is also possible for geographically descriptive names:

Article 66 of Regulation No 207/2009 provides for the possibility of registering Community collective marks. According to Article 66(1) of that regulation, ‘a Community trade mark which is described as such when the mark is applied for and is capable of distinguishing the goods or services of the members of the association which is the proprietor of the mark from those of other undertakings’ may constitute such a mark. That provision states that such marks may be applied for by ‘[a]ssociations of manufacturers, producers, suppliers of services, or traders which, under the terms of the law governing them, have the capacity in their own name to have rights and obligations of all kinds, to make contracts or accomplish other legal acts and to sue and be sued, as well as legal persons governed by public law’. Article 66(3) of Regulation No 207/2009 also states that the provisions of that regulation are to apply to Community collective marks, ‘unless Articles 67 to 74 [thereof] provide otherwise’.

Article 66(2) of Regulation No 207/2009 allows ‘signs or indications which may serve, in trade, to designate the geographical origin of the goods or services’ to be registered as Community collective marks within the meaning of Article 66(1) of that regulation, in derogation from Article 7(1)(c) thereof, pursuant to which trade marks consisting exclusively of such signs or indications are not to be registered.

It follows from case-law that, under the provisions of Article 8(1)(b) of Regulation No 207/2009, in conjunction with Article 66(3) of that regulation, a Community collective mark, like any other Community trade mark, enjoys protection against any infringement resulting from the registration of a Community trade mark that involves a likelihood of confusion.Footnote 94

One prominent example of a registered collective mark is ‘Darjeeling’, registered as No. 4312718 on 31 March 2006.Footnote 95 In a long-running dispute, the question arose whether this mark could be successfully invoked against the registration of ‘Darjeeling’ for lingerie and telecommunications. While these goods or services were undoubtedly dissimilar to tea, the Indian Tea Board argued that the scope of a collective mark should also extend to a protection of geographical origins, and consumers should in such case be protected against geographical misconceptions. Essentially, although the goods or services were different, registration should be denied where the goods or services did not originate or were not linked to the geographical notion conferred by the mark. The General Court of the CJEU rejected such an interpretation:Footnote 96

In the present case, it is not disputed that the word element ‘darjeeling’ may serve, in trade, to designate the geographical origin of the product covered by the earlier trade marks. That finding cannot be undermined by OHIM’s argument based on the possible perception of that word by part of the public, which would not recognise ‘darjeeling’ as a geographical name. However, while it is true – as the applicant rightly argues – that the essential function of a geographical indication is to guarantee to consumers the geographical origin of goods and the special qualities inherent in them (see, to that effect, judgment of 29 March 2011 in Anheuser-Busch v Budějovický Budvar, C-96/09 P, ECR, EU:C:2011:189, paragraph 147), the same cannot be said of the essential function of a Community collective mark. The fact that the latter consists of an indication which may serve to designate the geographical origin of the goods covered does not affect the essential function of all collective marks as stated in Article 66(1) of Regulation No 207/2009, which is to distinguish the goods or services of the members of the association which is the proprietor of that mark from those of other associations or undertakings (see, to that effect, judgment in RIOJAVINA, cited in paragraph 32 above, EU:T:2010:226, paragraphs 26 and 27). Consequently, the function of a Community collective mark is not altered as a result of its registration under Article 66(2) of Regulation No 207/2009. More specifically, a Community collective mark is a sign allowing goods or services to be distinguished according to which association is the proprietor of the mark and not according to their geographical origin.Footnote 97

The above interpretation confirms that collective marks are treated as ordinary trademarks unless specific provisions apply (namely the possibility of registering geographical terms). In particular, the language of Article 66 (3) expressly states so.Footnote 98

Following the reasoning of the Court, the possibility of registering geographical terms would thus not mean that geographical connotations are part of the function of a collective mark. The Tea Board, on the other hand, had argued that ‘similarity’ in the case of collective marks should be affirmed where the goods could be of the same geographical origin. The latter argument may find some justification in the specific provision of Article 66(2) of the CTMR,Footnote 99 which is a special safeguard for third parties who use the geographical mark in accordance with honest practices, namely where the goods indeed originate from such place. It is not clear why such provision should have been inserted over and above the exceptions in Article 9 of the CTMR,Footnote 100 if the scope of a collective mark, particularly with regard to geographical connotations, was the same as for ordinary trademarks. In addition, the decision is a narrow reading of the above Chiemsee decision:

The mere possibility that the average consumer might believe that the services in question, namely the retail services offered under the trade mark Darjeeling, are connected with goods originating in the geographical area of the same name, or that the telecommunications services provided under the same trade mark are connected with, or will offer information about, that geographical area is not sufficient to establish a similarity between the services covered by the mark applied for and the product covered by the earlier trade marks.Footnote 101

The case is currently under appeal before the CJEU.Footnote 102

4.4 Protection as a Well-Known Trademark or Geographical Indication

European law allows for an extended protection of a trademark against dissimilar goods in case the mark has obtained a reputation under Article 9(1) of the CTMR.Footnote 103 In particular, it is necessary for the trademark owner to show reputation, and for the use of the trademark to take unfair advantage of or be detrimental to the distinctive character or repute of the registered mark. This provision has been tested at national level in two French cases concerning the GI ‘Darjeeling’.

Notably, there are two Darjeeling decisions regarding the protection against the registration of the term for dissimilar products that should be discussed in this context. One is the more recent decision of the TGI Paris of 30 May 2013,Footnote 104 while the other, also a French decision, dates back to the year 2006.Footnote 105 These decisions reached opposite conclusions. The earlier one did not allow a third party to register ‘Darjeeling’ for communication products/services, while the second one allowed the registration for insurance products.

In the earlier case, the Tea Board of India requested the cancellation of a semi-figurative trademark composed of the name ‘Darjeeling’ and the design of a teapot, filed on 14 November 2002, by Jean-Luc Dusong, for editing- and communication-related products. At first instance, the TGIFootnote 106 rejected the claim based on the absence of confusion due to the difference between the products. This decision was overturned by the Court of Appeal,Footnote 107 which considered that it mattered little if the products in question were different, but rather, whether through the adoption of this denomination associated with the teapot design, Jean-Luc Dusong had sought to profit from the reputation attached to the Darjeeling indication that, according to the Court of Appeal, identifies in the perception of the public a tea originating from the region of Darjeeling, synonymous with excellence and refinement, and the savoir-faire of the Tea Board in promoting this product, which has been exploited free of cost.

It is important to note that, in this case, the trademark of Jean-Luc Dusong included not only the denomination Darjeeling but also the drawing of a teapot and was used together with the slogan ‘Communication is our cup of tea’. The Court established that the trademark undeniably evoked the tea ‘Darjeeling’. It was further established that in order to promote its trademark, Jean-Luc Dusong regularly made reference to the world of tea. According to the Court of Appeal:

It matters little that the products referred to are different from tea, since by adopting the name associated with a teapot drawing, Jean-Luc Dusong sought to take advantage of the reputation attached to that geographical indication which identifies in the mind of the public tea native of this region, synonymous with excellence and refinement, and of the expertise of the Tea Board to promote this product, borrowing its image without cost; that such use for products other than tea harms this prestigious geographical indication that only The Tea Board can exploit, by vulgarising and diluting its distinctive character.Footnote 108

The Court of Appeal thus overturned the decision of the TGI of 2005 which only looked at the dissimilarity of goods to decide that

the reputation of a tea label cannot be of benefit to publishing products; that the trade mark application does not characterize any willingness to appropriate the reputation and is not likely to result in a dilution or weakening of the indication of origin ‘Darjeeling’; and that, moreover, the conditions of exploitation of the trademark can neither be faulted nor are they likely to cause any damage, because they are limited to the registered class and mainly to editing.Footnote 109

Conversely, in the more recent Darjeeling case, the French tribunalFootnote 110 affirmed Placement Direct’s argument that it did not use the reputation of Darjeeling for the marketing of its life insurance contract, and held that Placement Direct did not profit from the reputation of Darjeeling. As such, there was no wrong attributable to Placement Direct. The TGI considered that the trademark of Placement Direct made no reference to the world of tea, and considered that even if the green colour was used, this did not directly make reference to the world of tea, because green was a common colour.Footnote 111

More questionable is the argument of the Tribunal that the choice of the name ‘Moka’ for another contract could not constitute any evidence against Placement Direct, since the name ‘Moka’ also denoted a town in Yemen, and Darjeeling was the name of a town situated in the province of the same name, as well as the name of a train connecting the valley with that town.Footnote 112 Indeed, before becoming generic, Moka was an indication of origin famous for coffee – so famous that in many countries it became synonymous for the product itself. Therefore, Moka is not just any city but a place of origin famous for a product very similar to tea. And the colour of the Moka trademark on the website of Placement Direct is as brown as coffee. Honi soit qui mal y pense!

The question is thus whether the two decisions can be reconciled given that in one case ‘Darjeeling’ was protected against a registration for dissimilar goods, while in the other it was not. The key difference between the two cases seems to be the fact that in one reference was made to the world the product belonged to, while this was not so in the other case. In the earlier, the mark featured a teapot and an advertisement that made an allusion to the world of tea, while in the second the connection between ‘Darjeeling’ and tea was absent. Yet such an allusion seems to be a condition for affirming the risk of dilution of the reputation and thus for denying registrability. In the first case, the trademark of Jean-Luc Dusong was revoked because it made reference to tea, which was not the case of the trademark of Placement Direct. In conclusion, it appears that the existence of the reputation of the GI is not enough to prevent registration or use of marks for dissimilar goods. Rather, a reference to the world the GI belongs to is necessary.

A further argument in the second case was that in a Google search for the term ‘Darjeeling’, the results confirm that this expression has been used to denote products and services different from tea, mainly products of lingerie which have been marketed for several years under the Community mark ‘Darjeeling’.Footnote 113 According to Placement Direct, such use demonstrates that the term ‘Darjeeling’ is used in France in contexts different from the one of tea.

There is one argument of the Tribunal that requires some digestion: ‘Darjeeling tea is a product coming from a precisely defined Indian region, it is, however, not proved that consumers consider it as equivalent to an exceptional beverage, for the reason that it is a consumer product sold by Unilever in supermarkets under the Lipton brand.’Footnote 114 Whether it is taken to be correct or not, it confers an important message. Often, the reputation of GIs is dependent upon those who market rather than those who produce. Manufacturers abroad may thus be dependent upon European distributors for the reputation of the indication.

5 Non-Proprietary Protection

As has been explained in the previous two sections, proprietary protection of geographical terms, be it as GIs or trademarks, limits the possibility of third parties wishing to use the term. This is one of the reasons why the registration of geographical terms as a GI requires proper structures of control and supervision in order to make sure that all those entitled to make use of the geographical term can do so. In the case of trademarks, registrability of geographical terms is limited so as to guarantee the freedom to operate of those who can legitimately use the termFootnote 115 and in order to avoid misperceptions in trade.

The absence of proprietary protection first of all ensures the freedom to operate. Importers of ‘Kobe beef’ are not prevented from importing meat under this denomination due to third-party rights. Still, in cases where Kobe beef does not originate from Kobe (or even from Japan), Japanese importers have an interest to limit such denomination to beef from Kobe (or Japan). Whether they can successfully do so in the absence of proprietary rights depends on consumer perception. If Kobe beef is regarded as a purely generic term, or is completely unknown to those in the trade,Footnote 116 there is no cause of action. If Kobe beef is considered as indicating certain qualities, then there is a case against misleading use if beef of a different quality is sold under this name.Footnote 117 The same is true if Kobe beef is considered as originating from Kobe (or Japan), and beef of a different origin is sold. Remedies in such cases depend on national law. These may be administrative (by competition or consumer authorities) or civil (by consumer associations, or competitors). As there is no uniform European law on this matter, the following three examples from three different jurisdictions should give the reader some idea in this respect.

The English decision Greek YoghurtFootnote 118 affirmed consumer misperception for the use (not registration) of the term ‘Greek Yoghurt’ for yoghurt not originating from Greece. In the absence of a proper implementation of Article 10bis section 3(iii) of the Paris Convention,Footnote 119 the plaintiff in the United Kingdom must show confusion by proving goodwill and misappropriation,Footnote 120 which is different from most other European countries where a case under unfair competition prevention law requires a misleading use but not a wide recognition of the indication. The action was brought by a major Greek producer of yoghurt.

The Italian decision Salame Felino rendered by the Supreme CourtFootnote 121 dealt with the question whether use of this term by producers outside the area of Felino was an actionable case of unfair competition (initiated by the producer association of Salame Felino). The Supreme Court ultimately rejected this, while the previous instances had affirmed. The reason lay more in the rather complicated interplay between national and EU law on the protection of GIs, however. ‘Salame Felino’ has meanwhile been registered as a European GI.Footnote 122

The German decision Aceto Balsamico rendered by the Mannheim District CourtFootnote 123 dealt with the question whether the use of the term ‘Aceto Balsamico’ for vinegar that originated in Germany was infringing the registered indication ‘Aceto Balsamico di Modena’, or, even if not, was misleading as to the origin of the product (the latter being an unfair competition claim). As the court had already affirmed the former under Article 13 of the Regulation 1152/2012,Footnote 124 there was no need to decide on the latter. But even for the first claim, the court held that at least according to German consumer perception, ‘Aceto Balsamico’ was perceived to come from Modena despite the fact that ‘Aceto Balsamico’ was registered only with the addition ‘Modena’, and was perhaps perceived to be generic in Italy.

6 Conclusion

The protection of Asian GIs in Europe is an uphill battle. Most Asian indications face the problem of being latecomers; thus, they have to deal with prior trademark rights, with ignorance or with the perception that they are generic. The easiest way for proprietary protection might be through bilateral trade agreements. Alternative ways are registration under the Lisbon Agreement or the European Regulation on GIs that is limited to food products and requires the GI to contain the name of a region or locality.Footnote 125

The administrative burden of monitoring quality and geographical scope can be onerous. The alternative of applying for trademark protection is dubious on legal grounds, and is not meant to indicate a geographical origin. The latter is also true for collective marks that are available for geographical terms. The minimum that should be achieved is the freedom to operate, for which it may be necessary either to oppose conflicting trademark applications or to sue against generic or misleading use. But a word of caution is necessary – many of the cases that have been litigated took years until a final decision could be obtained, as in the cases mentioned previously, and required considerable financial investment and a long-term perspective. This sounds a bit like the little steam locomotive that winds its way up from Colombo to Nuwara Eliya (a paradise for tea lovers); always an uphill struggle, but worth it.

9 Looking Beyond the Known Story: How the Prehistory of Protection of Geographical Indications in the Americas Provides an Alternate Approach

Christine Haight Farley Footnote *
1 Introduction

The current divide within the international community over the appropriate level of protection for geographical indications (GIs) is epitomized by the conflict between the European Union (EU) and the United States (US) in the context of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership Agreement (TTIP).Footnote 1 While GIs receive extensive protections that go beyond international treaty standards within the EU, the US (along with other “New World” countries) has repeatedly opposed strengthening the existing international GI protections.

The US’s resistance to strong protection of GIs has become a popularized account. The history of the US’s interest in GI protection, however, is more complex. Since 1929, the US has been bound by a little-known international convention that ensures strong protection of GIs: the General Inter-American Convention for Trade Mark and Commercial Protection (Inter-American Convention).Footnote 2 The Inter-American Convention is a regional agreement that was instituted by the US with several countries in the Americas. At the time in which the Convention went into force, the provisions on GIs in the Inter-American Convention were the most developed and strongest protections available in any international agreement. And remarkably, these provisions were developed by the US.

This history of the protection of GIs in the US remains enigmatic. Few scholars and lawyers are aware of the Inter-American Convention, let alone its chapter on GI protection. Why was such a chapter included, and why were similar provisions not included in the 1946 Trademark Act or subsequent international agreements? The treatment of GIs both in this convention and in the US Trademark Act is largely the result of the work of Edward Rogers and Stephen Ladas, two of the leading practitioners of US trademark law in the twentieth century. These two men had as sophisticated an understanding of US common law and international obligations as anyone at that time. The resulting texts of the Inter-American Convention and the Trademark Act – both of which they were instrumental in drafting – were no accident.

As the Inter-American Convention is still in force, it indicates the minimum standards for the protection of GIs in the US, at least with respect to beneficiaries of the Convention. It is also arguably a self-executing treaty in the US. Understanding this agreement therefore offers more than historical insight; it may offer an alternate approach to the protection of GIs. The Inter-American Convention also offers lessons for developing GI protection standards in other regions, such as Asia. One reason for the Convention’s inconspicuousness is that it was primarily intended to be used by US business in Latin America; it was not designed for the equal benefit of all member states. In addition, it was negotiated without the benefit of any experience protecting GIs on the part of the Latin American trading partners. Perhaps, it is not surprising then that the largely theoretical origins of the protections have resulted in the absence of a robust practice of applying them.

While the focus of this book is to consider GIs in Asia, this chapter will examine a particular historical moment in the legal protection of GIs that will expose a different view of the American approach to the protection of GIs. The reason to introduce this history is to offer policy makers in this region alternative approaches to GI protection beyond the current models advanced by the EU and the US. The short story is that the EU favors strengthening the current protections of GIs – it is said to be one of their greatest assetsFootnote 3 – while the US disfavors the development of additional protection for GIs beyond those offered by trademark law. The Inter-American Convention certainly complicates this story and provides a possible alternate approach.

2 The 1929 General Inter-American Convention on Trade Marks and Commercial Protection

The US experience with the international protection of GIs began with the 1929 Inter-American Convention on Trademarks and Unfair Competition. This relatively unknown Convention is still in force in all of the ten member states that were original parties to the Convention.Footnote 4 The Convention came out of the Pan-American movement, in which the US asserted its dominance in the region over British and European rivals in the postcolonial era. The Convention was an instance of the US effort to replace militarism with institutionalism. The US recognized that Latin America had much to offer in terms of a supply of raw materials and a potential market for US finished products. As a result, there was then an ambitious effort to unite the Americas through innovations such as the creation of a railway system, a customs union, and a common currency.Footnote 5 A harmonized intellectual property law was just one of the many attempts to create a regional market. The 1929 treaty was the last of six treaties concluded by the Pan-American Union that addressed trademarks.Footnote 6

The text, which was evidently prepared by the US delegation,Footnote 7 included, and still includes, some startlingly innovative provisions. Among theseFootnote 8 is an entire chapter, Chapter V, devoted to “the Repression of False Indications of Origin or Source.”Footnote 9 The legal concept captured by the phrase “indications of origin or source” is not the equivalent of “geographical indication.” Although the concept is not defined in the Inter-American Convention, indications of source generally do not demand a link to the geographical area, nor do they demand a reputation of the area for the goods.Footnote 10 Therefore, this chapter can be understood to address the use of geographic terms generally.Footnote 11 As a result, it actually offers protection to a broader category of geographical terms than the protection offered to GIs under the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects to Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS Agreement).Footnote 12 Ultimately, the Inter-American Convention’s protections are sweepingly broad.

For instance, Article 23 prohibits as “fraudulent and illegal” “any indication of geographical origin or source which does not actually correspond to the place in which the article, product or merchandise was fabricated, manufactured, produced or harvested.”Footnote 13 This language would seem to indicate that any false use of a geographical source is prohibited whether or not it is misleading.Footnote 14 Thus, Article 23 of the Inter-American Convention mirrors the strict standard of Article 23 of the TRIPS Agreement, but, significantly, it is not limited to wines and spirits.Footnote 15 In addition, the Inter-American Convention limits the use of generic terms.Footnote 16 Article 27 indicates that the exception for generic terms does not include “regional indication of origins of industrial or agricultural products, the quality and reputation of which, to the consuming public, depends on the production of origin.”Footnote 17 This article also indicates that “industrial” products are protected along with “agricultural products.”

Moreover, the chapter on geographical names in the Inter-American Convention not only prohibits the false use of geographical terms; it also limits the acquisition of trademark rights over geographical terms. Article 25 flatly states that “geographical names are not susceptible to individual appropriation.”Footnote 18 Depending on the interpretation given to “geographical names,” this restriction may prohibit any geographical term from being protected as a trademark in any of the member states.

In addition to a chapter on geographical names, another chapter of the Inter-American Convention, Chapter IV, is devoted to unfair competition and, in turn, applies to unfair competition-related uses of geographical names.Footnote 19 In particular, two of the five acts of unfair competition delineated in this chapter explicitly address the use of geographical terms.Footnote 20 In notable contrast to the chapter on geographical terms, this chapter of the Inter-American Convention unmistakably addresses the deceptive use of geographical terms. Under this chapter, the use of a geographical term in a deceptive manner constitutes a prohibited act of unfair competition.Footnote 21 The fact that this chapter requires deception suggests that unfair competition protection is different from the protections in the chapter on geographical terms. This is further reason not to read in an implied deception requirement in the chapter on geographical terms. To do so would mean that the provisions in the unfair competition chapter are duplicative.

2.1 Creating New Standards

The above-mentioned provisions do not seem to reflect any then existing international legal standards to which the US was obligated.Footnote 22 Moreover, there is no evidence that any Latin American states had corresponding protections at that time.Footnote 23 The GI protection standards in the Inter-American Convention also do not appear to reflect a contemporary understanding of then existing US statutory or common law.

Consider, for example, the case of “Tabasco.” Tabasco is a state in Mexico, where a particular chili pepper is grown and known as “Tabasco” pepper.Footnote 24 “TABASCO,” however, is also a trademark registered in the US since 1927 for a certain chili sauce.Footnote 25 “Tabasco” brand sauce is made from the type of pepper that is known as “Tabasco” pepper in Mexico, although not from peppers grown in Mexico. Interestingly, the TABASCO trademark was the object of several US federal court cases in the two decades preceding the ratification of the Inter-American Convention. In Gaidry v. McIlhenny Co.,Footnote 26 decided in 1918, the court recognized McIlhenny as the exclusive holder of the right to sell pepper sauce with the mark “Tabasco.” In particular, the court found that, despite the geographic descriptiveness of the word Tabasco, it had acquired a secondary meaning to the public as a source identifier for McIlhenny’s chili sauce. Likewise, in McIlhenny Co. v. Ed. Bulliard, decided in 1920, the Tabasco trademark was upheld as signifying the brand and not the place.Footnote 27 The court stated as fact that since 1868 McIlhenny had been making a sauce from peppers he grew from the seeds of peppers from the State of Tabasco, Mexico. The court stated that “McIlhenny gave his sauce the distinctive name ‘Tabasco Pepper Sauce.’”Footnote 28

It is intriguing then that the press release published by the US delegation announcing the US ratification of the Inter-American Convention stated that Chapter V was derived from US principles. Notably, the document stated that

Chapter V extends through Latin American common law principles of honest trading which have been enforced in the United States for forty years under the elastic jurisdiction of our equity courts. It has always been the law in this country that the application of geographical terms to merchandise not originating in the geographical district indicated, is unfair and unlawful. This chapter extends that salutary doctrine throughout Latin America.Footnote 29

Whether the Inter-American Convention drafters truly understood themselves to be codifying existing principles or creating new legal standards probably will never be known.

