Title: Hoodia Case Study
1Hoodia Case Study
- Rachel Wynberg
- Environmental Evaluation Unit,
- University of Cape Town
Photo Rachel Wynberg
2Overview
- Appetite suppressant based on TK of indigenous
peoples of southern Africa - Active constituents patented by CSIR
- Patents and commercial development without
knowledge or PIC of San - Agreement between CSIR-San
The late Vetman Piet eating Hoodia in the
Kalahari. Photo Rachel Wynberg
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4The Negotiating Process
Photo Rachel Wynberg
5Two forms of commercial development
- CSIR license agreement with Phytopharm - in
turn have agreement with consumer giant Unilever. - - Product will be incorporated into functional
food for mass consumer market. Unilever sole
agent. - - Based on patent
- - Clinical trials, stringent safety tests (Euro
4 million), FDA and EU compliant - - Working on Hoodia extract and product will be
clinically active - - All supply from cultivated source
- - Entire value chain
6Two forms of commercial development
- Wide (and wild!) trade as a commodity dried,
ground, exported - - Manufactured as extracts, pills, juice, diet
bars, diet drinks - - Wild harvested but will move towards
cultivation - - Negative impacts on the resource 500-600T
traded 2006 alone! Unsustainable! - - Cowboy industry 100s of dealers,
unsubstantiated claims, some is legally acquired
but much isnt, a lot of material is not Hoodia - - Quality issue here is to ensure it is Hoodia
not sawdust but not looking for actives - - Value chain highly fragmented
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8Photo Rachel Wynberg
9Also two forms of benefit-sharing agreement 1.
CSIR-San
- Parties are the South African San Council and
the CSIR (CSIR would only negotiate with a
legally constituted SA entity) - San are to receive 6 of all royalties received
by CSIR and 8 of milestone income - Monies payable into Trust set up by CSIR and SA
San Council but including regional
representatives. No individual benefits.US80,000
to date. Much more expected! - IPR remains exclusively with CSIR. San has no
right to claim co-ownership. - San prohibited from entering agreement with any
third party to commercialise Hoodia
10Photo Rachel Wynberg
112. Southern African Hoodia Growers Association
(SAHGA) WIMSA (San)
- SAHGA a voluntary group of Hoodia growers
wanting to promote best practice in the local
industry quality, traceability, fair trade,
benefit sharing, conservation. - WIMSA represents San Councils in SA, Namibia,
Botswana (not yet established) - MOU with provincial permitting authorities
- Acting in anticipation of the coming into
effect of Ch 6 of the Biodiversity Act through
promulgation of ABS regulations - Developing a label for traceability. Want to
promote recognition of its legitimacy. For food
market and dietary supplements. - San levy of R24/ dry kg
-
12Photo Rachel Wynberg
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14Photo Rachel Wynberg
15Legal Context
- Biodiversity Act (2004) but needs regulations to
be effected - IKS policy (2005)
- Patent Amendment Act requiring disclosure of
origin (2006) - Draft ABS regulations gazetted for comment 16
March 07. Three types of permits research
involving IK (province), bioprospecting (DEAT),
export (provinces, DEAT) - Threatened and protected species regulations will
come into effect 1 June 07 Hoodia listed as a
protected species and will come under national
control. Is also CITES Appendix II. Three permits
required to grow Hoodia registration, nursery,
trader. -
16ABS Regulations
- Regulate
- - bioprospecting of indigenous biological
resources and - - the export of indigenous biological resources
for bioprospecting or any other kind of
research - Recognise two phases to a bioprospecting project
- - the discovery phase (commercial application
unknown or unclear) and - - the commercialisation phase.
- Govern
- - the commercialisation phase
- - the discovery phase of bioprospecting projects
where the project makes use of an indigenous
communitys traditional use or knowledge of the
resource - - export
- Three types of permits
- - research permits, where TK is used (require
BSA) - bioprospecting permits (require MTA and BSA)
- export permits.
17The distribution of Hoodia spp. and occurrence of
the San in southern Africa (Wynberg, 2006).
Hoodia distribution is compiled from data
provided by PRECIS. San data is obtained from
Suzman (2001) http//www.san.org.za and R.
Chennells, SASI, pers. comm.
18Key Issues
- Regional collaboration and benefit sharing (SA is
currently primary beneficiary and Namibia is
developing alternative strategies different
capacities and interests CITES requires coherent
approach illegal trade through SA Devils Claw
Regional Working Group expanded to include
Hoodia) - Other knowledge holders?
- Streamlining permitting systems CITES, ABS,
province-province - Distinguishing between quality / traceability
issues and those of labelling for fair trade and
benefit sharing. Safety and efficacy are central.
Traceability critical when products change form.
19Key Issues
- Can biotrade and GR trade be differentiated? Case
demonstrates grey area. Unregulated biotrade may
however jeopardise Unilever initiative. - What happens when resource is not what is
claimed? (50 Hoodia products tested in States
none with Hoodia. Most traders dealing with many
species). - Growing concern of Hoodia outside region was
material legally acquired? - Ensuring industry collaboration on the Hoodia
trade local industry plus support from buying
countries