The timing of the Inter-American Convention is noteworthy. Ratified in 1929, the Inter-American Convention was one of the earliest international conventions to address geographical terms along with the Paris ConventionFootnote 30 and the Madrid Agreement.Footnote 31 The Inter-American Convention also preceded the 1958 Lisbon Agreement by almost three decades, and it was adopted earlier than most of the domestic legislation that was enacted in the European countries.Footnote 32 The Convention then was significant as a very early recognition of the protection of geographical terms in an international agreement.

2.2 Understanding the Objective

Yet, what was the objective of including these provisions on the protection of geographical terms in the Inter-American Convention? Were the US drafters seeking to extend US legal principles across the Americas, or were they on a mission to create new rights?

As mentioned above, the individuals most responsible for the Convention’s text were two of the most revered figures in US trademark law: Edward Rogers and Stephen Ladas. Perhaps, only the authors of trademark treatises had as sophisticated understanding of US trademark law as these practitioners. Rogers, who is best known as the drafter of the US Trademark Act,Footnote 33 litigated many of the Supreme Court and other trademark and unfair competition cases that the treatise authors studied.Footnote 34 Ladas, the named partner in Ladas & Parry LLP and the author of an important trademark treatise himself,Footnote 35 later represented the US at the 1958 revisions to the Paris Convention. As well as being fully informed of the existing state of US common law with regard to the protection of geographical terms, Rogers and Ladas were also well aware of international developments in trademark law.Footnote 36 Likewise, both experts had followed and written extensively on the delineation of specific acts of unfair competition in comparative jurisprudence during the first decades of the twentieth century.Footnote 37 The Inter-American Convention came along at an opportune time for these experts to articulate what they deduced was a developing set of principles, as well as to refine and further that agenda.

Still, as part of the history of the Inter-American Convention, there are hints that there was also a sense of developing conflict over protection standards for geographical terms. Later in his career, Ladas pointedly referred to the GI chapter in the Inter-American Convention as an “amelioration” of the Madrid Agreement,Footnote 38 which was revised in 1925, just four years prior to the Inter-American Convention. Perhaps, Ladas had in mind Article 4 of the Madrid Agreement, which prescribed protection for products of the vine according to the country of origin.Footnote 39 Yet the Inter-American Convention did not privilege wines and spirits, or even agricultural products.Footnote 40

3 Lessons to Be Drawn from the Inter-American Convention

Many lessons can be drawn from illuminating this little-known chapter on international GI protection in the Inter-American Convention. Many of these lessons are cautionary, but the primary lesson is that the US GI tradition is a bit more complicated than many have thought.

In particular, the Inter-American Convention represents an alternative approach, and one generated by the US. Moreover, the Inter-American Convention represented an early example of a regional approach to IP protection. Interestingly, this early twentieth-century attempt at regionalism in the Americas, much like recent regional agreements, was motivated in part by a strategy of forum shifting. More specifically, the Inter-American Convention was an attempt by the US to create a regional alternative to the Paris Convention, which at that time was dominated by European countries with few Latin American signatories.Footnote 41

Also in common with more recent examples, we see in the Inter-American Convention one country imposing its interests on the other, weaker states and trading partners. In this respect, the Inter-American Convention appeared to be primarily intended to benefit US firms conducting business in Latin America. In contrast, almost nothing in the Convention would have benefited Latin American firms at the time. Ladas admitted as much when he noted that Latin American “countries rarely register any trademarks in US, and the problem of protection of their trademarks is hardly existing.”Footnote 42 Thus, the objective of the Inter-American Convention was to protect US businesses; it was never even anticipated that it would be used by another signatory as a beneficiary of the provisions of the Convention in a US court. So not only was the Inter-American Convention an example of an imbalance of expertise in negotiating positions, but it was also problematic as a regional agreement where, other than desiring trade relations, the signatories did not have much else in common.

Ultimately, as a result of the dominant interests and negotiating position of the US, the Inter-American Convention was drafted without the benefit of any experience protecting GIs on the part of the Latin American signatories. In other words, rather than developing out of a tradition of protecting GIs steeped in practice, the Inter-American Convention’s provisions had more of a theoretical origin. The lack of correspondence of the protections to a practice may in part explain why the Inter-American Convention fell into disuse in many of the member states and has been largely forgotten. Certain of the provisions, however, have continued to be used and taken advantage of by US trademark owners in Latin America.

Still, as obvious as it may sound, countries should endeavor not to forget a convention that obligates them. Moreover, just as efforts to engage in regional trade partnerships have continued since 1929, so too have developments in the international protection of GIs. In fact, the US has since signed six separate free trade agreements (FTAs) with countries that are members of the Inter-American Convention in the intervening years.Footnote 43 Perversely, the Inter-American Convention was not explicitly referred to in any of these agreements even as these FTAs incorporated by reference other international agreements.Footnote 44 In addition, the standards of protection for GIs in these more recent agreements are not consistent with the standards in the Inter-American Convention described above. These FTAs did not commence from the foundation set by the Inter-American Convention, but rather began from a blank slate as if there had been no agreement in place already. In this respect, it would have been useful to take account of the rights that have already been agreed to before moving forward with different standards.

In light of this, as I have suggested elsewhere, there is a real possibility that the Inter-American Convention is today a sleeping treaty.Footnote 45 Were private parties to take notice of the Convention and make greater use of it as a basis for bringing individual claims in US courts, the US may be compelled to consider its obligations under it.

Notably, not only do countries not have the option to forget their obligations under treaties, but in this case there is a strong basis for resurrecting it in a US court. In 1940, the US Supreme Court pronounced the Inter-American Convention a self-executing treaty, and as such, the law of the land without the need for implementing legislation.Footnote 46 In fact, the Inter-American Convention was drafted in such a manner as to anticipate its provisions being used directly as operable law. For instance, under Article 28, the final article in the chapter on GIs, parties are authorized to make a claim and seek a remedy under existing domestic trademark laws in the event that no local law exists implementing the Convention’s protections.Footnote 47

Although there is some case law rejecting the assertion of rights under the Convention,Footnote 48 the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB), a body within the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), has ruled in a few cases, beginning in the year 2000, that the Convention is a self-executing treaty. First in British-American Tobacco v. Philip Morris,Footnote 49 the TTAB concluded that the Inter-American Convention has the same force of law as the Trademark Act, is independent of the Trademark Act, and it grants the USPTO jurisdiction to cancel registrations when it is alleged that there is a violation of the Convention.Footnote 50 Only one of these TTAB cases involved the false use of a geographical term, but this case happened to be brought under a different provision of the Convention.Footnote 51 As a result, we do not have an application of the GI provisions of the Convention in a US tribunal.

As the international community moves forward with the development of GI protections, it may be that considering the strengths and weaknesses of the Inter-American Convention proves helpful. But at a minimum, the Convention certainly serves to complicate the story about the US’s position on the protection of GIs, and demonstrates that the anti-GI narrative is of a more recent origin in the US.

4 United States v. European Union: Two Different Views and Objectives for the Protection of Geographical Indications

Despite the US’s complex history regarding the protection of GIs,Footnote 52 it appears that today’s US approach on GIs is generally referred to as the anti-EU approach. As is well known, the US and the EU have very different views about how GIs should be protected and to what extent they should be protected, and are referred to as being on opposite sides of the debate.Footnote 53

The opposing views of the US and the EU on GIs were well documented in the negotiations leading to the adoption of the GI provisions in TRIPS, and later in the gridlock of the multilateral negotiations under the built-in TRIPS agenda and the Doha Development Agenda under the Doha Ministerial Declaration.Footnote 54 More recently, the US and the EU have been engaged in a contest to see whose vision of GI protection will prevail as part of the negotiations for bilateral and plurilateral FTAs with third countries, including with countries in Asia.Footnote 55 As several experts have noted, the two positions – from the US’s and the EU’s points of view – seem to be incompatible and thus a contest (and a race to lock in trading partners with the preferred view) has expectedly ensued.Footnote 56 At present, Asia is certainly a main battleground, especially in light of the recently concluded Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP), and the many bilateral agreements that the US and EU have respectively concluded or are negotiating in Asia.Footnote 57 An example of this battle is Korea, who recently signed FTAs with both the US and EU and thus agreeing to incompatible protections for GIs.Footnote 58

In particular, the EU supports a strong protection of GIs to safeguard its economic interest in goods such as wine and cheese, which strategically rely on GIs to distinguish themselves from nonlocal competitors.Footnote 59 In the EU, GI protection is efficiently handled administratively by the EU Commission based on several EU Regulations.Footnote 60 As part of the registration process, applicants need to identify both the internal and the external entities that will enforce quality control for the GI products.

A crucial component of the EU GI protection is that GIs are categorically protected from becoming generic terms (even in the case that consumers may refer to the product generically in practice),Footnote 61 which means that GIs cannot fall into the public domain and be used as generic terms.Footnote 62 In this way, EU law aims at preserving the advantages that historic regional industries have against competitors who may claim (as they do in the US) that a term has become generic. For instance, if Tabasco were a GI in the EU, the protection received under EU law would ensure that the name continued to signify a place and not a type of product. I refer to this objective of EU law as a type of protection against the dilution of registered GIs because it seeks to maintain the significance and reputation of GIs in the same way that trademark dilution protection seeks to maintain the significance and reputation of a famous mark against free riders who attempt to take advantage by creating an association with the mark.

These strong protections are partially balanced in EU law by restricting GI protection to a circumscribed subject area. Under current EU law at least, GI protection only applies to foodstuffs, wines, and spirits.Footnote 63 Thus, manufactured products and services are excluded from protection, even though the EU is currently considering extending GI protection to nonagricultural products.Footnote 64

The more recent position of the US with respect to GI protection is seemingly incompatible with the EU approach. In principle, the US appears to be against the enhancement of GI protection. Like the EU, the US position corresponds to economic realities, namely its interest in protecting its large food producers, who frequently use European names based on the claim that these names are generic terms.Footnote 65

The fundamental difference, however, can be reduced to the legal approach taken by both the EU and the US. Notably, while the EU favors a sui generis approach based on the administrative requirement of GI registration, the US strenuously advocates addressing GI protection through trademark law exclusively.Footnote 66 As a result, the source of GI protection in the US is not a registration system per se (even though GIs are protected primarily as registered trademarks), but a market understanding.Footnote 67 Moreover, in order for US trademark law to protect a geographical name/GI as an ordinary trademark, the name must have acquired secondary meaning.Footnote 68 Like other trademarks, a distinctive sign can also lose its source-identifying significance over time through generic use. Furthermore, US trademark law does not protect geographical terms against dilution; instead, it is incumbent on the producers from that region to maintain the meaning.Footnote 69 Still, it should be noted that many GIs are protected in the US as certification and collective marks,Footnote 70 and that the conditions to be satisfied in order to obtain this protection – which is granted to a collectivity of producers and not to individual undertakings – resemble, to a considerable extent, the process to be followed in order to obtain a GI registration under a sui generis system.

Relatedly, US trademark law leaves enforcement to interested parties. For example, although the term “ROQUEFORT” is registered with the USPTO as a certification mark for cheese produced in the Roquefort region in France,Footnote 71 if a producer of cheese not from that region were to use this designation on its products in the US market, it would be incumbent on the registrant to bring a private lawsuit in a federal court.Footnote 72 Finally, as US trademark law loosely follows consumer understanding of signs, it is possible for geographical terms to be protected for any type of product whether agricultural or manufactured. In addition, it is possible to achieve protection in the US based on use without first obtaining a registration. For instance, common-law certification marks such as “COGNAC” have been recognized by US courts.Footnote 73

In sum, the EU and the US advocate for considerably diverging approaches to GI protection with the key features of these systems corresponding to different objectives. The EU system seeks to achieve a form of dilution protection through an administrative system. In contrast, the US system seeks to achieve a form of unfair competition protection limited by the contours of trademark law.Footnote 74

5 An Alternate Approach

Presented with these two diverging approaches, Asian countries, such as Korea, find themselves in the unenviable position of navigating between the EU and the US in deciding their national systems of GI protection. In this respect, the model embodied in the Inter-American Convention, with its provisions on GIs and unfair competition principles described above, could represent a distinct alternate approach.

First, the Inter-American Convention offers an alternative to the strict public law–private law divide between the EU and the US as member states can meet their obligations to protect GIs through either method so long as they agree to the broadly stated standards.Footnote 75

Second, both the EU and US approaches seem to work best at the national level (the regional level in the EU, in which GI protection is based on EU law). The Inter-American Convention approach, however, works best at a regional level (not strongly integrated as in the EU). As noted above, the Inter-American Convention was precisely an attempt to extend developing norms of unfair competition protection at the regional level among countries in the Americas. At the time when the Inter-American Convention was negotiated, the protection of GIs under US trademark law was not so well developed (and the current trademark act had not yet been adopted), and, thus, the convention aimed at (also) filling this gap.

Third, a model based on the Inter-American Convention may be better suited to address the conflicts that could possibly arise with respect to generic terms within a region. In particular, the generic exception – that is, the right to use foreign GIs on the basis that they are generic in the jurisdictions in question – is limited in the Inter-American Convention. As countries within a specific region – in Asia as much as in the Americas – may be more likely to share generic language and have awareness of the geographical meaning and reputations of GI regions and GI products from neighboring countries, the Inter-American Convention could represent a viable model for Asian countries to adopt a system of GI protection, which would take into account GIs registered in other countries in the same region.Footnote 76 In other words, a dilution-like GI protection such as that is applied in the EU could be achieved in Asia by adopting a system similar to the Inter-American Convention.

Another possible and positive consequence of adopting a model of GI protection having its source in unfair competition law, as in the Inter-American Convention, is the breadth of subject matter that can be protected under this model. In particular, because unfair competition law seeks to protect the reputation of a good, this type of GI protection can be used to protect agricultural products as much as nonagricultural products. This is explicitly the case in the Inter-American Convention text. Such possibility is of particular relevance in Asian countries, as many of these countries are rich in traditional handicrafts and several of them already provide for GI protection for nonagricultural products.Footnote 77

6 Protection for Geographical Indications in Asia

Considering GI protection in the Asian region allows us to open the discussion beyond GI protection from the perspective of the EU or the US. This discussion is important because the objectives in protecting GIs in other regions may not exactly mirror those of the EU and the US, as several of the chapters in this volume also demonstrate. In particular, the inflexibility of the models presented by the EU and US regimes limits regional experimentalism, and the Inter-American Convention may present a suitable alternative.

To date, several Asian countries have implemented or are considering primarily national systems of sui generis protection modeled after the EU regime. In addition, several countries in the region have negotiated or are negotiating FTAs with the EU or ad hoc agreements for GI protection. For instance, the EU and China have reached certain agreements where they reciprocate recognition of certain GIs (so far ten from China and ten from the EU) in the model of EU law. From the EU side, this includes “Grana Padano” cheese, “Prosciutto di Parma” ham, and “Stilton” blue-veined cheese – all these products are protected as sui generis GIs in China today.Footnote 78 In reciprocation, the EU has agreed to recognize GIs for Chinese products such as “Pinggu da Tau” peaches and “Dongshan Bai Lu Sun” asparagus. It is debatable whether this reciprocal agreement is of equal benefit for both parties. Christopher Heath’s chapter in this volume indicates, for example, that seventeen Asian GIs are registered in the EU, yet none of which will likely be familiar to Europeans (at least to date).Footnote 79

Of course, many Asian GIs are well known to consumers outside of Asia. For instance, “Basmati” rice and “Darjeeling” tea are two Indian GIs that are recognized around the world for agricultural products from India.Footnote 80 Yet, the recognition and the rights to be recognized to each of these GIs have been legally tested under the EU and US GI regimes with mixed results for the GIs. In short, these GIs have not fared as well as desired by their owners, showing the still existing problems for the protection of foreign GIs under the US and EU systems.

The legal saga of “Basmati” in the US is well known to GI experts. “Basmati” is an Indian GI for aromatic, long-grain rice that grows in the Punjab region in northern India and across the Pakistani border.Footnote 81 India has repeatedly claimed that the distinctive characteristics of basmati rice are a byproduct of the Indian soil that is irrigated by the Himalayan Rivers.Footnote 82 India is the largest exporter of basmati rice in the world. The word “basmati,” however, has been used generically in the US for decades referring to aromatic long grain rice without regard to where the rice is grown. This US generic use predated any legal protection for “Basmati” in India. In the late 1990s, a US company provoked the ire of the Indian government by not only using brand names such as “American Basmati” and registering the trademark “Texmati,”Footnote 83 but also attempting to patent its production of this rice.Footnote 84 Moreover, in the US, the term “Basmati” is also used in connection with goods other than rice. Several “Basmati” marks have been registered, such as “Basmati Bus,” which is a registered service mark for food truck services.Footnote 85 These registrations are generally not related to goods or services originating from India.

Furthermore, while the Indian government succeeded in invalidating the patents covering basmati rice, it could not prevent the US company from using the trademark “Texmati.” This episode angered the Indian public who believed that the use of the word “basmati” was pirating their indigenous product.Footnote 86 Indian nongovernmental organizations have insisted that the US change its rice standards so that only rice grown in India and Pakistan can be branded with the word “basmati.”Footnote 87 This dispute may have prompted the Indian government to protect basmati rice as a GI for the regions where it is being grown in India. However, this attempt was met with spirited opposition both from a state within India that produces basmati rice but had been excluded from the “Basmati region,”Footnote 88 as well as the Basmati Growers Association of Pakistan, who protested that basmati rice is grown in both India and Pakistan.Footnote 89

Similarly, the name “Darjeeling” has been the subject of several abuses, and legal challenges both in the US and the EU. The “Darjeeling” GI protects tea that is cultivated and grown in the Darjeeling region of West Bengal in India.Footnote 90 The distinctive quality and flavor of Darjeeling tea has been globally recognized for over a century.Footnote 91 The distinctiveness of Darjeeling tea is said to be due to two main factors: the tea’s geographic origin, and the process by which the tea is made.Footnote 92 The tea is grown in tea gardens located 2,000 meters above sea level, and the environment at that particular elevation is said to add to the uniqueness of the tea.Footnote 93 In addition to these two factors, the Tea Board of India’s quality control mechanisms ensure that the product maintains its high quality and that the tea originates only from the GI region.Footnote 94

Hence, there have been several controversies around the use of the term “Darjeeling” for non-tea products outside India in recent years. For instance, the Tea Board of India disputed the use of “Darjeeling” as a mark by a French company for intimate lingerie.Footnote 95 In this case, the Tea Board ultimately succeeded in protecting the name under EU trademark law, as Darjeeling was first registered as a mark in the EU,Footnote 96 and only subsequently was registered as a sui generis GI.Footnote 97 Still, in another dispute in France, an insurance company used “Darjeeling” as a mark for its services.Footnote 98 In response, however, the French courts concluded that because Lipton marketed “Darjeeling” in French supermarkets, that the term did not have enough of a distinctive reputation to receive dilution protection under trademark law in France.Footnote 99

In the US, several “Darjeeling” trademarks have been registered for non-tea products, again by parties unrelated to the producers of Darjeeling tea in India. For instance, “THE DARJEELING BAGS” is registered for luggage products.Footnote 100 Additionally, “DARJEELING” is registered to a company that sells shirts, shorts, dresses, and ladies undergarments.Footnote 101 These registrations are still in force and it does not seem that it would be possible to obtain their cancelation based on US trademark law.

Under an unfair competition approach, such as the one that is embodied in the Inter-American Convention, GI protection is justified not only to ensure that consumers are not deceived, but also to protect producers from the region referenced. For example, out of fairness to consumers and producers, countries interested in combating unfair competition would not want companies to use “Basmati” on rice that does not come from that region. But, this justification for protection does not apply in situations where non-rice products are marketed with “Basmati” marks because there is no threat to competition. Thus, while the mark “Texmati” would probably not withstand a legal challenge under a provision similar to the Inter-American Convention, the use of “Darjeeling” for non-similar goods or service would unlikely be prohibited.

7 Conclusion

As I have elaborated in this chapter, the US history with respect to GI protection is a little more complex than most assume. In particular, the US has not consistently shied away from GI protection nor has it always relied upon a trademark system to achieve GI protection. In 1929, in drafting and ratifying the Inter-American Convention, the US forged a different approach to GI protection to be applied in several countries in the Americas. The Inter-American Convention offered a broader, more comprehensive system of protection to GIs compared to the systems of protection achieved in any other treaty at that time. While the US may no longer officially follow this (still in force) approach today, and many in the US may barely have been aware of the Inter-American Convention, a similar system may be interesting for Asia, and for other regional blocks of countries coming into this discussion, as a model to consider. Ultimately, the Inter-American Convention offers the international community an alternate approach, or a middle path between the current US and EU models, with its unfair competition foundation. At a minimum, the Inter-American Convention offers a variant to the sui generis system today applied in the EU and the trademark approach of the US.

10 European Union-Singapore Free Trade Agreement: A New Chapter for Geographical Indications in Singapore

Susanna H.S. Leong Footnote *
1 Introduction

As a signatory to the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS),Footnote 1 Singapore is obliged to confer protection to geographical indications (GIs). For the past fifteen years, the relevant legislation in Singapore has been the Geographical Indications Act (GI Act 1999),Footnote 2 which came into force on 15 January 1999. However, with the successful conclusion of negotiations of the European Union (EU) and Singapore Free Trade Agreement (EU-Singapore FTA)Footnote 3 in 2013, the law on GIs in Singapore is set to change. One key takeaway from the EU-Singapore FTA Intellectual Property Chapter is that the EU and Singapore reached an agreement and Singapore will enhance its existing regime for the protection of GIs. Consequently, a new Geographical Indications Act (GI Act 2014) for Singapore has been passed by Parliament on 14 April 2014.Footnote 4 The new GI Act 2014 will replace the current GI Act 1999 once it is brought into force (as at the date of this writing and as of February 2017, just before this book goes to press, the GI Act 2014 has still not been brought into force in Singapore). Under the GI Act 2014, Singapore will strengthen its current protection by establishing an ad hoc register for GIs,Footnote 5 and a new chapter will begin for the protection of GIs.

In particular, the new GI Act 2014 heralds an enhanced protection regime for GIs in Singapore, and the provisions of the new Act will come into operation in several stages in tandem with the general ratification process of the EU-Singapore FTA. The first stage of implementation of the FTA will involve the establishment of the GI Registry.Footnote 6 However, the Registry will be established only when the EU ratifies the EU-Singapore FTA.Footnote 7 Likewise, the enhanced regime under the GI Act 2014 will be applicable only when the EU-Singapore FTA is implemented in the EU and Singapore. Furthermore, as part of this process, amendments related to the protection of GIs will have to be made to the current provisions of the Trade Marks Act 1998.Footnote 8 The final stage of implementation is supposed to take place within three years of entry into force of the EU-Singapore FTA. The same time frame will apply to the implementation of improved border enforcement measures with respect to registered GIs, as these measures will need to be adopted as part of Singapore’s obligations in the FTA. The staged approach adopted by the Singapore Parliament aims at ensuring that companies and government organizations will have sufficient time to adjust to the impact of the new GI protection regime in Singapore.

As Singapore moves into the next phase of legislative development on GIs with the enactment of GI Act 2014, this chapter examines and assesses the protection accorded to GIs in Singapore, but with a specific interest in the provisions of the new GI Act 2014. The chapter begins with a broad overview of the protection of GIs in Singapore under the GI Act 1999. It then addresses the adoption of the GI Act 2014. Next, the chapter focuses on the relevant provisions of the newly adopted (but not yet entered into force at the time of this writing) GI Act 2014 and discusses the legal issues as well as business implications that may be raised by the new GI provisions.

2 Legal Protection of Geographical Indications in Singapore
2.1 The Law Prior to the Geographical Indications Act of 1999

Once upon a time, under the old Trade Marks Act 1938,Footnote 9 it was difficult to register and protect a word which, according to its ordinary signification, is a geographical name, as it was not considered to be distinctive or adapted to distinguish the proprietor’s goods from the goods of any other trader.Footnote 10

During those times, marks which were geographical names were protected in Singapore under the common-law action for passing off, provided that the three elements of goodwill, misrepresentation and likelihood of damage are satisfied. Accordingly, owners of (generally foreign) GIs could take action in passing off against unauthorized use of their GIs by third parties in Singapore. However, the challenge remained, and still remains under a passing-off action in Singapore, that a GI which is protected in another country may not enjoy goodwill in Singapore because it is possible that the public in Singapore does not associate goods bearing the GI with the special qualities and characteristics attributable to the geographical region indicated in the GI. Another difficulty pertains to the second element of misrepresentation, which requires proof of a likelihood of confusion amongst the public. If the public in Singapore, on seeing a GI, understands that the goods do not originate from the geographical region as indicated in the GI (for example, if the GI, when applied, is accompanied with words such as ‘kind’, ‘type’, ‘style’, ‘limitation’ or ‘the like’Footnote 11), there is no confusion and passing off is not established, which may add to the chagrin of GI owners, as they would not be able to protect their GIs.

Starting in 1999, with the repeal of the Trade Marks Act 1938 and the enactment of the Trade Marks Act 1998 on 15 January 1999,Footnote 12 the owners of GIs that are used to identify products are permitted to register their GIs as a trademark under the Trade Marks Act 1998 if the GIs fall within the ambit of the statutory requirements for trademark registration.Footnote 13 It should be noted that trademark laws in Singapore do not prohibit the registration of GIs per se. Nevertheless, GI owners can prevent registration of a GI as a trademark which is not authorized by them. For example, Section 7(4)(b) of the Trade Marks Act 1998 provides that ‘a trade mark shall not be registered if it is … of such a nature as to deceive the public for instance as to the nature, quality or geographical origin of the goods or service’.Footnote 14 Furthermore, Section 7(7) of the Trade Marks Act 1998 stipulates that a ‘trade mark shall not be registered if it contains or consists of a GI in respect of a wine or spirit and the trade mark is used or intended to be used in relation to a wine or spirit not originating from the place indicated in the GI’.Footnote 15 The prohibition against registration remains

whether or not the trade mark has, or is accompanied by, an indication of the true geographical origin of the wine or spirit, as the case may be, or an expression such as ‘kind’, ‘type’, ‘style’, ‘imitation’ or the like, and irrespective of the language of the geographical indication is expressed in that trade mark.Footnote 16

Under the Trade Marks Act 1998, GIs may also be registered as collective or certification marks.Footnote 17 However, a GI which is a generic term to the public in Singapore cannot be registered as a collective or certification mark.Footnote 18 Beyond trademark laws, the use or application of a false trade description on goods including their place of origin is prohibited and constitutes an offence under the consumer protection legislation.Footnote 19

As a whole, it may be said that legal protection for GIs at that stage of Singapore’s IP infrastructure developments did not meet Singapore’s obligations under TRIPS,Footnote 20 and a change in the law was hence considered necessary.

2.2 The Law Post–Geographical Indications Act 1999

To meet Singapore’s international obligations to provide protection for GIs as stipulated in TRIPS, the Singapore Parliament enacted the GI Act 1999,Footnote 21 which came into force on 15 January 1999. Thus, for the past fifteen years, the GI Act 1999 has been the relevant legislation which laid down the basic framework for GI protection in Singapore. The GI Act 1999 is a short Act with only twelve sections.Footnote 22

Under GI Act 1999, a GI is defined as

any indication used in trade to identify goods as originating from a place, provided that -

  1. (a) the place is a qualifying country or region or locality in the qualifying country; and

  2. (b) a given quality, reputation or other characteristics of the goods is essentially attributable to that place[.]Footnote 23

According to this definition, not all GIs are protected in Singapore. Indeed, only GIs of a country which is a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO),Footnote 24 a party to the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property (Paris Convention)Footnote 25 or a country designated by the Singapore government as a qualifying country can be protected.Footnote 26

Furthermore, the GI Act 1999 does not provide a registration system for GIs in Singapore. Instead, protection for GIs is granted automatically if the criteria set forth in the GI Act 1999 are met.Footnote 27 A producer or trader of goods identified by GIs could institute civil proceedings against a person for committing an act prohibited under the GI Act 1999 if he is able to prove that he is entitled to protection for the GI in question.

The following uses are prohibited under the GI Act 1999:Footnote 28

  1. 1. Use of the GI on goods which do not originate in the place indicated in the GI, in a manner which misleads the public as to the geographical origin of the goods

  2. 2. Use of the GI which constitutes an act of unfair competition within the meaning of Article 10bis of the Paris ConventionFootnote 29

  3. 3. For wines and spirits, there is an additional level of protectionFootnote 30 – its use on wines or spirits not originating from the place indicated in the GI is prohibited whether or not

    1. (i) the true geographical origin of the second-mentioned wine is used together with the GI;

    2. (ii) the GI is used in translation; or

    3. (iii) the GI is accompanied by any of the words ‘kind’, ‘type’, ‘style’, ‘imitation’, or any similar word or expression.

Essentially, the GI Act 1999 has adopted a two-tier approach in granting protection to GIs, which is consistent with TRIPS.Footnote 31 At a more basic level, the GI Act 1999 provides a general protection for GIs based on wrongful use resulting in misrepresentation or unfair competition. An enhanced level of protection is accorded to wines and spirits in that the protection approximates that of a dilution-type remedy, which is not premised on a likelihood of confusion on the part of the public.Footnote 32

Singapore did not, and still does not, have a list of GIs or her own GIs for which protection is sought. Thus, the legal framework provided under the GI Act 1999 was initially considered to be adequate as far as GI protection in Singapore was concerned, at least as the first step after the implementation of TRIPS in Singapore.Footnote 33 In this respect, it may be said that the main inadequacy of the GI Act 1999 lies in the fact that it does not provide for the establishment of a registration system. As a result, filing a claim in the Singapore courts for infringement of a GI under the GI Act 1999 requires that the GI owners first establish that they are entitled to protection for the GI in question.Footnote 34 Essentially, in practice, this means that GI owners are required to go before a court to prove conclusively that their GIs are entitled to be protected in Singapore. This would be considered as unsatisfactory and inadequate protection to most GI owners in general, in particular those who enjoy comprehensive protection in a sui generis system such as the EU.Footnote 35

The successful conclusion of the EU-Singapore FTA in 2013 has provided the impetus for change in the law of GIs,Footnote 36 and it is to the substantive provisions in the GI Act 2014 that we shall now turn.

3 The New Law to Be in Singapore: Salient Features of the Geographical Indications Act 2014

The GI Act 2014 will repeal and re-enact with amendments the old GI Act 1999. Compared to the GI Act 1999, the number of provisions in the GI Act 2014 has significantly expanded from twelve to ninety.Footnote 37 In broad terms, the GI Act 2014 is significant in three areas: (a) the establishment of a GI Registry;Footnote 38 (b) the conferment of enhanced protection of GIs in Singapore;Footnote 39 and (c) the provision of improved border enforcement measures for GIs.Footnote 40

3.1 The Establishment of a Geographical Indications Registry in Singapore

Part IV of the GI Act 2014Footnote 41 establishes a system of registration for GIs in Singapore. This new GI Registry will reside within the Intellectual Property Office of Singapore (IPOS). Once established, the GI Registry will examine applications for GI registration in respect of wines, spirits, selected categories of foodstuffs and agricultural products such as cheese, meat and seafood.Footnote 42 The registration process of GIs mirrors that of the trademark registration system in Singapore,Footnote 43 which essentially comprises three main stages: (a) application;Footnote 44 (b) examination;Footnote 45 and (c) publication and opposition.Footnote 46

Only certain categories of persons are entitled to file an application for registration of a GI.Footnote 47 They include ‘persons who are carrying on an activity as a producer in the geographical area specified in the application with respect to the goods specified in the application’Footnote 48 and ‘an association of such persons’,Footnote 49 as well as competent authorities having responsibility for the geographical indication for which registrations are sought.Footnote 50

Section 39 of the GI Act 2014Footnote 51 provides that an application for registration of a GI must be done in the prescribed manner and shall specify details such as the name, address and nationality of the applicant; the capacity in which the applicant is applying for registration; the GI for which registration is sought; the goods to which the GI applies; the geographical area to which the GI applies; and the quality, reputation or other characteristics of the goods and how they are attributable to the geographical origin. Registration of a GI may only be made in respect of prescribed categories of goods as set out in the Schedule of the GI Act 2014.Footnote 52

The GI Act 2014 implements a system of substantive examination of the application for registration of a GI in Singapore. In particular, the GI Act 2014 establishes that, after the submission of an application to register a GI, the Registrar will conduct an examination of the applicationFootnote 53 to determine whether the application for registration of a GI satisfies all the requirements of the GI Act 2014. To do so, the Registrar may (and likely will) carry out a search of earlier trademarksFootnote 54 and earlier GIs.Footnote 55 The Registrar may refuse to register a GI based on any of the grounds set out in Section 41 of the GI Act 2014.Footnote 56 These grounds of refusal of registration of a GI fall broadly into two categories. The first category pertains to objections associated with the innate attributes or qualities of the GI under consideration for registration such as:Footnote 57

  1. (a) If the indication does not fall within the meaning of ‘geographical indication’Footnote 58 as defined in Section 2 of the GI Act 2014

  2. (b) If the GI identifies goods which do not fall within any of the categories of goods set out in the Schedule of the GI Act 2014

  3. (c) If the GI is contrary to public policy or morality

  4. (d) If the GI is not or has ceased to be protected in its country or territory of origin

  5. (e) If the GI is identical to the common name of any goods in Singapore, where registration of the GI is sought in relation to those goods

  6. (f) If the GI contains the name of a plant variety or an animal breed and is likely to mislead the consumer as to the true origin of the product.

This set of grounds for refusal for registration of a GI in Section 41(1) of the GI Act 2014 resembles the absolute grounds for refusal of registration of a trademark under Section 7 of the Trade Marks Act 1998. In particular, these grounds for refusal include the lack of distinctivenessFootnote 59 and/or other obstacles such as bad faithFootnote 60 or being against public policy.Footnote 61 Both sets of grounds of refusal for registration of a GI and a trademark focus on the innate ability of the GI or the trademark to distinguish goods or services in the marketplace. In the case of a GI, the inquiry is whether GIs distinguish the goods that originate from the particular geographical location from goods that do not; in the case of a trademark, the inquiry is whether the trademarks distinguish goods that are associated with one trader from those of other traders. It is anticipated that given the close relationship between a GI and a trademark, the principles developed in trademark law, in particular those used to determine whether a sign or indication has ‘become customary in current language or bona fide and established practices of trade’,Footnote 62 would certainly help inform the calibration of whether a GI may be considered ‘identical to the common name of any goods in Singapore’Footnote 63 under Section 41(1)(e) of the GI Act 2014 and consequently must be refused registration. It should be noted that in this regard Section 41(2) of the GI Act 2014 provides that in determining whether a GI is ‘identical to the common name of any goods in Singapore’ under Section 41(1)(e), any marketing material in Singapore which uses a GI shall be relevant evidence to show that the GI is not the common name of any goods in Singapore, if the marketing material suggests in a misleading manner that the goods to which the marketing material relates originate in the geographical origin of the GI, when in fact those goods originate elsewhere.Footnote 64 This may be done through using either words or pictures.

The other set of grounds for refusal of registration of a GI may be referred to as the relative grounds for refusal of registration because the objections lie essentially in that if the proposed GI is registered, its use will conflict with an ‘earlier GI’Footnote 65 or an ‘earlier trademark’.Footnote 66 These relative grounds for refusal of registration of a GI under Sections 41(3) to (6) may be summarized as follows:

  1. (a) A GI shall not be registered if there exists a likelihood of confusion on the part of the public because the GI is identical with or similar to, and has the same geographical origin as, an earlier GI.Footnote 67 An exception to this ground for refusal of registration is the registration of homonymous GIs under Section 42 of the GI Act 2014.Footnote 68 A homonymous GI refers to a GI ‘that, in part or in whole, has the same spelling as, or sounds the same as, a GI for any goods having a different geographical origin’.Footnote 69 The Registrar may register homonymous GIs subject to the imposition of practical conditions so as to differentiate the homonymous GIs from the earlier GI.Footnote 70 In doing so, the Registrar shall have regard to factors such as (i) the need to ensure equitable treatment of all the interested parties concerned; (ii) the need to ensure that consumers are not misled; and (iii) the views and submissions of the applicant for registration of the homonymous GI and of the applicant for registration or registrant of the earlier GI.Footnote 71

  2. (b) A GI shall not be registered if there exists a likelihood of confusion on the part of the public because (i) the GI is identical with or similar to a trademark;Footnote 72 and (ii) the trademark is a registered trademark – the application or registration for which was before the date of application for the GI in Singapore and the application or registration of the said trademark was in good faith – or that the trademark has been used in good faith in Singapore in the course of trade before the date of application for registration of the GI in Singapore.Footnote 73

  3. (c) A GI shall not be registered if it is identical with or similar to a trademark that is, before the date of application for registration of the GI in Singapore, a well-known trademark in Singapore and registration of the GI is liable to mislead consumers as to the true identity of the goods identified by that GI.Footnote 74

If there are no objections from the Registrar or if the objections have been successfully overcome, the application will be accepted and the Registrar shall cause the application to be published in the prescribed manner.Footnote 75 Thereafter, any person may within the prescribed time commence opposition proceedings against the registration of the GI.Footnote 76 If the opposition is successful, the application for registration of the GI will be refused. On the other hand, if the opposition is unsuccessful or if there is no opposition, the GI will be registered and a certificate of registration will be issued to the applicant.Footnote 77 The GI will be registered for a period of ten years from the date of registration,Footnote 78 and may be renewed for further periods of ten years in respect of each renewal.Footnote 79

Post-registration, a registered GI may be cancelled by either the Registrar upon an application by the registrant or by the court or Registrar upon an application by any other person on any of the grounds stipulated in Section 52(2) of the GI Act 2014.Footnote 80 These grounds include:Footnote 81

  1. (a) that the GI was registered in breach of Section 41Footnote 82 of the GI Act 2014;

  2. (b) that the registration was obtained fraudulently or by misrepresentation;

  3. (c) that the GI has ceased to be protected in its country or territory of origin;

  4. (d) that there has been a failure to maintain, in Singapore, any commercial activity or interest in relation to the GI, including commercialization, promotion or market monitory;

  5. (e) that, in consequence of a lack of any activity by any interested party of goods identified by a registered GI, the GI has become the common name of those goods in Singapore.

If the GI is cancelled upon application of the registrant, the rights conferred by the registration on any interested party of goods identified by the GI shall cease to exist with effect from the date of cancellation of the registration.Footnote 83

In the event that a GI is cancelled based on the grounds that it has been registered in breach of Section 41 of the GI Act 2014Footnote 84 or that the registration was obtained fraudulently or by misrepresentation, the GI shall be deemed never to have been registered.Footnote 85

If the GI is cancelled based on any of the other grounds, it shall cease to exist with effect from the date of application for cancellation or if the Registrar or the court is satisfied that the ground existed at an earlier date.Footnote 86

3.2 Enhanced Protection of Geographical Indications in Singapore

The new GI Act 2014, when brought into force, will establish a sui generis system of protection for GI in Singapore. Both unregistered and registered GIs are set to be protected under the GI Act 2014.

In respect of unregistered GIs, the protection is the same as that provided under the GI Act 1999.Footnote 87 Essentially, this means a trader or an association of producers or traders may bring action against any person for the use of an unregistered GI in relation to any goods which did not originate in the place indicated by the GI, in a manner which misleads the public as to the geographical origin of the goods or if the use of the unregistered GI constitutes an act of unfair competition within the meaning of Article 10bis of the Paris Convention.Footnote 88

The protection accorded to GIs which identify wines and spirits as conferred under the GI Act 1999 remains unchanged under the GI Act 2014. The use of GIs on wines or spirits not originating from the place indicated in the GI is prohibited whether or not

  1. (i) the true geographical origin of the second-mentioned wine is used together with the GI;

  2. (ii) the GI is used in translation; or

  3. (iii) the GI is accompanied by any of the words ‘kind’, ‘type’, ‘style’, ‘imitation’ or any similar word or expression.Footnote 89

This enhanced level of protection formerly accorded only to wines and spirits under the repealed GI Act 1999 is now extended to registered GIs for selected categories of agricultural products and foodstuff as stated in the Schedule of the GI Act 2014.Footnote 90 Protection is conferred on GIs of these selected agricultural products and foodstuff even if consumers are not misled as to the products’ true geographical origin.Footnote 91

3.3 Improved Border Enforcement Measures for Geographical Indications

Under Part VI of the GI Act 2014,Footnote 92 owners of a registered GI will have access to a suite of improved border enforcement measures. One such improved border enforcement measure is that an interested party of goods identified by a registered GI may request the customs authorities in Singapore to detain suspected infringing goods and restrict the importation or exportation of such goods.Footnote 93

These improved border enforcement measures will only be implemented within three years after the EU-Singapore FTA comes into force.Footnote 94 Substantial resources will have to be allocated to enhance the capabilities of Singapore customs authorities so as to undertake effective GI enforcement actions.

4 Issues and Implications of the New Geographical Indications Regime in Singapore
4.1 Establishing a Registration System for Geographical Indications in Singapore

The new GI RegistryFootnote 95 to be established under the GI Act 2014Footnote 96 will commence receiving applications for registration of GIs after the EU-Singapore FTA is ratified by the European Parliament. The examination of applications for registration of GIs is a major undertaking of the new GI Registry and it will require the establishment of substantial institutional capabilities and resources to facilitate and support it.

Under Article 11.17 of the EU-Singapore FTA,Footnote 97 both the EU and Singapore have agreed to subject the names listed under Annex 11-A of the EU-Singapore FTAFootnote 98 to their respective domestic registration processes to determine the registrability of these names as GIs.Footnote 99 Thereafter, both parties to the EU-Singapore FTA will convene to adopt a decision in the Trade Committee regarding the list of names that are to be protected as GIs in Singapore and the EU.Footnote 100 Yet, it is noteworthy that under the EU-Singapore FTA, Singapore did not accept to grant automatic recognition and protection to a limited list of key GIs from the EU. There are altogether 196 names from the EU to be examined and to be verified by the Registrar that they identify goods originating in territories of the EU or a region or locality in the EU, where a given quality, reputation or other characteristic of the goods is essentially attributable to their geographical origin.Footnote 101 In contrast, Singapore has no list of its own GIs for which it wants protection in the EU. The Singapore position is noteworthy because several other countries that have concluded FTAs with the EU have accepted to protect the same or a similar list of EU GIs automatically (i.e. without a substantive examination), even though some exceptions have been carved for certain names in some of these countries.Footnote 102

Nevertheless, in order to expedite the processing of a list of priority EU GIs,Footnote 103 the Singapore government has agreed to take fully into account the fact that the GIs have been evaluated and registered in the EU when carrying out the examination of EU GIs. This includes the possibility of rationalizing the volume of information to be submitted, based on the fact that the EU legislation has been examined and on the principle of recognition of GI systems. Nevertheless, given the volume of examination of names to be registered as GIs that must be undertaken in Singapore by a relatively new and inexperienced Registry, the learning curve for those in charge of the Registry is expected to be steep.Footnote 104

Further delays may be expected as a result of third-party opposition proceedings,Footnote 105 in particular if there are objections raised that the EU-recognized GIs should be refused registration on the basis that they have become generic names in Singapore, or conflict with prior registered trademarks in Singapore.Footnote 106 In opposition proceedings based on the generic nature of the products, only evidence of genericness within Singapore will be relevant.Footnote 107

As Singapore has few local agricultural, foodstuff or wine producers,Footnote 108 it is anticipated that opposition to registration of GIs in Singapore is likely to be mainly initiated by producers in other major agricultural export countries such as the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India, China and Japan, just to name a few, whose produce is marketed and sold in the Singapore market. In this regard, it is noteworthy that to secure stronger protection for its GIs through bilateral trade agreements, affected industries in the United States have come together to establish the Consortium for Common Food Names.Footnote 109 The Consortium is an international initiative based in Washington, DC, and it seeks to foster the adoption of an appropriate model for protecting both legitimate geographical indications and generic food names.Footnote 110

Be that as it may, Singapore is a small market of approximately 5.4 million people,Footnote 111 and it remains to be seen whether there will be a large number of opposition proceedings against the registration of EU-recognized GIs in Singapore from affected third-party producers.

4.2 Interrelationships between Owners of Registered Geographical Indications and Other Existing Right Holders

With the new GI protection regime coming into force in Singapore, one area of concern is the interrelationships between registered GI owners and existing GI holders, registered trademark owners as well as users of signs identical with or similar to the registered GIs. The government is mindful of the impact that the new GI registration system will have on the rights of existing GI holders and trademark owners. In the Second Reading speech on the Geographical Indications Bill on April 14, 2014,Footnote 112 Senior Minister of State for Law Indranee Rajah SC explained the relationship between the existing GI protection regime and the new Bill:

When the new GI protection regime comes into force, it will not over-ride or undermine any rights which GI holders already have under the existing regime. These rights will co-exist with those under the new regime.Footnote 113

Thus, the legislative framework in the GI Act 2014 preserves the ‘first-in-time, first-in-right’ principle in managing the conflicting interests of various stakeholders in the protection and enforcement of GIs in Singapore. Essentially, this means that ‘a new application for a GI registration may not invalidate a prior conflicting GI or trademark which already exists’.Footnote 114

4.2.1 Registered or Protected Geographical Indications Owners under Geographical Indications Act 2014 and Existing Geographical Indications Holders

Section 12(1) of GI Act 2014Footnote 115 makes provisions for a prior user (who is a qualified personFootnote 116) of a GI, being a GI identifying a wine or spirit in relation to any goods or services if he or his predecessors in title have continuously used in Singapore that GI in relation to those goods or services or related goods or services either (a) for at least ten years preceding 15 April 1994Footnote 117 or (b) in good faith preceding that date.Footnote 118

By this provision, the law recognizes that for reasons of business efficacy, there is a need to allow the co-existence of a GI (whether registered or unregistered) used in relation to a wine or spirit with another GI used in relation to any goods or services in the marketplace when the duration of such use meets the requisite length (ten years) or that its use precedes the said wine or spirit GI in good faith. To avail himself of this exception, the prior user of a GI must also show to the satisfaction of the courts that he has ‘continuously used’ the earlier GI.Footnote 119 It should be noted that the concept of ‘continuous use’ is also found in Section 28(2) of Trade Marks Act 1998,Footnote 120 which provides for a similar prior use defence to a defendant sued for trademark infringement. It is submitted that principles developed in trademark law in relation to the concept of ‘continuous use’ are relevant and may be applied in interpreting the phrase ‘continuously used’ in Section 12(1) of the GI Act 2014. Thus, concepts such as ‘genuine commercial use’ developed by the courts in trademark casesFootnote 121 under the old lawFootnote 122 would also be relevant. Hence, the prior use exception under Section 12(1) of GI Act 2014Footnote 123 should not be available where it is clear that the use demonstrated was made merely for the purpose of securing the exception with no intent for genuine use of the earlier GI in Singapore.

4.2.2 Registered or Protected Geographical Indications Owners under Geographical Indications Act 2014 and Existing Registered Trademark Owners

GIs and trademarks are similar in that both are badges of origin and they convey important information to the ultimate consumers about the products to which they are attached. Trademarks are source indicators of commercial origins in that they inform the consumers about the manufacturers or producers of the goods or services. GIs, on the other hand, do not identify a specific manufacturer or producer but make reference to a geographical location and the special attribute or reputation which is associated with that product by virtue of that geographical location. GIs and trademarks are, however, very different in the following aspects:

  1. (i) Trademarks are personal property and are owned by individual commercial enterprises.Footnote 124 They may be assigned, licenced and pledged as collaterals to raise funds. In contrast, GIs are collectively owned by the producers in a demarcated geographical location who have the right to use them in relation to their products.Footnote 125 Thus, GIs are not personal property and cannot be dealt with in the same manner as trademarks.

  2. (ii) Trademarks co-exist with the business enterprises that own them. If the business ceases, the trademarks are unlikely to be renewed. Furthermore, trademarks may be revoked if they fall into non-use.Footnote 126 On the other hand, GIs continue to exist for as long as the geographical locations to which the products owe their special qualities and reputation also exist.

The relationship between trademarks and GIs is an interesting one. Traditionally, trademark laws disallow signs denoting geographical locations to be registered on the grounds of public interest to ensure that such signs may be freely used by all and to prevent traders seeking to monopolize terms which are already common names in the public domain.Footnote 127 In the same vein, trademark laws provide as a defence to infringement the use of a sign ‘to indicate the kind, quality, quantity, intended purpose, value, geographical origin or other characteristic of goods or services, the time of production of goods or of the rendering of services, subject to the condition that the use must be in accordance with honest practices in industrial or commercial matters’.Footnote 128 Recent exceptions to these trademark rules are collective marks,Footnote 129 certification marksFootnote 130 and GIs.

When the GI Act 2014 comes into force in Singapore, the interplay between the GI registration system and the trademark registration system may be summarized as follows:

  1. 1. Cumulative protection for a GI under the GI Act 2014 and the Trade Marks Act 1998 is possible. Thus, producers and associations with GIs will have an option as to whether to register their GIs under the GI Registry or as certification or collective marks under the Trade Marks Act 1998.

  2. 2. The registration of a GI may be refused if it is identical with or similar to (i) a registered trademark which was applied for or registered in good faith, or (ii) a trademark which was used in good faith in Singapore in the course of trade before the date of application for registration of the GI, where there exists a likelihood of confusion on the part of the public.Footnote 131

  3. 3. The registration of a GI may also be refused if it is identical or similar to a trademark and the trademark is, before the date of application for registration of the GI in Singapore, a well-known trademark in Singapore and registration of the GI is liable to mislead consumers as to the true identity of the goods identified by that GI.Footnote 132

  4. 4. In general, a mark which consists of an indication of a geographical origin of the goods or services should not be the monopoly of any particular trader, and by virtue of Section 7(1)(c) of the Trade Marks Act 1998,Footnote 133 such a mark is not registrable unless it has in fact acquired a distinctive character as a result of the use made of it. However, when the new GI registration system comes into force, the Trade Marks Act 1998 will be amended to include a new Section 7(10A) that precludes a trademark which has acquired a distinctive character as a result of the use made of it before the date of application for registration from being registered if (a) it contains or consists of a GI which is registered or in respect of which an application has been made before the date of application of the trademark; and (b) the goods for which the trademark is sought to be registered are identical or similar to that for which the GI is registered or sought to be registered, and do not originate in the place indicated by the GI.Footnote 134

  5. 5. A mark which consists of an indication of geographical origin of the goods or services may be registered as a collective mark under Section 60 of the Trade Marks Act 1998.Footnote 135 Registrability of a collective mark is subject to the same absolute and relative grounds for refusal in Sections 7 and 8 of the Trade Marks Act 1998 as for ‘ordinary’ trademarks.Footnote 136 However, the proprietor of such a mark is not entitled to prohibit the use of the signs or indications in accordance with honest practices in industrial or commercial matters, in particular by a person who is entitled to use a geographical name.Footnote 137

  6. 6. Registrability of certification marks is also subject to the same absolute and relative grounds for refusal in Sections 7 and 8 of the Trade Marks Act 1998 for ‘ordinary’ trademarks.Footnote 138 An exception to Section 7(1)(c) of the Trade Marks Act 1998 has been created in the case of a certification mark,Footnote 139 just like that of collective marks, such that even if the certification mark may consist of an indication of a geographical origin of the goods or services, it may nevertheless be so registered. However, the registration does not entitle the proprietor of a certification mark to prohibit the use of the sign by a third party in accordance with honest practices in industrial or commercial matters.Footnote 140

4.2.3 Registered or Protected Geographical Indications Owners under Geographical Indications Act 2014 and Users of Signs Identical with or Similar to These Geographical Indications

Under Section 4 of the GI Act 2014, the use of a registered GI or a GI protected under the Act such as one which identifies a wine or spirit is prohibited, and any interested party may take legal action against such unauthorized use. The remedies for infringement of a registered GI or a GI protected under the GI Act 2014 include injunctions and damages or an account of profits.Footnote 141 The use of a GI includes the use of a trademark which contains or consists of the GI in question.Footnote 142

However, an exception is created in the case of a prior user of a trademark which is identical or similar to a GI if the prior user has continuously used that trademark in good faith before 15 January 1999 or before the GI in question is protected in its country or territory of origin.Footnote 143

5 Conclusion

Undoubtedly, Singapore’s ratification of several significant international IP treaties and conventions is an important driving force in the rapid development of Singapore’s IP legal infrastructure. At the same time, free trade agreements to which Singapore is a signatory have also played a significant role in shaping Singapore’s IP legal landscape in recent years. We have seen the impact of free trade agreements on IP laws since the conclusion of the US-Singapore Free Trade Agreement in 2003 (US-Singapore FTA).Footnote 144 As a result of the US-Singapore FTA, the regulatory framework for IP protection in Singapore has undergone substantial reforms in 2004,Footnote 145 spanning across areas of copyrights and trademarks. Pursuant to her obligations under the US-Singapore FTA, Singapore has basically subscribed to a framework of protection of GIs which allows registration of signs including words associated with GIs as trademarks (subject to certain restrictions),Footnote 146 and the person who registers the trademark associated with the GI first in time and who has successfully overcome opposition proceedings, if any, shall have the right to be protected.

A decade later in 2013, when Singapore concluded the negotiations on the EU-Singapore FTA, the stage was set once again for changes in IP laws with the most significant changes taking place in the area of GIs. The EU protects GIs with a specialized and extensive registration system that offers an enhanced protection. In the free trade agreements which the EU has previously entered into with South Korea and Canada, detailed provisions on the establishment of a registration system and various aspects of enhanced protection to be accorded to wines, spirits and other agricultural products can be found in the intellectual property chapters. The EU-Singapore FTA is no exception and Singapore has agreed to establish a Registry for GIs even though Singapore does not have any GIs of her own for which protection is sought.Footnote 147 Before the adoption of the GI Act 2014, protection for GIs in Singapore was comparable to the level set out in TRIPS even in the absence of a registration system. Once the GI Act 2014 is brought into force, protection for GIs in Singapore will be significantly enhanced with the establishment of a dedicated GI Registry.

Admittedly, the registration of GIs in Singapore, in particular the automatic recognition and protection to a list of key EU GIs if accepted, would have a far-reaching impact on existing GI users and trademark owners. However, to minimize the impact of the change brought forth by the new law on GI protection, the Singapore government negotiated the EU-Singapore FTA and secured the agreement from the EU that there will be no automatic recognition and protection to a list of key EU GIs but that Singapore will be allowed to develop its own GI registration system. The list of key EU GIs will be subject to examination by the new GI Registry, and third parties who object to their registrations on the grounds of genericness would be given the opportunity to do so under the law. This may be seen as a significant break-through in trade negotiations on GIs, and may offer a ‘middle way’ in the resolution of divergent attitudes towards GI protection amongst countries. The Singapore government should be commended for her attempts to create a fair model of protection which, it is hoped, will better balance the interests of GI owners and legitimate GI users in general. Be that as it may, it should also be noted that the Singapore model is, however, the exception rather than the norm and that the arrangements of the EU-Singapore FTA for GIs ‘reflect the fact that Singapore’s legislation does not permit direct protection of geographical indications via the Agreement, and underlines that this does not constitute a precedent’.Footnote 148

The implementation of the changes brought forth by the GI Act 2014 is unfortunately delayed as the EU-Singapore FTA is still awaiting ratification by the EU Parliament.Footnote 149 In a recent report in July 2015,Footnote 150 Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong was of the view that a ratification of the EU-Singapore FTA would encourage an ASEAN-EU FTA deal, and he was quoted to say ‘Singapore is the bellwether. If you can do one with Singapore, I think that will encourage other deals to come in, including the ASEAN-EU deal.’Footnote 151 Of course, it remains to be seen whether the Singapore model on the protection of GIs will be accepted by the EU through the ratification of the EU-Singapore FTA and whether it will pave the way for a middle-ground approach where countries of differing views on GI protection may agree to meet each other half way.

Footnotes

6 Geographical Indications and Mega-Regional Trade Agreements and Negotiations

* Professor of Law, Chair in Intellectual Property and International Trade, Faculty of Law, Victoria University of Wellington.

1 Geographical Indications, European Commission, http://ec.europa.eu/trade/policy/accessing-markets/intellectual-property/geographical-indications/ (last visited 21 March 2016).

3 See, in particular, the chapters in Part III of this volume.

4 See, e.g., Jason Clay, Are Agricultural Subsidies Causing More Harm Than Good?, The Guardian (8 August 2013), www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/agricultural-subsidies-reform-government-support (concluding ‘global economic progress requires a recalibration of how we approach today’s challenges. Agricultural subsidies can be a blunt instrument that can impede progress and slow economic growth if they’re wielded without precision and a specific cut-off date. We’ll only succeed in protecting our planet – and our food security – if we change how we think about subsidies and how we use them.’).

5 I borrow this phrase from Peter Drahos, When the Weak Bargain with the Strong: Negotiations in the World Trade Organization, 8 Int’l Negot. 79109 (2003), http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=418480.

6 For an expansion of this argument in relation to traditional knowledge, see Susy Frankel, The Mismatch of Geographical Indications and Innovative Traditional Knowledge, 29 Prometheus 253 (2011), http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1953033.

7 William van Caenegem, Peter Drahos & Jen Cleary, Provenance of Australian Food Products: Is There a Place for Geographical Indications? Rural Industries Research And Development Corporation, Australia Government (July 2015), https://rirdc.infoservices.com.au/items/15–060.

8 Footnote Id. at 68–70. Interestingly, in relation to the wine industry, the authors note that it is difficult to gauge the benefit of GIs, but that they seem to be enhancing the industry. Footnote Id. at 22.

9 Global trade rules about origin of goods have many detailed rules that are separate from Intellectual Property (IP) rules. As the World Trade Organization (WTO) explains, ‘rules of origin are the criteria needed to determine the national source of a product. Their importance is derived from the fact that duties and restrictions in several cases depend upon the source of imports.’ Technical Information on Rules of Origin, WTO, www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/roi_e/roi_info_e.htm (last visited 21 March 2016).

10 See generally The Structure of Intellectual Property Law: Can One Size Fit All? (Annette Kur & Vytautas Mizara eds., 2001); Graeme B. Dinwoodie & Rochelle C. Dreyfuss, A Neofederalist Vision of TRIPS: The Resilience of the International Intellectual Property Regime (2012); Daniel J. Gervais, Intellectual Property IP Calibration, in Intellectual Property, Trade and Development 86116 (Daniel J. Gervais ed., 2014).

11 See Geographical Indication Protection in the United States, United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/web/offices/dcom/olia/globalip/pdf/gi_system.pdf (last visited 21 March 2016).

12 Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization, 15 April 1994, 1867 U.N.T.S. 154, Annex 1C [hereinafter TRIPS Agreement].

13 TRIPS Agreement, art. 1.1.

14 The World Trade Organization records that since its formation in 1995 over 400 regional trade agreements have been entered into and many are still being negotiated. Many but not all include IP chapters. See Regional Trade Agreements: Facts and Figures, World Trade Organization, www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/region_e/regfac_e.htm (last visited 3 June 2016).

15 Trans-Pacific Partnership, New Zealand Foreign Affairs & Trade, www.tpp.mfat.govt.nz/text (last visited 21 March 2016) [hereinafter TPP]. As of January 2017 it seems unlikely that the TPP will ever come into force ads the united States has withdrawn form it.

16 For a general discussion, see David A. Gantz, The TPP and RCEP: Mega-Trade Agreements for the Pacific Rim, 33 Ariz. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 57, 59, 63 (2016).

17 See, for e.g., Intellectual Property Watch, Hundreds Of Civil Society Groups Urge RCEP Negotiators To Reject Imported TPP Clauses, 30 November 2016), www.ip-watch.org/2016/11/30/hundreds-civil-society-groups-urge-rcep-negotiators-reject-imported-tpp-clauses/.

18 K. William Watson, Geographical Indications in TTIP: An Impossible Task, Cato Institute (October 2015), www.cato.org/publications/cato-online-forum/geographical-indications-ttip-impossible-task.

20 Footnote Id. (citing Adam Behsudi, US to Europe: Don’t Move My Cheese, Politico (June 20, 2015), www.politico.com/story/2015/07/us-to-europe-dont-move-my-cheese-120387).

21 Footnote Id. (citing EU Trade Commissioner Expects Italian Cheese Exporters to Benefit from Lower Tariffs, Strong GI Protections in TTIP, Cheese Reporter (26 June 2015), http://npaper-wehaa.com/cheese-reporter/2015/06/s3/#?article=2545800).

22 The Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP) is a proposal for a free trade agreement (FTA) of the Asia Pacific between the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) nations which is being designed to bridge the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP).

23 In addition, many members of the European Union (EU) are members of the Lisbon Agreement, see Daniel Gervais’ chapter in this book.

24 It will come into force when a sufficient amount of trade coverage is covered by the ratifying parties.

25 TPP, art. 18.29.

26 TPP, art. 18.1:1.

27 TRIPS Agreement, art. 22.1.

28 TPP, art. 18:30.

29 TPP, art. 18.19.

30 The EU has an extensive GI framework with multiple regimes, including protected designations of origin (PDOs). PDOs are applicable to agricultural products that are produced, processed and prepared in a particular geographical area using a recognized method or other sort of know-how; protected geographical indications (PGIs) that apply to agricultural products that are linked to a geographical area; and traditional speciality guaranteed (TSG), which applies to products that have a particular traditional character related to either the product’s composition or means of production. This summary shows the wide catchment of the European system. See generally, European Commission, Agriculture and Rural Development Quality Policy, http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/schemes/index_en.htm (last visited 1 June 2016).

31 TPP, art. 18.32:1(a).

32 TPP, art. 18.32:1(c).

33 TPP, art. 18.32:2.

34 The substantive obligations for protection of GIs in the TRIPS Agreement are found in arts. 22–23 and are not as specific as the TPP language, but broadly require laws to prevent users that mislead the public. See TRIPS Agreement, art. 22.2(a).

35 EU-Australia Wine Agreement (entered into force on 31 August 2010, replacing the 1994 Agreement) (as a result of which Australian wine producers will not be able to continue the use of many names, including ‘Champagne’, ‘Port’, ‘Sherry’, ‘Amontillado’ and ‘Claret’).

36 EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement, 20 January 2016, Chapter 12 Intellectual Property, art. 6.3.1. The reciprocal obligation on the EU is in art. 6.3.2, http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/press/index.cfm?id=1437 (last visited 1 August 2016).

37 EU-Singapore Free Trade Agreement, 29 June 2015, Chapter 11 Intellectual Property [hereinafter EU-Singapore FTA], art 11.17.3 and Annex 11-A, List of Names to be Applied for Protection as Geographical Indications in the Territory of Parties, http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/press/index.cfm?id=961 (last visited 1 August 2016).

38 Billy A. Melo Araujo, The EU Deep Trade Agenda: Law and Policy 157 (2016).

39 TPP, art. 1.2:2.

40 TPP, art. 18.36.

41 TPP, art. 18.36:6.

42 TPP, art. 18.36:1–5.

43 The side-letters are negotiated alongside the agreement and often explain positions in relation to particular articles and in relation to the TPP between some, but not all, of the parties to the agreement.

44 South Korea is one of several countries that have suggested interest in joining the TPP. South Korea has existing trade agreements with most TPP members.

45 Letter from Korean Ministry of Trade Industry and Energy to Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Australia, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (24 March 2014), https://dfat.gov.au/trade/agreements/kafta/Documents/letter-on-geographical-indications-korea.pdf.

46 The negotiating members of RCEP include Association of South-East Asian Nations members (Brunei, Myanmar, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam) plus six other nations (New Zealand, Australia, China, South Korea, Japan and India). See The Second Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), Association of Southeast Asian Nations, www.asean.org/the-second-regional-comprehensive-economic-partnership-rcep/ (last visited 3 June 2016).

47 Guiding Principles and Objectives for Negotiating the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, www.mfat.govt.nz/assets/_securedfiles/FTAs-in-negotiations/RCEP/Guiding-Principles-and-Objectives-for-Negotiating-the-Regional-Comprehensive-Economic-Partnership.pdf (last visited 21 March 2016).

48 Chapter on Intellectual Property Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) Free Trade Agreement (Working draft), Knowledge Ecology International (KEI) (10 October 2014), http://keionline.org/sites/default/files/RCEP-TNC6-WGIP3-ASEAN-Draft%20IP%20Text-10Oct2014.pdf.

51 Leaked IP Chapter, Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) FTA, KEI (3 October 2014), www.keionline.org/node/2239.

52 EU-Canada Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), European Commission, http://ec.europa.eu/trade/policy/in-focus/ceta/ (last visited 21 March 2016).

53 Footnote Id. art. 7.

54 Geographical Indications for Non-agricultural Products, European Commission, http://ec.europa.eu/growth/industry/intellectual-property/geographical-indications/non-agricultural-products/index_en.htm (last visited 21 March 2016).

55 CETA, art. 20.19:2.

56 CETA, art. 20.19:3.

57 CETA, art. 20.20.1. A provision also provides for negotiation regarding homonymous GIs with third parties. CETA, art. 20.20:2.

58 CETA, art. 20.21:1.

60 For an overview of terroir as part of the French appellation of origin system, see Dev Ganjee, Relocating the Law of Geographical Indications 83 (2012).

61 GI advocates emphasize the difference between their products and others of like style (even when they are made in niche markets and with quality ingredients) because of the regional differences in terroir and ingredients emanating from the terroir. For example, no one can make the equivalent of Roquefort because they do not have the same caves and grapes; even the caves and grapes one metre outside of Champagne are allegedly different from those found within the region.

62 Examples include New Zealand milk powder and even cheeses and wines, which while the products use geographical names they have not been marketed on a GI basis to date. Analogous examples exist all around the world.

63 It is even less likely to be the case where the products have not yet developed to a level where they compete in export markets, such as many of the agricultural products of developing countries. Processed primary products are more relevant to the GI context.

64 See the description of champagne characteristics in the passing-off cases Bollinger v. Costa Brava Wine Co Ltd [1960] RPC 16 and Wineworths Group Ltd v. Comite Interprofessionel du Vin de Champagne [1992] 2 NZLR 327 (CA).

65 See, for example, EU-Australia Wine Agreement, supra Footnote note 34.

66 See Dev S. Gangjee, Spanish Champagne: An Unfair Completion Approach to GI Protection, in Intellectual Property At the Edge: The Contested Contours of IP 105–29 (Rochelle Cooper Dreyfuss & Jane C. Ginsburg eds., 2014); Daniel Gervais, A Cognac after Spanish Champagne? Geographical Indications as Certification Marks, in Intellectual Property at the Edge: The Contested Contours of IP 130–56 (Rochelle Cooper Dreyfuss & Jane C. Ginsburg eds., 2014).

67 In Ervin Warnick v. Townend & Sons [1979] A.C. 73, the House of Lords recognized the plaintiffs’ claim in passing off and dismissed the defendant’s argument that the plaintiffs, makers of Advocaat, could not use passing off because unlike the Champagne makers they did not rely on a geographic area for their reputation.

68 Trade barriers are often divided into tariff and non-tariff barriers. All of IP is a non-tariff trade barrier. The TRIPS Agreement is a recognition of a globally agreed level of IP protection in a framework that has long characterized IP rights as an exception to the principles of the GATT Agreement, including free movement of goods, which provides in art. XX:

subject to the requirement that such measures are not applied in a manner which would constitute a means of arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination between countries where the same conditions prevail, or a disguised restriction on international trade, nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to prevent the adoption or enforcement by any contracting party of measures … (d) necessary to secure compliance with laws or regulations which are not inconsistent with the provisions of this Agreement, including those relating to customs enforcement … the protection of patents, trade marks and copyrights, and the prevention of deceptive practices.

69 See generally William Fisher, Theories of Intellectual Property, in New Essays in the Legal and Political Theory of Property 168–99 (Stephen R. Munzer ed., 2001); Robert Merges, Justifying Intellectual Property (2011).

70 See Justin Hughes, Champagne, Feta and Bourbon: The Spirited Debate about Geographical Indications, 58 Hastings L. J. 299386 (2006).

71 In patents and copyright, the length of protection is severely contested precisely because of the limitations the rights place on follow-on creativity and innovation.

72 Irene Calboli, Overlapping Rights: The Negative Effects of Trademarking Creative Works, in The Evolution and Equilibrium of Copyright 52 (Susy Frankel & Daniel Gervais eds., 2014).

73 One could argue about whether in fact this is the case.

74 TRIPS Agreement, art. 27.1.

75 Some authors have explored other incentive models, particularly in patents such as prizes, see Joseph E. Stiglitz, Prizes, Not Patents, Project Syndicate (6 March 2007), www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/prizes–not-patents; see also Daniel J. Hemel & Lisa L. Ouellette, Beyond the Patents-Prizes Debate, 92 Tex. L. Rev. 303–82 (2013).

76 Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, WTO, www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/24-scm.pdf (last visited 21 March 2016).

77 See Susy Frankel, Test Tubes for Global Intellectual Property Issues: Small Market Economies 6891 (2015).

78 See Footnote id. Also, see the discussion in the WTO Appellate Body’s report about whether a patent is the equivalent of a subsidy. The issues arose in a complaint about the alleged subsidizing of the United States (US) aircraft industry. The facts are complex and involve much more than patents, but the patent-relevant point was whether the allocation of patent rights under contracts between government agencies and Boeing amounted to a subsidy. Based on the submission of the parties, the panel assumed, for the sake of argument, that the allocation of patent rights to government-financed research could constitute a subsidy. WTO Appellate Body Report, United States – Measures Affecting Trade in Large Civil Aircraft (Second Complaint), WTO, WT/DS353/AB/R (12 March 2012), www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dispu_e/353abr_e.pdf (last visited 21 March 2016).

79 A carrot is often used as a colloquial term for an incentive. ‘Raining carrots’ means that there is an excess of incentives.

80 Irene Calboli, Geographical Indications of Origin at the Crossroads of Local Development, Consumer Protection and Marketing Strategies, 46 Int’l Rev. Intell. Prop. & Competition L. 760, 760–80 (2015).

81 Frankel, supra Footnote note 6.

82 Footnote Id., at 14.

83 As noted above, this has been the success for GIs for the Australian wine industry. The Australian Aborigine peoples cannot boast of such success, or at least not yet. Willian van Caenegem, Jen A. Cleary, & Peter Drahos, Pride and Profit: Geographical Indications as Regional Development Tools in Australia, 16 J. Econ. & Soc. Pol’y 3 (2014). In relation to regional development, the authors suggest that locally tailored GI policies should be considered if they can assist Aboriginal Communities, noting that Australians ‘are also prepared to pay more for products emanating from specialist niche sectors, such as from Aboriginal country, culture and community’. Id.

84 There also is a practical difference between GIs and traditional knowledge. There is an international standard for GIs, but there is no international protection for traditional knowledge. Thus, a very narrow aspect of traditional knowledge is protected through the GI system, which in essence favours the protection of Western versions of traditional knowledge.

85 TRIPS Agreement, art. 15(2)–(3); Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, 20 March 1883 (as amended 28 September 1979), 21 U.S.T. 1583, 828 U.N.T.S. 305 (protecting well-known trademarks in Article 16bis).

86 At the time of writing, both Australia and New Zealand are negotiating trade agreements with the EU and are likely to enter into analogous complexities. The difference, however, is that unlike Singapore, these negotiations are post-TPP.

87 United States-Singapore Free Trade Agreement, US-Sing., art. 16.2(2), January 1, 2004, https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/uploads/agreements/fta/singapore/asset_upload_file708_4036.pdf (last visited 1 June 2016).

88 EU-Singapore FTA, supra Footnote note 36, art. 11.21(2) n.19.

7 Geographical Indications as Property: European Union Association Agreements and Investor–State Provisions

* Professor of Intellectual Property Law, Director of the Advanced Masters Intellectual Property Law and Knowledge Management (IPKM LL.M/MSc), and Academic Director of the Institute for Globalization and International Regulation (IGIR), Maastricht University.

1 See Final Report of And-International on the external study: ‘Value of production of agricultural products and foodstuffs, wines, aromatised wines and spirits protected by a geographical indication (GI)’ (October 2012), http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/external-studies/value-gi_en.htm.

2 See Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, 15 April, 1994, Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization, Annex 1C, 1869 U.N.T.S. 299 [hereinafter TRIPS].

3 See Footnote id. art. 23(4), which mandates that ‘negotiations shall be undertaken in the Council for TRIPS concerning the establishment of a multilateral system of notification and registration of geographical indications’.

4 Consolidated Version of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, 10 October 2012, 2012 O.J. (C 326) 1 [hereinafter TFEU].

5 See Footnote id. Art. 3(1)(e). See Case 22/70, Comm’n v. Council, 1971 E.C.R. 263 [hereinafter ERTA]:

Each time the Community … adopts provisions laying down common rules …, the Member States no longer have the right, acting individually or even collectively, to undertake obligations with third countries which affect those rules. … When such common rules come into being, the Community alone is in a position to assume and carry out contractual obligations towards third countries affecting the whole sphere of application of the Community legal system. … To the extent to which Community rules are promulgated for the attainment of the objectives of the Treaty, the Member States cannot, outside the framework of the Community institutions, assume obligations which might affect those rules or alter their scope.

6 TFEU, art. 207(1).

7 EU-South Korea Free Trade Agreement, EU-S. Kor., 16 September 2010, 54 O.J. (L 127) 1, 46–47, http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/en/ALL/?uri=OJ:L:2011:127:TOC.

8 EU-Singapore Free Trade Agreement, EU-Sing., 20 September 2013, http://ec.europa.eu/trade/policy/countries-and-regions/countries/singapore/.

9 Comprehensive Trade and Economic Agreement, Can.-EU, Consolidated CETA Text, ch. 22, Intellectual Property, 26 September 2014, http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2014/september/tradoc_152806.pdf [hereinafter CETA].

10 EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement, EU-Viet., 5 August 2015, http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/august/tradoc_153674.pdf [hereinafter EU-Vietnam FTA].

11 The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) is currently still under negotiation. Further details can be seen at In Focus: Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), Eur. Comm’n, http://ec.europa.eu/trade/policy/in-focus/ttip/ (last visited 2 June 2016).

12 A short internet search also reveals that ISDS is not exclusive to trade deals involving Western nations. Asian countries are equally parties to such agreements, also when it concerns their regional trade and investment partners.

13 North American Free Trade Agreement, US-Can.-Mex., 17 December 1992, 32 I.L.M. 289 (1993) [hereinafter NAFTA].

14 Trans-Pacific Partnership, ch. 18, Intellectual Property, 5 November 2015, https://medium.com/the-trans-pacific-partnership/intellectual-property-3479efdc7adf#.ux18hliw0 [hereinafter TPP, Intellectual Property Chapter].

15 See Final Report from the Expert Group on Intellectual Property Valuation (29 November 2013), https://ec.europa.eu/research/innovation-union/pdf/Expert_Group_Report_on_Intellectual_Property_Valuation_IP_web_2.pdf.

16 See DOOR, Eur. Comm’n, http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/door/list.html (last visited 5 June 2016).

18 See E-Spirit-Drinks, Eur. Comm’n, http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/spirits/.

19 Council regulation 1601/91 of 10 June 1991, laying down general rules on the definition, description and presentation of aromatized wines, aromatized wine-based drinks and aromatized wine-product cocktails, 1991 O.J. (L 149) 1.

20 Commission Communication – EU best practice guidelines for voluntary certification schemes for agricultural products and foodstuffs, 2010 O.J. (C 341) 4, 5.

21 Council Regulation 2081/92 of 14 July 1992, on the protection of GIs and designations of origin for agricultural products and foodstuffs, 1992 O.J. (L 208) 1–8.

22 Complaint by the United States, EC – Trademarks and Geographical Indications for Agricultural Products and Foodstuffs, WTO Doc. WT/DS174/R (adopted 20 April 2005); Complaint by Australia, EC – Protections of Trademarks and Geographical Indications for Agricultural Products and Foodstuffs, WTO Doc. WT/DS290/R (adopted 20 April 2005); see also Lothar Ehring, National Treatment Under the GATT 1994, in The Principle of National Treatment in International Economic Law – Trade, Investment and Intellectual Property 3454 (Anselm Kamperman Sanders ed., 2014) [hereinafter The Principle of National Treatment in International Economic Law]; Anselm Kamperman Sanders, National Treatment Under the TRIPS Agreement, in The Principle of National Treatment in International Economic Law, supra, at 286–99.

23 See TRIPS, art. 3(1) (obligating National Treatment (NT) in respect of WTO Member States).

24 See General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, 15 April 1994, Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization, Annex 1A, Legal Instruments – Results of the Uruguay Round, art. III(4), 1867 U.N.T.S. 187 (1994) [hereinafter GATT 1994].

25 GATT 1994, art. XX(d) (providing that an exception can be made to measures falling foul of the mandated standards if they are ‘necessary to secure compliance with laws or regulations’).

26 See Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade, GATT Secretariat. Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations: Legal Instruments Embodying the Results of the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations done at Marrakesh on 15 April 1994 (2003), GATT Doc. MTN/FA II-A1A-6 (15 December 1993) [hereinafter TBT], www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/17-tbt.pdf.

27 Regulation 1151/2012 concerning certain foodstuffs and certain non-food agricultural products (the ‘Foodstuffs Regulation’), 2012 O.J. (L 343), 1–29.

28 Regulation 1308/2013 concerning wines and sparkling wines, 2013 O.J. (L 347) 671–854; Regulation 110/2008 on the definition, description, presentation, labelling and the protection of geographical indications of spirit drinks, 2008 O.J. (L 39) 16–54; Council Regulation 1601/91 of 10 June 1991, laying down general rules on the definition, description and presentation of aromatized wines, aromatized wine-based drinks and aromatized wine-product cocktails, 1991 O.J. (L 149) 1–9.

29 2012 O.J. (L 343), art. 13(c)–(d).

30 2012 O.J. (L 343), art. 13(a).

32 Footnote Id. art. 13(b).

33 See Guide to Applicants, Eur. Comm’n, http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/schemes/guides/guide-for-applicants_en.pdf (last visited 5 June 2016).

34 See Prosciutto di Parma, www.prosciuttodiparma.com/ (last visited 5 June 2016).

35 One can follow the hilarious videos of the ‘Prosciutto di Parma DOP slicing instruction’ videos on YouTube. ProsciuttodiParmaDOP, English Tutorial: Preparing and Slicing Parma Ham, YouTube (16 October 2012), www.youtube.com/watch?v=_qfVIzmqlGE.

36 Formerly European Court of Justice (ECJ).

37 Case C-108/01, Consorzio del Prosciutto di Parma en Salumificio S. Rita SpA v. Asda Stores Ltd and Hygrade Foods Ltd., 2003 E.C.R. I-5163.

38 Regulation 2081/92 on the protection of geographical indications and designations of origin for agricultural products and foodstuffs, 1992 O.J. (L 208) 1–8.

39 2012 O.J. (L 343), art. 8(2).

40 For a list of inspection bodies, see Eur. Comm’n, http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/schemes/compliance-authorities_en.pdf (last visited 5 June 2016).

41 See Prosecco Wine, Wine-Searcher, www.wine-searcher.com/regions-prosecco (last visited 7 November 2013), for a brief summary; Filippo Mattia Ginanni, The 2009 Prosecco DOC Reform, Wine & Spirit Educ. Tr., www.wsetglobal.com/documents/julian_brind_scholarship_2015_prosecco_reform__filippo_ginanni.pdf.

42 See Anselm Kamperman Sanders, Geographical Indications of Origin: When GIs Become Commodities, All Gloves Come Off, 46 IIC-Int’l Rev. Intell. Prop. & Competition L. (IIC) 755–59 (2015).

43 1992 O.J. (L 208) 1–8.

44 See Monica Carss-Frisk, A Guide to the Implementation of Article 1 of the Protocol No. 1 to the European Convention on Human Rights, in Human Rights Handbook (Eur. Council, Human Rights Handbooks No. 4, 2001), www.echr.coe.int/LibraryDocs/DG2/HRHAND/DG2-EN-HRHAND-04(2003).pdf.

45 Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms Protocol 1 art. 1, 4 November 1950, 213 U.N.T.S. 222 (European Convention on Human Rights) [hereinafter ECHR]:

Every natural or legal person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of international law.

The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way impair the right of a state to enforce such laws at it deems necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other contributions or penalties.

46 Anheuser-Busch Inc. v. Portugal, App. No. 73049/01, 44 Eur. H.R. Rep. 42, para. 72 (2007) (stating that ‘Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 is applicable to intellectual property as such’, but in the case at hand decided that legitimate regulatory interests may justify interference with the right of property in line with the court’s general approach to interference with the right to property).See also Anselm Kamperman Sanders, Professional Case Comment, Case No. 73049/01 of the Grand Chamber of the ECHR, Anheuser-Bush Inc. v. Portugal, 4 Eur. Human Rights Cases (EHRC) 433–37 (2007).

47 See James v. the United Kingdom, 8 Eur. H.R. Rep. A98, para. 46 (1986).

48 Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union art. 17, 18 December 2000, 2000 O.J. (C 364) 1, on the right to property provides:

  1. 1. Everyone has the right to own, use, dispose of and bequeath his or her lawfully acquired possessions. No one may be deprived of his or her possessions, except in the public interest and in the cases and under the conditions provided for by law, subject to fair compensation being paid in good time for their loss. The use of property may be regulated by law in so far as is necessary for the general interest.

  2. 2. Intellectual property shall be protected.

49 Case C-70/10 Scarlet Extended v. Société Belge des auteurs, compositeurs et éditeurs SCRL (SABAM), 2011 E.C.R. I-11959.

50 Case C-491/01, The Queen v. Secretary of State for Health, ex parte British American Tobacco (Investments) Ltd and Imperial Tobacco Ltd., 2002 E.C.R. I-11453.

51 Current requirements are even more stringent under Directive 2014/40/EU, of the European Parliament and of the Council of 3 April 2014, on the approximation of the laws, regulations and administrative provisions of the Member States concerning the manufacture, presentation and sale of tobacco and related products and repealing Directive 2001/37/EC, 2014 O.J. (L 127) 1, with Arts. 8–10 amounting to a ‘75% rule’ in terms of the package having to display health warnings.

52 See Tobacco Plain Packaging Act 2011 (Austl.).

53 British American Tobacco Australasia Limited and Ors v. Commonwealth of Australia, 2012 250 CLR 1.

54 Complaint by Ukraine, Australia – Certain Measures Concerning Trademarks, and Other Plain Packaging Requirements Applicable to Tobacco Products and Packaging, WTO Doc. WT/DS343/1 (13 March 2012).

55 Complaint by Honduras, Australia – Certain Measures Concerning Trademarks, Geographical Indications and Other Plain Packaging Requirements Applicable to Tobacco Products and Packaging, WTO Doc. WT/DS435/1 (4 April 2012 [hereinafter Australia – Certain Measures Concerning Trademarks); Complaint by Dominican Republic, Australia – Certain Measures Concerning Trademarks, WTO Doc. WT/DS441/1 (18 July 2012); Complaint by Cuba, Australia – Certain Measures Concerning Trademarks, WTO Doc. WT/DS458/1 (3 May 2013); and Complaint by Indonesia, Australia – Certain Measures Concerning Trademarks, WTO Doc. WT/DS467/1 (20 September 2013).

56 See infra Section 5.

57 See supra Section 1.

58 Appellate Body Report, Mexico – Tax Measures on Soft Drinks and Other Beverages, WTO Doc. WT/DS308/AB/R, (adopted 6 March 2006).

59 Panel Report, Peru – Additional Duty on Imports of Certain Agricultural Products, WTO Doc. WT/DS457/R (adopted 27 November 2014) [hereinafter Additional Duty Panel Report].

60 Appellate Body Report, Peru – Additional Duty on Imports of Certain Agricultural Products, 5.86 WTO Doc. WT/DS457/AB/R (adopted 20 July 2015).

61 Additional Duty Panel Report, supra Footnote note 60, at ¶ 5.106.

62 GATT 1994 art. XXIV(5) (providing that parties can form custom unions or free trade areas, subject to certain conditions being met).

63 GATT 1994 art. XXIV(5)(a).

64 Appellate Body Report, Turkey – Restrictions on Imports of Textile and Clothing Products, WTO Doc. WT/ DS34/AB/R (adopted 19 November 1999).

65 TRIPS, supra Footnote note 2.

66 TBT, supra Footnote note 26.

67 GATT 1994 art. III(4).

68 See supra Footnote notes 54 & Footnote 55. The Chair of the panel informed the Dispute Settlement Body on 10 October 2014 that the panel expects to issue its final report to the parties in the second half of 2016.

69 See Panel Report, EC – Trademarks and Geographical Indications, 7.210, WTO Doc. WT/DS/174R (adopted 15 March 2005).

70 Philip Morris Asia Limited (Hong Kong) v. The Commonwealth of Australia, Case No. 2012–12 (Perm. Ct. Arb. 22 June 2011), www.pcacases.com/web/view/5.

71 UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules, U.N. Comm’n Int’l Trade L., www.uncitral.org/uncitral/en/uncitral_texts/arbitration/2010Arbitration_rules.html (last visited 6 June 2016).

72 International Thunderbird Gaming Corporation v. The United Mexican States, NAFTA, Arbitral Award (26 January 2006), www.iisd.org/pdf/2006/itn_award.pdf.

73 Footnote Id. at 49, para. 147.

74 Saluka Investments BV (The Netherlands) v. Czech Republic, Partial Award, (Perm. Ct. Arb. 17 March 2006), http://archive.pca-cpa.org/SAL-CZ%20Partial%20Award%20170306ba57.pdf?fil_id=105.

75 Footnote Id. at 66, para. 305.

76 For a comprehensive overview, see H. Grosse Ruse-Khan, Litigating Intellectual Property Rights in Investor-State Arbitration: From Plain Packaging to Patent Revocation (Univ. Cambridge, Legal Studies Research Paper Series No. 52, 2014).

77 AHS Niger and Menzies Middle East and Africa S.A. v. Republic of Niger, ICSID Case No. ARB/11/11 Award (15 July 2013), www.italaw.com/sites/default/files/case-documents/italaw3034.pdf.

78 Philip Morris Brands Sàrl v. Oriental Republic of Uruguay, ICSID Case No. ARB/10/7, www.italaw.com/cases/460.

79 Agreement Between the Swiss Confederation and the Oriental Republic of Uruguay on the Recipocal Promotion and Protection of Investments, 7 October 1988, 1976 U.N.T.S. 389.

80 NAFTA, supra Footnote note 13.

81 Eli Lilly and Co. v. The Government of Canada, ICSID Case No. UNCT/14/2 NAFTA (7 November 2012).

82 Eli Lilly and Co. v. The Government of Canada, ICSID Case No. UNCT/14/2 Final Award (16 March 2017).

83 See supra Footnote note 41.

84 See Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures, 15 April 1994, Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization, Annex 1, 1867 U.N.T.S. 493.

85 The ‘Duchy of Limburg’ was a state in the Holy Roman Empire (1065–1794) and a part of the German Confederation (1839–1867). Since 1839 ‘Limburg’ is a province in Belgium, and a province in the Netherlands. Furthermore, it is the name of a town in Belgium, and in Germany it is used in respect of various cities, towns, a castle, abbey and airfield.

86 See Idaho Potato Comm’n, https://idahopotato.com (last visited 6 June 2016).

87 EU-Vietnam FTA, supra Footnote note 10.

88 Case C-104/81, Hauptzollamt Mainz v. C.A. Kupferberg, 1982 E.C.R. 3641. See also Case C-265/03, Igor Simutenkov v. Ministerio de Educación y Cultura and Real Federación Española de Fútbol (EU-Russia Partnership Agreement), 2005 E.C.R. I-2579 (precluding imposing limits in fielding individual sportsmen from non-EEA members). But see Case C-240/09, Lesoochranárske zoskupenie VLK v. Ministerstvo životného prostredia Slovenskej republiky (Aarhus Convention), 2011 E.C.R. I-1255 (holding that in the absence of EU rules governing the matter, it is for the domestic legal system of each Member State to lay down the detailed procedural rules governing actions for safeguarding rights which individuals derive from EU law); Joined Cases C-404 & C-4055/12P, Council v. Stichting Natuur en Milieu and Pesticide Action Network Europe (Aarhus Convention), 2015 EUR-Lex CELEX LEXIS 62012CJ0404 (13 January 2015) (holding that an NGO has no standing to invoke the Aarhus Convention in a challenge to the postponement of clean air requirements).

8 How Would Geographical Indications from Asia Fare in Europe?

* Member of the Board of Appeal, European Patent Office; former Head of the Asia Department, Max-Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition.

1 Geographical indications (GIs) are understood here in a rather broad sense as any indication that, in the course of trade, may serve as a geographical identifier for goods or services.

2 The reverse already exists. The European Union (EU) has commissioned a study as to how European GIs can be protected abroad: ‘Geographical Indications and TRIPs: 10 Years Later … A Roadmap for EU GI Holders to Get Protection in Other WTO Members’, available at http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2007/june/tradoc_135088.pdf.

3 John Brunton, Lovely Bubbly: A Taste of Italy’s Prosecco Region, The Guardian (3 August 2010), www.theguardian.com/travel/2010/aug/03/prosecco-wine-tasting-tour-italy.

4 See Larry Olmsted, ‘Food’s Biggest Scam: The Great Kobe Beef Lie’, Forbes (12 April 2012), www.forbes.com/sites/larryolmsted/2012/04/12/foods-biggest-scam-the-great-kobe-beef-lie/#4938377434d7. Olmsted covers the misuse of the term ‘Kobe beef’ in a four-part series of articles.

5 See the External Study on the Value of Production of Agricultural Products and Foodstuffs, Wines, Aromatised Wines and Spirits Protected by a GI, Eur. Comm’n (October 2012), http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/external-studies/value-gi_en.htm, which puts the figure of GI products sold in 2010 at 54.3 billion euros. The study also concludes that GI-indicated products are sold at 2.23 times the price of comparable products that do not bear a GI. Irene Calboli correctly points out that such mark-up can only be justified when these claims for premium products are reflected in distinct ingredients and methods of production. Often, this is not the case, although consumers are made to believe so. See Irene Calboli, Geographical Indications of Origin at the Crossroads of Local Development, Consumer Protection and Marketing Strategies, 46 Int’l Rev. Intell. Prop. & Competition L. 760, 772 (2015).

6 See 2007 O.J. (L240) 7; Café de Colombia, www.cafedecolombia.com (last visited 21 May 2016).

7 See infra Section 5.

8 Council Regulation No. 2081/92 of 14 July 1992 on the protection of GIs and designations of origin for agricultural products and foodstuffs, 1992 O.J. (L 208) 1.

9 Council Regulation No. 2082/92 of 14 July 1992 on certificates of specific character for agricultural products and foodstuffs, 1992 O.J. (L 208) 9.

10 Commission Regulation No. 1848/93 of 9 July 1993 laying down detailed rules for the application of Council Regulation (EEC) No 2082/92 on certificates of specific character for agricultural products and foodstuffs, 1993 O.J. (L 168) 35.

11 Council Regulation No. 1234/2007 of 22 October 2007 establishing a common organisation of agricultural markets and on specific provisions for certain agricultural products, 2007 O.J. (L 299) 1.

12 See Quality Policy, European Commission, http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/schemes/index_en.htm (last visited 4 May 2016) (explaining the three schemes for protecting the names and agricultural products and foodstuffs).

13 See Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights arts. 22–24, 15 April 1994, Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization, Annex 1C, 1869 U.N.T.S. 299 [hereinafter TRIPS].

14 Panel Report, European Communities – Protection of Trade Marks and Geographical Indications for Agricultural Products and Foodstuffs, WT/DS174/R (adopted 15 March 2005).

15 See Council Regulation (EC) No. 510/2006 on the protection of GIs and designations of origin for agricultural products and foodstuffs, 2006 O.J. (L 93) 12.

16 Regulation 1151/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 November 2012 on quality schemes for agricultural products and foodstuffs, 2012 O.J. (L 343) 1.

17 Regulation 1308/2013, of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 December 2013 establishing a common organisation of the markets in agricultural products and repealing Council Regulations (EEC) No 922/72, (EEC) No 234/79, (EC) No 1037/2001 and (EC) No 1234/2007, 2013 O.J. (L 347) 671.

18 DOOR, Eur. Comm’n, http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/door/list.html (last visited 21 May 2016).

19 2016 O.J. (L 41) 1.

20 2015 O.J. (L 185) 4.

21 2015 O.J. (L 185) 5.

22 DOOR, Denomination Information, Eur. Comm’n, http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/door/appliedName.html?denominationId=8850 (last visited 21 May 2016).

23 2013 O.J. (L 41) 3.

24 2012 O.J. (L 330) 12.

25 2012 O.J. (L 310) 17.

26 2012 O.J. (L 277) 1.

27 2012 O.J. (L 219) 3.

28 2012 O.J. (L 153) 4.

29 2011 O.J. (L 285) 6.

30 2011 O.J. (L 276) 5.

31 2011 O.J. (L 122) 67.

35 DOOR, Denomination Information, Eur. Comm’n, http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/door/appliedName.html?denominationId=10144 (last visited 21 May 2016).

37 According to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) GI Database that has been created by ECAP, the total number of registered GIs in ASEAN was 178, as on 20 March 2006. ASEAN GI Database, www.asean-gidatabase.org (last visited 21 May 2016).

38 For Japan, see Sachiko Tanaka, Analysis of a Newly Enacted Law in Japan on Geographical Indications, 40 AIPPI Japan (International Edition) 71 (2015).

39 Regulation 1151/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 November 2012 on Quality Schemes for Agricultural Products and Foodstuffs, art. 13(1), 2012 O.J. (L343) 1.

40 See also Case C-132/05, Comm’n v. Federal Republic of Germany (Parmesan), 2008 E.C.R. I-957. Note that the national courts determine ‘evocation’ based on the perception of domestic consumers. In a recent decision on the indication ‘Aceto Balsamico di Modena’, the Mannheim District Court ruled that at least for German consumers the term ‘Aceto Balsamico’ was indicative of a provenance from Modena, although the term ‘Aceto Balsamico’ was not protected as a geographical indication in Italy. LG Mannheim 15 September 2015, 2O 187/14, http://lrbw.juris.de/cgi-bin/laender_rechtsprechung/document.py?Gericht=bw&nr=19891. The court did not rule on the question as to whether ‘Aceto Balsamico aus Deutschland’ was considered misleading for German consumers as to its geographical origin, an issue that would have to be argued under unfair competition prevention law. See infra Section 5. For further comments, see Christopher Heath, Parmigiano Reggiano by Another Name – The ECJ’s Parmesan Decision, 39 Int’l Rev. Intell. Prop. & Competition L. 951 (2008).

41 EU-South Korea Free Trade Agreement, EU-S. Kor., 16 September 2010, 54 O.J. (L 127) 1, http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/ALL/?uri=OJ:L:2011:127:TOC [hereinafter EU-South Korea FTA].

42 Christopher Heath & Delphine Marie-Vivien, Geographical Indications and the Principles of Trade Mark Law, 46 Int’l Rev. Intell. Prop. & Competition L. 819, 831 (2015).

43 See art. 14(2), 2012 O.J. (L 343) 1. In practice, this provision will only apply to cases where the problem has not been envisaged at the stage of GI registration. In the notable case of Budějovický Budvar v. OHMI (Budweiser), Joined Cases T-53/04 to T-56/04, T-58/04, and T-59/04, Budweiser, 2007 E.C.R. II-57, the Czech indication ‘Budweiser’, although registered under the Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and their International Registration (Lisbon Agreement), was permitted registration in the EU only in the Czech versions Budějovické pivo (PGI), Českobudějovické pivo (PGI) and Budějovický měšťanský var (PGI) so as to avoid trademark conflicts. Athens Accession Treaty to the European Union, Annex II art. 20 para. 18, 23 September 2003, 2003 O.J. (L 236) [hereinafter Treaty of Athens].

44 EC-Australia Wine Agreement, EC-Austl., 31 March 1994, 1994 O.J. (L 86) 3, now replaced by EC-Australia Wine Agreement, EC-Austl.,30 January 2009, 2009 O.J. (L 28) 3, which came into force 1 September 2010.

45 Agreement between the European Community and the Republic of South Africa on trade in wine, EC-S. Afr., 30 January 2002, 2002 O.J. (L 28) 4; Agreement between the European Community and the Republic of South Africa on trade in spirits, EC-S. Afr., 30 January 2002. 2002 O.J. (L 28) 113.

46 Agreement between the European Community and the United States of America on trade in wine, EC-US, 24 March 2006, 2006 O.J. (L 87) 2.

47 Agreement between the European Community and Canada on trade in wines and spirit drinks, EC-Can., 6 February 2004, 2004 O.J. (L 35) 3.

48 Agreement establishing an association between the European Community and its Member States, of the one part, and the Republic of Chile, of the other part, Annexes V and VI, 18 November 2002, 2002 O.J. (L 352) 3.

49 Economic Partnership, Political Coordination and Cooperation Agreement between the European Community and its Member States, of the one part, and the United Mexican States, of the other part, 28 October 2000, 2000 O.J. (L 276) 45 (incorporating 1997 O.J. (L 152)16).

50 See Wine: Bilateral agreements with third countries, Eur. Comm’n (23 May 2016), http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/wine/third-countries/index_en.htm (providing an overview over all agreements currently in force).

51 Such automatic protection without verifying whether such indication would be considered protectable under national law is also a characteristic of the Lisbon Agreement. See Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and Their International Registration, 31 October 1958, as revised 14 July 1967, 923 U.N.T.S. 205 [hereinafter Lisbon Agreement]. See also David Vivas-Egui & Christoph Spennemann, The Evolving Regime of Geographical Indications in WTO and in Free Trade Agreements, in Intellectual Property and International Trade: The TRIPS Agreement 163, 188 (Carlos Correa & Abdulqawi Yusuf eds., 2nd edn. 2008).

52 Anke Moerland, Why Jamaica Wants to Protect Champagne: Intellectual Property Protection in EU Bilateral Trade Agreements 159–66 (2013). The EU tries to avoid such conflicts when allowing protection for geographical indications without prejudice to existing trademarks. This was the case with the indication ‘Budejovice Budvar’ in the 2004 Treaty of Athens. See Treaty of Athens, supra Footnote note 43. A related problem may arise in case the same GI is protected for different countries, and conflicting obligations arise due to membership of these countries to different international or bilateral agreements. An example may be conflicts between North and South Korea based on the fact that North Korea is a member to the Lisbon Agreement (as are several European countries), and South Korea is part of the bilateral EU-South Korea FTA. While under the Lisbon Agreement, Kaesong Koryo Inasm (Ginseng from Kaesong) is protected (for North Korea), the FTA protects Koryo Insam Jepum (white Ginseng).

53 EU-South Korea FTA, supra Footnote note 41.

54 EU-South Korea FTA, supra Footnote note 41, Annex 1 pt. B.

55 EU-South Korea FTA, supra Footnote note 41.

56 For details on issues related to GIs in the EU’s FTAs, see Tim Engelhardt, Geographical Indications under Recent EU Free Trade Agreements, 46 Int’l Rev. Intell. Prop. & Competition L. 781 (2015).

57 Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property art. 1.3, March 20, 1883, as revised 14 July 1967, 21 U.S.T. 1583, 828 U.N.T.S. 305 [hereinafter Paris Convention].

58 See Paris Convention art. 10 (regarding the seizure of products bearing false indications as to their sources).

59 See Paris Convention art. 10bis (regarding the prohibition of acts of unfair competition).

60 Albrecht Krieger, Der internationale Schutz von geographischen Bezeichnungen aus deutscher Sicht, GRUR Int‘l 71, 72, 1984.

61 See TRIPS, supra Footnote note 13, sec. 3 (covering Articles 22–24 on GIs).

62 TRIPS, supra Footnote note 13, art. 22(2) (‘In respect of geographical indications, Members shall provide the legal means for interested parties to prevent: (a) the use of any means in the designation or presentation of a good that indicates or suggests that the good in question originates in a geographical area other than the true place of origin in a manner which misleads the public as to the geographical origin of the good; and (b) any use which constitutes an act of unfair competition within the meaning of Article 10bis of the Paris Convention (1967).’).

63 TRIPS, supra Footnote note 13, art. 22(3), provides additional protection for GIs, specifically for wines and spirits.

64 See Madrid Agreement for the Repression of False and Deceptive Indications of Source on Goods, 14 April 1891, 828 U.N.T.S. 163 [hereinafter Madrid Agreement].

65 An example would be the decision of the Japanese Patent Office to refuse registration of the mark ‘Loreley’ for wine products which bore no relation to Germany. Christopher Heath, Geographical Indications: International, Bilateral and Regional Agreements, in New Frontiers of Intellectual Property Law, IP and Cultural Heritage – Geographical Indications – Enforcement – Overprotection 99 n.4 (Christopher Heath & Anselm Kamperman eds., 2005).

66 In almost all bilateral agreements on the protection of geographical indications, provisions can be found indicating that ‘diluting’ an indication by additions such as ‘type’, ‘method’, etc., is not permissible. See EU-South Korea FTA, supra Footnote note 41; Engelhardt, supra Footnote note 56, at 781.

67 Madrid Agreement, supra Footnote note 64, art. 4 reads: ‘The courts of each country shall decide what appellations, on account of their generic character, do not fall within the provisions of this Agreement, regional appellations concerning the source of products of the vine being, however, excluded from the reservation specified by this Article.’

68 Stephen P. Ladas, Patents, Trade Marks, and Related Rights 1589(1975).

69 See Lisbon Agreement, supra Footnote note 51.

70 WIPO-Administered Treaties, World Intell. Prop. Org., www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ShowResults.jsp?lang=en&treaty_id=10 (last visited 28 May 2016).

71 Actes de la Conference du Lisbonne 1958, Geneva 1963, 814/815.

72 See Lisbon Agreement, supra Footnote note 51, art. 4.

73 Lisbon, The International System of Appellations of Origin, WIPO, www.wipo.int/ipdl/en/search/lisbon/search-struct.jsp (last visited 28 May 2016) (providing the list of appellations of origin registered by North Korea).

74 See Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and Their International Registration, Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement on Appellations of Origin and Geographical Indications (as adopted on 20 May 2015), World Intell. Prop. Org, www.wipo.int/wipolex/en/details.jsp?id=15625 (last visited 20 May 2015).

75 Contracting Parties, Lisbon Agreement, World Intell. Prop. Org., www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ActResults.jsp?act_id=50 (last visited 28 May 2016).

76 While the Italian Supreme Court affirmed that indications validly registered under the Lisbon Agreement could be invalidated at least for the national territory of a Member State, Budweiser, Italian Supreme Court, Decision of 21 May 2002, 34 IIC – Int’l Rev. Intell. Prop. & Competition L. 676 (2003), the Israel Supreme Court denied such possibility where protection was valid in the country of origin. Budweiser II, Decision of 13 September 1992, 25 Int’l Rev. Intell. Prop. & Competition L. 589 (1994).

77 Directive 2008/95/EC, art. 3.1(c) of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 October 2008 to approximate the laws of the Member States relating to trademarks, 2008 O.J. (L 299) 5 [hereinafter Trade Mark Directive].

78 Joined cases C-108/97 & C-109/97, Windsurfing Chiemsee Produktions- und Vertriebs GmbH (WSC) v. Boots, 1999 E.C.R. I-2779.

79 Joined cases C-108/97 & C-109/97, 1999 E.C.R. at para 25–26, 29.

80 See supra Footnote note 76.

81 For an introduction, see The Coffee War: Ethiopia and the Starbucks Story, World Intell. Prop. Org., www.wipo.int/ipadvantage/en/details.jsp?id=2621 (last visited 1 June 2015).

82 A good example is the decision of the General Court in the October 2015 cases T 292/14 and T 293/14 where trademark registration for the indication ‘Halloumi’ for cheese was denied. Joined Cases 292 & 293/14, Republic of Cyprus v. OHIM (XAΛΛOYMI and HALLOUMI), 2015 O.J. (C 398) 52. The application had been made by the Cyprus government and was meant to protect the foremost geographical indication of Cyprus. Id. OHIM and the General Court held that the mark was descriptive for a certain product and thus incapable of identifying a commercial origin. Id.

83 ‘Deceptive’ refers to marks that describe a geographic location and are applied to goods that do not originate from that place. Authority in Europe on this issue is the ‘Cuvée Palomar’ decision. Case T-237/08, Abadía Retuerta v. OHIM (CUVÉE PALOMAR), 2010 O.J. (C 179) 59.

84 SIDAMO Registration No. 4955561 (Japan), www3.j-platpat.inpit.go.jp/cgi-bin/ET/TM_LIST_E.cgi?ITEM01=106&KEY01=Sidamo&OPT01=01&ITEM02=702&KEY02=&OPT02=01&ITEM03=402&KEY03=&OPT03=01&ITEM04=705&KEY04=&OPT04=01&STIME=146456377736402643188342&HITCNT=1&HITCNT3=1&S_FLAG=00&TERMOPT=02&PAGE=01. In Japan, the Ethiopian government also managed to invalidate a registration of ‘Sidamo’ owned by the Japan Coffee Association as misleading. Chiteki Zaisan Kōtō Saibansho [Intellectual Prop. High Ct.] 29 March 2010, 2009 (Gyo-Ke) no. 10227, Saibansho saibanrei jōhō [Saibansho Web] 1, www.ip.courts.go.jp/app/files/hanrei_en/160/000160.pdf. The court held that the mark could not be considered descriptive as to a lack of recognition amongst consumers that ‘Sidamo’ was a place name. Id. at 2. However, consumers would associate the term with high-quality coffee. Id.

85 SIDAMO, Registration No. 004348751 (EUIPO). The registration is inconsistent with the above Chiemsee decision in that ‘Sidamo’ ‘designate(s) a place which is currently associated in the mind of the relevant class of persons with the category of goods concerned, or whether it is reasonable to assume that such an association may be established in the future’. Joined Cases C-108/97 & C-109/97, Windsurfing Chiemsee, 1999 E.C.R. I-2779, para. 31.

86 SIDAMO, Registration No. 78589307.

87 SIDAMO, Application No. 0916800 (Can.).

88 There are a number of word marks such as ‘Tabasco’ registered in Europe on behalf of the US company McIlhenny starting with Community mark 001126176. eSearch plus, The EUIPO’s database, EUIPO, https://euipo.europa.eu/eSearch/#details/owners/51748 (last visited 29 May 2016).

89 This was a dispute involving several dozens of jurisdictions. Christopher Heath, The Budweiser cases: A brewing conflict, in Landmark Intellectual Property Cases and Their Legacy 181 (Christopher Heath & Anselm Kamperman Sanders eds., 2011).

90 ‘Budweiser V,’ Decision of the Supreme Court 19 September 2013 – Case No. 21472/13, 46 Int’l Rev. Intell. Prop. & Competition L. 891 (2015).

91 See Community Trade Mark Regulation, Council Regulation (EC) 207/2009 of 26 February 2009 on the Community trademark, art. 9(1), 2009 O.J. (L 78) 1 [hereinafter Community Trade Mark Regulation].

92 See Community Trade Mark Regulation, art. 12, which, according to the European Court of Justice, decision of 19 November 2004, case C-245/02, means ‘an expression of the duty to act fairly in relation to the legitimate interests of the trade-mark proprietor’. The decision concerned use of the geographical term ‘Budweiser’ for beer in a situation where ‘Budweiser’ was registered on behalf of a US company for beer.

93 See supra Section 4.1.

94 Case T-624/13, The Tea Board v. OHIM – Delta Lingerie (Darjeeling), 2015 EUR-Lex CELEX LEXIS 743 (2 October 2015).

96 Footnote Id. at para. 41.

97 Footnote Id. The Tea Board in this case did not rely on its registered GI in order to oppose Delta’s trademark registration. The case does not shade any light as to why this was so.

98 See Community Trade Mark Regulation, art. 66(3) (‘The provisions of this Regulation shall apply to Community collective marks, unless Articles 67 to 74 provide otherwise.’).

99 Community Trade Mark Regulation, art. 66(2).

100 See Community Trade Mark Regulation, art. 9 (providing rights conferred by a Community trademark).

101 Case T-624/13, The Tea Board v. OHIM – Delta Lingerie (Darjeeling), 2015 EUR-Lex CELEX LEXIS 743, at para. 53 (2 October 2015).

102 See the status of The Tea Board v. OHIM – Delta Lingerie, Case C673/15, at InfoCuria – Case-law of the Court of Justice, CURIA, http://curia.europa.eu/juris/liste.jsf?num=C-673/15&language=en (last visited 29 May 2016).

103 See Community Trade Mark Regulation, art. 9(1).

104 Tribunal de grande instance [TGI] [High Court] Paris, 30 May 2013, RG 2010/01706.

105 Cour d’appel [CA] [Court of Appeal] Paris, 4th Chamber, 22 November 2006, 05/20050.

106 Tribunal de grande instance [TGI] [High Court] Paris, 6 July 2005, 03/11092.

107 Cour d’appel [CA] [Court of Appeal] Paris, 4th Chamber, 22 November 2006, 05/20050.

108 Heath & Marie-Vivien, supra Footnote note 42, at 833 (Delphine Marie-Vivien providing translated portion of the court’s opinion).

110 Tribunal de grande instance [TGI] [High Court] Paris, May 30, 2013, RG 2010/01706.

111 ‘Darjeeling’, Decision of the Paris District Court (Tribunal de grande instance) 30 May 2013 – Case No. RG 2010/01706, 46 Int’l Rev. Intell. Prop. & Competition L. 868, 871 (2015) [hereinafter Darjeeling].

113 DARJEELING, Registration Nos. 009468463, 009466228, 009466269, 009468521; DARJEELING LINGERIE Registration No. 004189742 (Fr.).

114 Darjeeling, supra Footnote note 111, at 870.

115 An example could be cupuaçu, a Brazilian fruit that can be processed to fruit juice as well as butter. The company Asahi Foods developed a process for the manufacture of chocolate from cupuaçu and registered (or attempted to register) the term for fruit juice. Thanks to the NGO Amazonlink, the trademark was invalidated in Japan: Decision of the Japanese Patent Office, 18 February 2004, 37 Int’l Rev. Intell. Prop. & Competition L. 98 (2006).w. comment by Edson Beas Rodrigues; withdrawn in the US, CUPUACU, Registration No. 2729413, while at OHIM, an application on behalf of the Body Shop was withdrawn, and the registered mark on behalf of Asahi Foods was invalidated. eSearch plus, The EUIPO’s database, EUIPO, https://euipo.europa.eu/eSearch/#basic/1+1+1+1/50+50+50+50/CUPUACU (last visited 29 May 2016). The Japanese Patent Office reasoned that the term was either descriptive of the product (if used for cupuaçu), or misleading (if used for anything different).

116 If an indication is unknown, there can be no case for confusion or misperception. Yet in a world of globalised trade, it is important to properly determine the relevant public, which should include immigrant communities and importers: Christopher Heath & Tiffany Prüfer, Fremdsprachige Bezeichnungen als Marke, in Festschrift für Gerhard Schricker 791, 797 (2005).

117 This was expressly affirmed by the Italian Supreme Court in the ‘Salame Felino’ decision. Cass. Sez.Un., 12 Febbraio 2015, n. 2828, 2015 Rivista di Diritto Industriale 251. However, the plaintiff, the Association of Salame Felino, had not argued the case of consumer deception.

118 Fage UK Ltd. v. Chobani UK Ltd. [2014] EWCA 5 (Civ).

119 See Paris Convention, 10bis(3)(3) (‘[T]he following in particular shall be prohibited: 3. indications or allegations the use of which in the course of trade is liable to mislead the public as to the nature, the manufacturing process, the characteristics, the suitability for their purpose, or the quantity, of the goods.’).

120 This is of course a serious hurdle and may lead to consumers being confused without any remedy at hand. Anheuser-Busch Inc v. Budejovicky Budvar NP [1984] F.S.R. 413 (CA).

121 C, Cass., Sez. Un. [Court of Cassation, Grand Chamber], 12 Febbraio 2015, n. 2828, 2015 Rivista di Diritto Industriale 251.

122 Commission Regulation 186/2013, 2013 O.J. (L 62) 4.

124 Regulation 1152/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 November 2012, Amending Council Regulation 2371/2002 on the Conservation and Sustainable Exploitation of Fisheries Resources under the Common Fisheries Policy art. 13, 2012 O.J. (L 343) 30, states:

  1. 1. Registered names shall be protected against:

    1. (a) any direct or indirect commercial use of a registered name in respect of products not covered by the registration where those products are comparable to the products registered under that name or where using the name exploits the reputation of the protected name, including when those products are used as an ingredient;

    2. (b) any misuse, imitation or evocation, even if the true origin of the products or services is indicated or if the protected name is translated or accompanied by an expression such as ‘style’, ‘type,’ ‘method,’ ‘as produced in,’ ‘imitation’ or similar, including when those products are used as an ingredient;

    3. (c) any other false or misleading indication as to the provenance, origin, nature or essential qualities of the product that is used on the inner or outer packaging, advertising material or documents relating to the product concerned, and the packing of the product in a container liable to convey a false impression as to its origin;

    4. (d) any other practice liable to mislead the consumer as to the true origin of the product.

    Where a protected designation of origin or a protected geographical indication contains within it the name of a product which is considered to be generic, the use of that generic name shall not be considered to be contrary to points (a) or (b) of the first subparagraph.

  2. 2. Protected designations of origin and protected geographical indications shall not become generic.

  3. 3. Member States shall take appropriate administrative and judicial steps to prevent or stop the unlawful use of protected designations of origin and protected geographical indications, as referred to in paragraph 1, that are produced or marketed in that Member State.

To that end Member States shall designate the authorities that are responsible for taking these steps in accordance with procedures determined by each individual Member State.

These authorities shall offer adequate guarantees of objectivity and impartiality, and shall have at their disposal the qualified staff and resources necessary to carry out their functions.

125 Council Regulation 510/2006 of 20 March 2006, on the Protection of Geographical Indications and Designations of Origin for Agricultural Products and Foodstuffs, 2006 O.J. (L93) 12 (EC).

9 Looking Beyond the Known Story: How the Prehistory of Protection of Geographical Indications in the Americas Provides an Alternate Approach

* Professor of Law, American University Washington College of Law.

1 Lina Monten, Geographical Indications of Origin: Should They Be Protected and Why? An Analysis of the Issue from the U.S. and EU Perspectives, 22 Santa Clara High Tech. L.J. 315, 315 (2005) (noting how the members of the World Trade Organization who ultimately enact the laws proposed by the treaties are split between the EU and the “Old World” in favor of enhanced protection of GIs and the US and the “New World” in favor of limited protection, if any).

2 General Inter-American Convention for Trade-mark and Commercial Protection, February 20, 1929, 46 Stat. 2907, 124 L.N.T.S. 357 (hereinafter Inter-American Convention) (being referred to as both the Inter-American Convention and the Pan American Convention).

3 Catherine Saez, WIPO Design Treaty Fate Left to Assembly, Despite Shift on Technical Assistance, Intell. Prop. Watch (March 21, 2013), www.ip-watch.org/2014/03/21/wipo-design-treaty-fate-left-to-assembly-despite-shift-on-technical-assistance/ (citing to a letter written by EU Parliament President Martin Schulz to members of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) expressing concern over the misuse of European GIs as domain names).

4 The 1929 Convention included nineteen signatory countries. Stephen P. Ladas, The International Protection of Trade Marks by the American Republics 11 (1929) (stating the signatories to the Convention were Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, the United States, Uruguay, and Venezuela). The Convention entered into force on April 2, 1930, and became effective in the United States, by Presidential proclamation, on February 27, 1931. Ten states ultimately ratified the Convention: Colombia, Cuba, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, and the United States. The Convention remains in force today in every one of the original member states. See Contracting Parties/Signatories: General Inter-American Convention for Trade-Mark and Commercial Protection, WIPO www.wipo.int/wipolex/en/other_treaties/parties.jsp?treaty_id=353&group_id=21 (last visited April 10, 2015).

5 Pan American Union, Fifth International Conference of American States, Special Handbook for the Use of the Delegates 6 (1922) (“The first International Conference was held at the city of Washington from October 2, 1889, to April 19, 1890. Invitation to this Conference was authorized by an act of the Congress of the United States, promulgated May 24, 1888, directing the President of the United States to invite the Republics of Mexico, Central and South America, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Empire of Brazil to meet in conference with United States. The same act sets forth the topics which the Conference was called upon to consider, which were as follows:

  1. 1. To preserve the peace and promote the prosperity of the American states.

  2. 2. Formation of an American customs union.

  3. 3. Establishment of regular and frequent communication between the American States.

  4. 4. Establishment of a uniform system of customs regulations.

  5. 5. Adoption of a uniform system of weights and measures, and laws to protect patents, copyrights, and trademarks.

  6. 6. Adoption of a common silver coin.

  7. 7. Agreement upon the recommendation for adoption to their Governments of a definite plan of arbitration.

  8. 8. Consideration of other matters relating to the welfare of the several countries, which may be presented at the Conference.”).

6 Six conventions were ratified between 1889 and 1929. All of these conventions are still in force, but more recent conventions supersede previous one for those parties who sign both. Since Brazil and the US both ratified the 1923 convention, but only the US ratified the 1929 Convention, the 1923 Convention remains in force as between the US and Brazil.

7 Just prior to the conference, Stephen Ladas published an influential book titled The International Protection of Trade Marks by the American Republics in an effort to “facilitate the work of the conference of trade mark experts and specialists of the American countries, meeting at Washington, February 11, 1929.” Ladas, supra Footnote note 4, at v. In this book, Ladas offered his own draft of the treaty. In a footnote in another book he published later, Ladas referred to “preparatory work” done by US trademark experts – including him – that seems to have been the basis of his draft text. Stephen P. Ladas, Patents, Trademarks and Related Rights: National and International Protection 1754 n.40 (1975) [hereinafter Ladas, Patents, Trademarks and Related Rights].

8 See generally Christine Haight Farley, The Pan-American Trademark Convention of 1929: A Bold Vision of Extraterritorial Meets Current Realities, in Trademark Protection and Territoriality: Challenges in the Global Economy (Irene Calboli & Edward Lee eds., 2014) (discussing novel priority provisions of the Convention).

9 Inter-American Convention, supra Footnote note 2, ch. V.

10 Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, March 20, 1883, as revised July 14, 1967, 21 U.S.T. 1583, 828 U.N.T.S. 305 [hereinafter Paris Convention].

12 Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights arts. 22–24, April 15, 1994, Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization, Annex 1C, 1869 U.N.T.S. 299 [hereinafter TRIPS].

13 Inter-American Convention, supra Footnote note 2, art. 23.

14 See Ladas, Patents, Trademarks and Related Rights, supra Footnote note 7, at 1581 (explaining that the only two requirements are that the term is understood as a geographic place and that the goods are not from that place); see also Amy P. Cotton, 123 Years at the Negotiating Table and Still No Dessert? The Case in Support of TRIPS Geographical Indication Protections, 82 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 1295, 1300–01 (2007) (discussing the requirement of deception in GI protection under the Madrid and Lisbon Agreements).

15 Compare Inter-American Convention, supra Footnote note 2, art. 23, with TRIPS, supra Footnote note 12, art. 23.

16 Interestingly, the original draft had limitations on the use of generic terms within Article 23. Somewhere along the way the qualification was removed and now only appears in Article 27.

17 Inter-American Convention, supra Footnote note 2, art. 27.

18 Footnote Id. at art. 25.

19 See Inter-American Convention, supra Footnote note 2, ch. IV, which provides:

Article 20. Every act or deed contrary to commercial good faith or to the normal and honorable development of industrial or business activities shall be considered as unfair competition and, therefore, unjust and prohibited.

Article 21. The following are declared to be acts of unfair competition and unless otherwise effectively dealt with under the domestic laws of the Contracting States shall be repressed under the provisions of this Convention:

  1. (a) Acts calculated directly or indirectly to represent that the goods or business of a manufacturer, industrialist, merchant or agriculturist are the goods or business of another manufacturer, industrialist, merchant or agriculturist of any of the other Contracting States, whether such representation be made by the appropriation or simulation of trade marks, symbols, distinctive names, the imitation of labels, wrappers, containers, commercial names, or other means of identification;

  2. (b) The use of false descriptions of goods, by words, symbols or other means tending to deceive the public in the country where the acts occur, with respect to the nature, quality, or utility of the goods;

  3. (c) The use of false indications of geographical origin or source of goods, by words, symbols, or other means which tend in that respect to deceive the public in the country in which these acts occur;

  4. (d) To sell, or offer for sale to the public an article, product or merchandise of such form or appearance that even though it does not bear directly or indirectly an indication of origin or source, gives or produces, either by pictures, ornaments, or language employed in the text, the impression of being a product, article or commodity originating, manufactured or produced in one of the other Contracting States;

  5. (e) Any other act or deed contrary to good faith in industrial, commercial or agricultural matters which, because of its nature or purpose, may be considered analogous or similar to those above mentioned.

Article 22. The Contracting States which may not yet have enacted legislation repressing the acts of unfair competition mentioned in this chapter, shall apply to such acts the penalties contained in their legislation on trade marks or in any other statutes, and shall grant relief by way of injunction against the continuance of said acts at the request of any party injured; those causing such injury shall also be answerable in damages to the injured party.

22 In 1929, the US was a party to the Paris Convention, which addressed both indications of source and unfair competition, but neither provision corresponded to the standards set out in the Inter-American Convention. See supra Footnote notes 10Footnote 21 and accompanying text.

23 See infra Footnote notes 24Footnote 29 and accompanying text.

24 Tabasco, Encyclopædia Britannica, https://global.britannica.com/place/Tabasco-state-Mexico (last visited June 30, 2016).

25 TABASCO, Registration No. 223310 (U.S.).

26 McIlhenny Co. v. Gaidry, 253 F. 613 (5th Cir. 1918).

27 McIlhenny Co. v. Ed. Bulliard, 10 Trademark Rep. 213, 215 (W.D. La. 1920) (“At this time these peppers were grown in the State of Tabasco, Mexico and elsewhere in Mexico, and were known as Mexican or Chili peppers – not as Tabasco peppers.”).

28 Footnote Id. (emphasis added). Interestingly, the first brand name he used was “Petite Anse Sauce,” “Petite Anse” being the French name for the island on which he lived. Hence both names had a geographical significance, which was likely common for merchants at that time.

29 Press Release, U.S. Delegation to the Inter-American Convention, The Advantages Accruing to American Citizens from the General Convention for Trademark and Commercial Protection 2 (February 11, 1929).

30 Paris Convention, supra Footnote note 10, as revised at The Hague, November 6, 1925, 47 Stat. 1789, T.S. No. 834..

31 According to the Madrid Agreement for the Repression of False and Deceptive Indications of Source on Goods, April 14, 1891, 828 U.N.T.S. 163 [hereinafter Madrid Agreement], all goods bearing a false or deceptive indication of source, by which one of the Contracting States, or a place situated therein, is directly or indirectly indicated as being the country or place of origin, must be seized on importation, or such importation must be prohibited, or other actions and sanctions must be applied in connection with such importation.

32 It was not until 1935 – six years after the Inter-American Convention – that the Institut National des Appellations d’Origine (INAO) was created, the same year that French law established a special category of AOC for wine and spirits. Champagne was not granted an AOC until the following year. Décret 47–1331 du 16 Juillet 1947 Fixant La Composition du Comite National des Appellations D’origine [Law 47–1331 of July 16, 1947, Determining the Composition of the National Committee of Origin], Journal Officiel de la République Française [J.O.] [Official Gazette of France], July 19, 1947, p. 6948. Judicial decisions produced uncertainty, so the French government created an official body to both establish and protect appellations of origin. This new regime recognized the importance of both origin and quality. Dev Gangjee, Relocating the Law of Geographical Indications 109 (2012).

33 See Edward S. Rogers, The Lanham Act and the Social Function of Trademarks, 14 Law & Contemp. Probs. 173, 180 (1949) (recounting how he drafted what was introduced by Congressman Lanham in 1938 as the original bill based on ABA committee meetings).

34 See generally Stephen P. Ladas, Latin American Economic Integration and Industrial Property, 62 Trademark Rep. 1 (1972).

35 See Ladas, Patents, Trademarks and Related Rights, supra Footnote note 7.

36 Ladas reflected in 1930 that few countries regulated place names in their domestic legislation and that domestic and international standards were occurring simultaneously. Stephen Ladas, The International Protection of Industrial Property 658–59 (Cambridge Press 1930).

37 Rogers, for instance, drafted a “Uniform Code dealing with Unfair Competition,” which was an effort not only to distil the rules from US common law, but also to incorporate international developments into enumerated acts of unfair competition. See Edward S. Rogers, Business Good-Will and Trade-Marks Nationally and Internationally Considered, 34 Trademark Rep. 281 (1939).

38 Ladas, Patents, Trademarks and Related Rights, supra Footnote note 7, at 1754.

39 Madrid Agreement, supra Footnote note 31, art. 4.

40 See supra Footnote notes 10Footnote 21 and accompanying text.

41 Ladas, supra Footnote note 4, at 11. In addition to addressing the meager participation of Latin American states in the Paris Union, it appears that the drafters of the Inter-American Convention were interested in dealing with the perceived issues in the region with greater focus.

42 Ladas, supra Footnote note 4, at 32.

43 See United States-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement, U.S.-Colom., November 22, 2006 (2012), https://ustr.gov/trade-agreements/free-trade-agreements/colombia-fta/final-text; United States-Panama Trade Promotion Agreement, U.S.-Pan., June 28, 2007, https://ustr.gov/trade-agreements/free-trade-agreements/panama-tpa/final-text (entered into force October 31, 2012); Central America Free Trade Agreement (2006) (Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua) Dominican Republic-Central America-United States Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR), U.S.-Cent. Am.-Dom. Repub., May 28, 2004, 43 I.L.M. 514; Peru Trade Promotion Agreement, April 12, 2006, Temp. State Dep’t No. 09–54, KAV 8674.

44 See supra Footnote note 43.

45 See Christine Haight Farley, The Pan-American Trademark Convention of 1929: A Bold Vision of Extraterritorial Meets Current Realities, in Trademark Protection and Territoriality: Challenges in the Global Economy (Irene Calboli & Edward Lee eds., 2014); Christine Haight Farley, The Protection of Geographical Indications in the Inter-American Convention on Trademarks, 6 WIPO J. 68 (2014).

46 Bacardi v. Domenech, 311 U.S. 150, 161 (1940).

47 Inter-American Convention, supra Footnote note 2, art. 28 (“In the absence of any special remedies insuring the repression of false indications of geographical origin or source, remedies provided by the domestic sanitary laws, laws dealing with misbranding and the laws relating to trade marks or trade names, shall be applicable in the Contracting States.”).

48 In Havana Club Holding v. Galleon, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals wrestled with the question of the applicability of this treaty and held that it was not applicable because a party must assert rights under the Inter-American Convention “pursuant to § 44(b) of the Lanham Act.” Havana Club Holding v. Galleon, 203 F.3d 116 (2d Cir. 2000). In other words, it must make a claim for relief under the Trademark Act. Thus, the Second Circuit did not consider it as providing an independent basis of jurisdiction. See also Empresa Cubana Del Tabaco v. Culbro Corp., 399 F. 3d 462 (2d Cir. 2005).

49 British-American Tobacco Company Limited and Tabacalera Istmena, S.A. v. Philip Morris USA, Inc., 55 U.S.P.Q.2d 1585 (T.T.A.B. 2000).

51 The case of Cor Cimex S.A. v. DM Enterprises & Distributors, No. 91178943, 2008 WL 5078739 (T.T.A.B. November 17, 2008), was simply brought as a trademark case in 2008. The Cuban brand was successful in preventing the registration of Cubita for this other party.

52 See Christine Haight Farley, The Protection of Geographical Indications in the Inter-American Convention, 6 W.I.P.O. J. 68, 69 (2014) (highlighting that the Inter-American Convention had some of the strongest GI protections in any international agreement even though the US has never been a strong supporter of GI protection).

53 See Philippe Zylberg, Geographical Indications v. Trademarks: The Lisbon Agreement: A Violation of Trips?, 11 U. Balt. Intell. Prop. L.J. 1, 1 (2003) (noting that the US and EU are the main contributors to the GI debate).

54 World Trade Organization, Ministerial Declaration of November 14, 2001, WTO Doc. WT/MIN(01)/DEC/1, ¶ 18, 41 ILM 746 (2002) [hereinafter Doha Declaration]. For a detailed analysis of the Doha Declaration, see TRIPS: Issues, Geographical Indications, World Trade Org., http://wto.org/english/tratop_e/trips_e/gi_e.htm (last visited November 20, 2015).

55 For a detailed review of these agreements, see Susy Frankel, Geographical Indications and Mega-Regional Trade Agreements and Negotiations, and Anselm Kamperman Sanders, Geographical Indications as Property: European Union Association Agreements and Investor–State Provisions, in this Volume.

56 See Bernard O’Connor, The European Union & the United States: Conflicting Agendas on Geographical Indications – What’s Happening in Asia?, 9 Global Trade & Customs J. 66, 66 (2014).

57 See, e.g., Trans-Pacific Partnership, ch. 18, Intellectual Property, October 5, 2015, https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/TPP-Final-Text-Intellectual-Property.pdf [hereinafter TPP, Intellectual Property Chapter]; United States-South Korea Free Trade Agreement, U.S.-S. Kor., June 30, 2007, https://ustr.gov/trade-agreements/free-trade-agreements/korus-fta; United States-Singapore Free Trade Agreement, U.S.-Sing., May 6, 2003, Temp. State Dep’t No.04–36, KAV 6376; United States-Oman Free Trade Agreement, U.S.-Oman, January 19, 2006, Temp. State Dep’t No.09–53, KAV 8673; EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement, EU-Viet., August 5, 2015, http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/august/tradoc_153674.pdf; EU-Singapore Free Trade Agreement, EU-Sing., September 20, 2013, http://ec.europa.eu/trade/policy/countries-and-regions/countries/singapore/; EU-South Korea Free Trade Agreement, EU-S. Kor., September 16, 2010, 54 O.J. (L 127) 1, 46–47, http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/en/ALL/?uri=OJ:L:2011:127:TOC.

58 See supra Footnote note 57.

59 Zylberg, supra Footnote note 53 (noting that the US and EU are the main contributors to the GI debate).

60 See Regulation 1151/2012, of the European Parliament and of the Council of November 21, 2012, on Quality Schemes for Agricultural Products and Foodstuff, 2012 O.J. (L 343) 1 [hereinafter EU Agricultural Products and Foodstuff Regulation]; Council Regulation 479/2008 of April 29, 2008 on the Common Organization of the Market in Wine, Amending Regulations 1493/1999, 1782/2003, 1290/2005, 3/2008 and Repealing Regulations (EEC) 2392/86 and 1493/1999, 2008 O.J. (L 148) 1 [hereinafter EU Wine Regulation]; Regulation 110/2008, of the European Parliament and of the Council of January 15, 2008, on the Definition, Description, Presentation, Labeling and the Protection of Geographical Indications of Spirits Drinks and Repealing Council Regulation (EEC) 1576/89, 2008 O.J. (L 39) 16 [hereinafter EU Spirits Regulation].

61 In Italy, for example, many consumers use the word “parmigiano” to refer to the grated cheese used on their pastas, yet only the producers associated with the Consorzio del Parmigiano Reggiano can use the term “Parmigiano” on their products. Case C-132/05, Comm’n v. Federal Republic of Germany (Parmesan), 2008 E.C.R. I-957.

62 Zylberg, supra Footnote note 53, at 3 (2003) (noting that the US and EU are the main contributors to the GI debate).

63 See supra Footnote note 62.

64 On September 22, 2015, the European Parliament also considered the issue in a plenary session following the opinions of several of its committees, and called “on the Commission to propose without delay a legislative proposal with the aim of establishing a single European system of protection of geographical indications for non-agricultural products.” Comm. on Legal Affairs, Report on the Possible Extension of Geographical Indication Protection of the European Union to Non-Agricultural Products, Eur. Parl. Doc. A8-0259, at 6/26 ¶ 3 (2015).

65 U.S. Dairy Industry Drives Home Concerns on Geographical Indications and Common Food Name Issues During TTIP Stakeholders Forum, CONSORTIUM FOR COMMON FOOD NAMES (February 4, 2015), www.commonfoodnames.com/u-s-dairy-industry-drives-home-concerns-on-geographical-indications-and-common-food-name-issues-during-ttip-stakeholders-forum/ (last visited July 12, 2016) (relating the dairy industry opposition to EU pressure for protection of geographical indications).

66 See, e.g., United States-Australia Free Trade Agreement, U.S.-Austl., art. 17.2.1, May 18, 2004, Temp. State Dep’t No. 05–074, KAV 7141 (“Each Party shall provide that marks shall include marks in respect of goods and services, collective marks, and certification marks. Each Party shall also provide that geographical indications are eligible for protection as marks.”).

67 Zylberg, supra Footnote note 53, at 6, 15.

68 Footnote Id. at 15.

69 See generally Trademark Dilution Revision Act of 2006, Pub. L. No. 109–312, § 2, 120 Stat. 1730 (to be codified at 15 U.S.C. § 1125(c)(2)(A)).

70 See, e.g., GROWN IN IDAHO, Registration No. 2,914,307 (U.S.).

71 See ROQUEFORT, Registration No. 571,798 (U.S.).

72 United States Patent and Trademark Office, Geographical Indication Protection in the United States 4 (2016), www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/web/offices/dcom/olia/globalip/pdf/gi_system.pdf (explaining that “with respect to protection of geographical indication certification marks, affected parties can oppose registration or seek to cancel registrations, all within the existing trademark regime in the United States”).

73 Institut National Des Appellations D’Origine v. Brown-Forman Corp., 47 U.S.P.Q.2d 1875 (T.T.A.B. 1998) (holding “COGNAC” to be a geographical indication for brandy from France).

74 But see Irene Calboli, Time to Say Local Cheese and Smile at Geographical Indications of Origin? International Trade and Local Development in the United States, 53 Hous. L. Rev. 373 (2015) (pointing out that the US protects appellations for wines with a sui generis system, and that the controversy between the US in the EU is primarily driven by diverging business interests; thus, consensus can be found when these interests overlaps, such as in the case of wines).

75 See generally Inter-American Convention, supra Footnote note 2.

76 In this respect it could be mentioned that the revised text of the Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and their International Registration that was adopted following a Diplomatic Conference was convened in Geneva, Switzerland, in May 2015 includes the possibility to register the same GI in two different countries through an application for a “trans-border area.” See Diplomatic Conference for the Adoption of a New Act of the Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and Their International Registration, WORLD INTELL. PROP. ORG., www.wipo.int/meetings/en/details.jsp?meeting_id=35202 [hereinafter Geneva Act] (last visited July 28, 2016)

77 See various examples in this respect in Part III of this volume.

78 EU-China Geographical Indications – “10 plus 10” Project Is Now Completed, Eur. Comm’n (November 30, 2012), http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-12–1297_en.htm (discussing the pilot program between the EU and China and listing the ten GIs to which both sides committed to register and protect); Geographical Indications, E.U.-China Trade Project (II), www.euctp.org/index.php/en/agriculture-food-safety/geographical-indications-gi.html (last visited November 20, 2015) (supporting GI registration in the EU and China).

79 See Christopher Heath, How Would Geographical Indications from Asia Fare in Europe?, in this volume.

80 But see Michelle Agdomar, Removing the Greek from Feta and Adding Korbel to Champagne: The Paradox of Geographical Indications in International Law, 18 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media & Ent. L.J. 541, 582–84 (2008) (explaining the legal battle over the “Basmati” GI in the US).

81 Saritha Rai, India-U.S. Fight on Basmati Rice is Mostly Settled, N.Y. Times (August 25, 2001), www.nytimes.com/2001/08/25/business/india-us-fight-on-basmati-rice-is-mostly-settled.html.

83 See TEXMATI, Registration No. 1,859,875 (U.S.); Utsav Mukherjee, A Study of the Basmati Case (India-US Basmati Rice Dispute): Geographical Indication Perspective (National Law University Jodhpur, 2008) http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1143209.

84 U.S. Patent No. 5,663,484 (filed August 7, 1994); see also Rai, supra Footnote note 81.

85 See U.S. Trademark Application Serial No. 86557496 (filed March 9, 2015).

86 Rai, supra Footnote note 81.

87 Mukherjee, supra Footnote note 83.

88 The State of Madhya Pradesh filed an opposition on the grounds that the application for “Basmati” as a GI had excluded thirteen territories of Madhya Pradesh (MP) where Basmati rice is grown.

89 If the evidence of opposition were not filed within the prescribed time, the application would be deemed to be abandoned.

90 S. C. Srivastava, Protecting the Geographical Indication for Darjeeling Tea, World Trade Organization, www.wto.org/english/res_e/booksp_e/casestudies_e/case16_e.htm.

94 See the Chapter by Yogesh Pai & Tania Singla, “Vanity GIs”: India’s GI Legislation and the Missing Regulatory Framework, in this volume.

95 The Darjeeling Question: What’s Your Cup of Tea – a T-bag or a G-string?, The IPKat (October 14, 2015), http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/2015/10/the-darjeeling-question-whats-your-cup.html.

96 The Tea Board’s trademark is DARJEELING, Registration No. 004325718 (EU). The opposed marks were DARJEELING collection de lingerie, Trade Mark No. 009466228 (EU) and DARJEELING, Trade Mark No. 009466269 (EU).

97 Commission Implementing Regulation No 1050/2011 of October 20, 2011, entering a name in the register of protected designations of origin and protected geographical indications (Darjeeling (PGI)), 2011 O.J. (L276) 5; DOOR, Denomination Information, Eur. Comm’n, http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/door/registeredName.html?denominationId=1900.

98 See the chapter by Christopher Heath, How would Geographical Indications from Asia fare in Europe?, in this volume.

100 THE DARJEELING BAGS, Registration No. 4855286 (U.S.).

101 DARJEELING, Registration No. 2043112 (U.S.).

10 European Union-Singapore Free Trade Agreement: A New Chapter for Geographical Indications in Singapore

* Professor and Vice Dean (Graduate Studies), NUS Business School, National University of Singapore.

1 See Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, 15 April 1994, Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization, Annex 1C, Legal Instrument – Result of the Uruguay Rounds Vol. 31, 33 I.L.M. 83, 1869 UNTS 299 (1994) [hereinafter TRIPS].

2 Geographical Indications Act (Cap 117B, 1999 Rev. Ed.) (Sing.) [hereinafter GI Act 1999].

3 See EU-Singapore Free Trade Agreement, EU-Sing., June 29, 2015 [hereinafter EU-Singapore FTA], http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/press/index.cfm?id=961.

4 Geographical Indications Act (No. 19 of 2014) (Sing.) [hereinafter GI Act 2014].

5 See GI Act 2014 pt. IV, §§ 17–37.

7 EU-Singapore FTA, art. 11.17 (‘(2) The systems referred to in paragraph 1 shall contain elements such as … (a) a domestic register.’) The Intellectual Property Chapter of the EU-Singapore FTA is available at http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2013/september/tradoc_151761.pdf.

8 Singapore Trade Marks Act (Cap 332, 2005 Rev Ed) [hereinafter Trade Marks Act 1998].

9 Singapore Trade Marks Act (Cap 332, 1992 Rev Ed) [hereinafter Trade Marks Act 1938]. For more than half a century since 1 February 1939, the Trade Marks Act 1938 was the operative statute and cornerstone of trademark protection in Singapore. After Singapore became a signatory to TRIPS on 15 April 1994, the Trade Marks Act 1938 was repealed and the Trade Marks Act 1998 came into force on 15 January 1999.

10 Trade Marks Act 1938 at § 10(1)(d).

11 TRIPS, arts. 22–24.

12 See Trade Marks Act 1998.

13 See Trade Marks Act 1998 §§ 7–9, which cover the grounds of refusal of registration of trademarks.

14 See Footnote id. § 7(4)(b) (‘(4) A trade mark shall not be registered if it is: … (b) of such a nature as to deceive the public (for instance as to the nature, quality or geographical origin of the goods or service.’)).

15 See Footnote id. § 7(7) (‘A trade mark shall not be registered if it contains or consists of a GI in respect of a wine or spirit and the trade mark is used or intended to be used in relation to a wine or spirit not originating from the place indicated in the geographical indication’.).

16 Footnote Id. § 7(8).

17 See Footnote id. pt. VIII, §§ 60–61.

18 See Trade Marks Act 1998, scheds. 1–2.

19 Consumer Protection (Trade Description and Safety Requirements) Act (Cap 53, 1985 Rev Ed).

20 See TRIPS, arts. 22–24.

21 GI Act 1999.

22 See Footnote id. §§ 1–12.

23 See Footnote id. § 2.

24 See TRIPS, art. 22(2).

25 Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, 20 March 1883, 21 U.S.T. 1583, 828 U.N.T.S. 305 (revised 1967) [hereinafter Paris Convention].

26 Compare GI Act 1999 § 2 with GI Act 1999 § 11.

27 See Footnote id. §§ 2–3.

28 See Footnote id. § 3(2).

29 See Paris Convention, art. 10bis.

30 See GI Act 1999 § 3(2)(c).

31 TRIPS, art. 23.

32 See, e.g., TRIPS, arts. 22–24.

33 The language used in TRIPS for prescribing the standard of protection for GIs is fairly wide and it is clear that TRIPS does not make protection of GIs contingent on registration. See TRIPS, art. 22(2)(a)–(b).

34 See GI Act 1999 § 3(1).

35 The European Union protects GIs through an extensive Register which encompasses over 1,400 food and agricultural products and over 3,000 wines and spirits. See ‘E-bacchus’, a database consisting of the Register, which is available at http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/markets/wine/e-bacchus/. See also the DOOR Databases for foodstuff and agricultural GIs, which is available at http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/quality/door/list.html.

36 See EU-Singapore FTA, art. 11.17(1)–(2).

37 See GI Act 2014.

38 See Footnote id. pt. IV, §§ 17–37.

39 See Footnote id. pt. II.

40 See GI Act 2014 pt. VI.

41 See Footnote id. pt. IV, §§ 17–37.

42 See GI Act 2014, sched. (listing wines, spirits, beers, cheese, meat and meat products, seafood, edible oils, non-edible oils, fruits, vegetables, spices and condiments, confectionery and baked goods, flowers and parts of flowers, and natural gum).

43 See Trade Marks Act 1998 pt. II.

44 Footnote Id. §§ 5–6A.

45 Footnote Id. § 12.

46 Footnote Id. § 13.

47 GI Act 2014 § 38.

48 Footnote Id. § 38(a).

49 Footnote Id. § 38(b).

50 Footnote Id. § 38(c).

51 Footnote Id. § 39(l).

52 See Footnote id., sched.

53 Footnote Id. § 43.

54 See Footnote id. § 43(7) (‘An “earlier trademark” means (a) a registered trademark or an international trademark (Singapore), the application for registration of which was made earlier than the application for registration of the geographical indication in general, taking into account (where appropriate) the priorities claimed in respect of the trademark under the Trade Marks Act 1998; or (b) a trademark which, at the date of application for registration of the geographical indication in question, was a well-known trademark’.).

55 See Footnote id. § 2(1) (‘An “earlier geographical indication,” … means a geographical indication (a) which has been registered under section 48; or (b) an application for registration of which has been made under section 39, before the date of application in question’.).

56 See Footnote id. § 41.

57 Footnote Id. § 41(1)(a)–(f).

58 The definition of a ‘geographical indication’ in the GI Act 2014 is the same as that in GI Act 1999. Section 2(1) of the GI Act 2014 defines a ‘geographical indication’ to mean ‘any indication used in trade to identify goods as originating from a place, provided that (a) the place is a qualifying country or a region or locality in a qualifying country; and (b) a given quality, reputation or other characteristic of the goods is essentially attributable to that place’. GI Act 2014 § 2(1).

59 Trade Marks Act 1998 § 7(1)(b).

60 Footnote Id. § 7(6).

61 Footnote Id. § 7(4)(a).

62 See Footnote id. § 7(1)(d). See also Wing Joo Loong Ginseng (S) Ltd v. Qinghai Xinyuan Foreign Trade Co Ltd [2009] 2 SLR 814, in which the SGCA suggested that trademarks which are generic descriptions of the goods in question are caught by section 7(1)(d) of the Trade Marks Act 1998. Both Trade Marks Act 1998 § 7(1)(d) and GI Act 2014 § 41(1)(e) are targeted at generic terms.

63 GI Act 2014 § 41(1)(e).

64 Footnote Id. § 41(2).

65 Footnote Id. § 41(3).

66 Footnote Id. § 41(4)–(5).

67 Footnote Id. § 41(3).

68 Footnote Id. § 42.

69 Footnote Id. § 2.

70 Footnote Id. § 42(2).

71 Footnote Id. § 42(3); see also TRIPS, art. 23(2), covering the refusal of registration of trademarks for wines containing homonymous indications.

72 GI Act 2014 § 41(4).

73 Footnote Id. § 41(5).

74 Footnote Id. § 41(6).

75 Footnote Id. § 45(1).

76 Footnote Id. § 45(2).

77 Footnote Id. § 48.

78 Footnote Id. § 50.

79 Footnote Id. §§ 50–51.

80 Footnote Id. § 52(1)–(2).

81 Footnote Id. § 52(2)(a)–(e).

82 Footnote Id. § 41 (stating the grounds for refusal of registration).

83 Footnote Id. § 52(5).

84 See Footnote id. § 41.

85 Footnote Id. § 52(6).

86 Footnote Id. § 52(7).

87 GI Act 1999 §§ 2, 3(2).

88 Compare GI Act 2014 §4(2)(a)–(b) with Paris Convention, art. 10bis.

89 GI Act 2014 § 4(2)(c)–(d).

90 See Footnote id., sched.

91 Footnote Id. § 4(6).

92 See Footnote id. pt. VI, §§ 55–74.

93 Footnote Id. § 56.

94 Sing. Parl. Deb., Official Rep. (14 April 2014) vol. 91 (Indranee Rajah, Senior Minister of State for Education and Law).

95 See GI Act 2014 §§ 17–20.

96 See Footnote id. pt. IV, §§ 17–37.

97 EU-Singapore FTA art. 11.17.

98 See EU-Singapore FTA, Annex 11-A.

99 Article 11.17(3), EU-Singapore FTA.

101 GI Act 2014, Annex 11-A.

102 See, e.g., EU-South Korea Free Trade Agreement, EU-S. Kor., 16 September 2010, 2011 O.J. (L 127) 47, art. 10.21, http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:22011A0514(01)&rid=8; see also EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement, EU-Viet., 5 August 2015, http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/august/tradoc_153674.pdf; Comprehensive Trade and Economic Agreement, Can.-EU, Consolidated CETA Text, ch. 22, Intellectual Property, 26 September 2014, http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2014/september/tradoc_152806.pdf.

103 See letter from Mr Lim Hng Kiang, Singapore Minister for Trade and Industry, addressed to Mr Karel De Gucht, Member of the European Commission (21 January 2013), http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2013/september/tradoc_151779.pdf. However, it is unclear from the Minister’s letter whether priority is to be given to all 196 GIs from the EU in the list, or just some of them.

104 See Footnote id.

105 GI Act 2014 §§ 45, 48.

106 See Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), arts. 18.20, 18.32, https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/TPP-Final-Text-Intellectual-Property.pdf. These provisions in the TPP uphold the principle that prior use and existing rights of a trademark could prevent the registration of a GI.

107 See GI Act 2014 § 41(1)(e).

108 Central Intelligence Agency, Singapore, The World Factbook (5 May 2016), www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/sn.html.

109 The Consortium for Common Food Names is an international initiative to preserve the right to use generic food names; see Consortium for Common Food Names, www.commonfoodnames.com/ (last visited 12 May 2016).

110 The Consortium for Common Food Names has a set of guidelines which it hopes will be adopted by national governments and international organizations in their efforts to establish a fair model for the protection of both common names and legitimate food-related geographical indications. The guidelines include the following: (a) requiring that a geographical indication include the name of the region or sub-region where the product is produced, and a second term that describes the product (e.g. ‘Camembert de Normandie’, ‘Idaho Potatoes’, etc.); (b) maintaining a strong tie to the full original geographical indication by protecting the term only in its original language and in transliteration (e.g. ‘Parmigiano Reggiano’); (c) establishing reference points for identifying common names, such as existence of a Codex standard or other international standards; use of the term in dictionaries, newspapers, product descriptions in tariff schedules or in explanatory notes; levels and diffusion of global production; international trade; etc.; (d) providing the opportunity for stakeholders around the world to comment on geographical indication applications to ensure that officials have fully considered the request and its impact on other farmers and food producers. See Consortium for Common Food Names, www.commonfoodnames.com/the-issue/our-mission/ (last visited May 12, 2016).

112 Sing. Parl. Deb., Official Rep. (14 April 2014) vol. 91 (Indranee Rajah, Senior Minister of State for Education and Law).

113 Footnote Id. (emphasis added).

115 See GI Act 2014 § 12(1).

116 A ‘qualified person’ means (a) a citizen of Singapore or an individual resident in Singapore; (b) a body corporate incorporated under any written law in Singapore; or (c) any other person who has a real and effective industrial or commercial establishment in Singapore. See Footnote id. § 12(3).

117 Footnote Id. § 12(1)(a).

118 Footnote Id. GI Act 2014 § 12(1)(b).

119 Footnote Id. § 12(1)–(2).

120 See Trade Mark Act 1998 § 28(2).

121 See Electrolux Ltd v. Electrix Ltd [1954) 71 RPC 23 (CA); Imperial Group Ltd v. Philip Morris & Co Ltd [1982] FSR 72 (CA).

122 See Trade Marks Act 1938.

123 See I Act 2014 § 12(1).

124 See Trade Marks Act 1998 § 4.

125 See Ng-Loy Wee Loon, Law of Intellectual Property of Singapore [28.0.3] (2nd edn. 2014).

126 Trade Marks Act 1998 § 22(1).

127 Trade Marks Act 1938 § 10(1)(d).

128 Trade Marks Act 1998 § 7(1)(c).

129 A collective mark is a sign used, or intended to be used, in relation to goods or service dealt with or provided in the course of trade by members of an association to distinguish those goods or services from goods or services so dealt with or provided by persons who are not members of the association. See Footnote id. § 60(1).

130 A certification mark is a sign used, or intended to be used, to distinguish goods or services (a) dealt with or provided in the course of trade; and (b) certified by the proprietor of the certification mark in relation to origin, material, mode of manufacture of goods or performance of services, quality, accuracy or other characteristics, from other goods or services dealt with or provided in the course of trade but not so certified. See Footnote id. § 61(1).

131 See GI Act 2014 § 41(4)–(5).

132 See Footnote id. § 41(6).

133 Trade Marks Act 1998 § 7(1)(c).

134 See GI Act 2014 § 90(c).

135 Trade Marks Act 1998 § 60.

136 Footnote Id., §§ 7–8 which cover grounds of refusal of registration.

137 See Footnote id. sched. 1, para. 3(2).

138 Footnote Id. § 60.

139 See Footnote id. sched. 2, § 3(1).

140 See sched. 2, § 3(2).

141 GI Act 2014 § 5.

142 See GI Act 2014 § 4(4).

143 See GI Act 2014 § 12(2).

144 United State-Singapore Free Trade Agreement, U.S.-Sing., May 6, 2003, [hereinafter US-Singapore FTA], https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/uploads/agreements/fta/singapore/asset_upload_file708_4036.pdf.

145 For example, the Trade Marks (Amendment) Act 2004 introduced several important changes to the Trade Marks Act 1998, including the concept of trademark dilution in the case of trademarks well known to the public at large in Singapore.

146 See US-Singapore FTA, art. 16.2.

147 See supra Footnote note 103.

148 See Footnote id. (emphasis added) (explicitly stating the EU’s stance on this matter).

149 Although the EU and Singapore concluded the FTA in October 2014, there is uncertainty as to how the legal agreement should be classified. More importantly, an opinion of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) needs to clarify whether it is an agreement which the EU has exclusive competence to sign and to ratify or whether it is a ‘mixed agreement’ which requires the approval of every single parliament in every single Member State before the agreement can be ratified. The EU Commission has since made a request for a CJEU legal opinion on the precise legal status of the EU-Singapore FTA. See Council Directive C332/45, 2015 O.J. C 332 45–46. The CJEU’s opinion will be awaited with interest.

150 Jamie Lee, Ratification of EU-Singapore FTA Would Encourage EU-ASEAN Trade Deal: PM Lee, Business Times (29 July 2015 3:48 PM), www.businesstimes.com.sg/government-economy/ratification-of-eu-singapore-fta-would-encourage-eu-asean-trade-deal-pm-lee.

151 Transcript of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s Remarks at the Joint Press Conference with UK Prime Minister David Cameron on 29 July 2015, Prime Minister’s Office, www.pmo.gov.sg/mediacentre/transcript-prime-minister-lee-hsien-loongs-remarks-joint-press-conference-uk-prime (last visited 9 October 2015).

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