CHAPTER I¡GDEFINITIONS
Article 1¡GDefinitions
For the purposes of this Act:
(i) "this Convention" means the present (1991) Act of the International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants;
(ii) "Act of 1961/1972" means the International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants of December 2, 1961, as amended by the Additional Act of November 10, 1972;
(iii) "Act of 1978" means the Act of October 23, 1978, of the International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants;
(iv) "breeder" means
- the person who bred, or discovered and developed, a variety,
- the person who is the employer of the aforementioned person or who has commissioned the latter's work, where the laws of the relevant Contracting Party so provide, or
- the successor in title of the first or second aforementioned person, as the case may be;
(v) "breeder's right" means the right of the breeder provided for in this Convention;
(vi) "variety" means a plant grouping within a single botanical taxon of the lowest known rank, which grouping, irrespective of whether the conditions for the grant of a breeder's right are fully met, can be
- defined by the expression of the characteristics resulting from a given genotype or combination of genotypes,
- distinguished from any other plant grouping by the expression of at least one of the said characteristics and
- considered as a unit with regard to its suitability for being propagated unchanged;
(vii) "Contracting Party" means a State or an intergovernmental organization party to this Convention;
(viii) "territory," in relation to a Contracting Party, means, where the Contracting Party is a State, the territory of that State and, where the Contracting Party is an intergovernmental organization, the territory in which the constituting treaty of that intergovernmental organization applies;
(ix) "authority" means the authority referred to in Article 30(1)(ii);(x) "Union" means the Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants founded by the Act of 1961 and further mentioned in the Act of 1972, the Act of 1978 and in this Convention;
(xi) "member of the Union" means a State party to the Act of 1961/1972 or the Act of 1978, or a Contracting Party.
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CHAPTER II¡GGENERAL OBLIGATIONS OF
THE CONTRACTING PARTIES
Article 2¡GBasic Obligation of the Contracting Parties
Each Contracting Party shall grant and protect breeders' rights.
Article 3¡GGenera and Species to be Protected
(1)[States already members of the Union]
Each Contracting Party which is bound by the Act of 1961/1972 or the Act of 1978 shall
apply the provisions of this Convention,
(i) at the date on which it becomes bound by this Convention, to all plant genera and species to which it applies, on the said date, the provisions of the Act of 1961/1972 or the Act of 1978 and,
(ii) at the latest by the expiration of a period of five years after the said date, to all plant genera and species.
(2)[New members of the Union]
Each Contracting Party which is not bound by the Act of 1961/1972 or the Act of 1978 shall
apply the provisions of this Convention,
(i) at the date on which it becomes bound by this Convention, to at least 15 plant genera or species and,
(ii) at the latest by the expiration of a period of 10 years from the said date, to all plant genera and species.
Article 4¡GNational Treatment
(1)[Treatment]
Without prejudice to the rights specified in this Convention, nationals of a Contracting
Party as well as natural persons resident and legal entities having their registered
offices within the territory of a Contracting Party shall, insofar as the grant and
protection of breeders' rights are concerned, enjoy within the territory of each other
Contracting Party the same treatment as is accorded or may hereafter be accorded by the
laws of each such other Contracting Party to its own nationals, provided that the said
nationals, natural persons or legal entities comply with the conditions and formalities
imposed on the nationals of the said other Contracting Party.
(2)["Nationals"]
For the purposes of the preceding paragraph, "nationals"
means, where the Contracting Party is a State, the nationals of that State and, where the
Contracting Party is an intergovernmental organization, the nationals of the States which
are members of that organization.
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CHAPTER III¡GCONDITIONS FOR THE GRANT OF THE BREEDER'S RIGHT
Article 5¡GConditions of Protection
(1)[Criteria to be satisfied]
The breeder's right shall be granted where the variety is
(i)new,
(ii)distinct,
(iii)uniform and
(iv)stable.
(2)[Other conditions]
The grant of the breeder's right shall not be subject to any further or different
conditions, provided that the variety is designated by a denomination in accordance with
the provisions of Article 20, that the applicant complies with the formalities provided
for by the law of the Contracting Party with whose authority the application has been
filed and that he pays the required fees.
Article 6¡GNovelty
(1)[Criteria]
The variety shall be deemed to be new if, at the date of filing of the application for a breeder's right, propagating or harvested material of the variety has not been sold or otherwise disposed of to others, by or with the consent of the breeder, for purposes of exploitation of the variety
(i) in the territory of the Contracting Party in which the application has been filed earlier than one year before that date and
(ii) in a territory other than that of the Contracting Party in which the application has been filed earlier than four years or, in the case of trees or of vines, earlier than six years before the said date.
(2)[Varieties of recent creation]
Where a Contracting Party applies this Convention to a plant genus or species to which it did not previously apply this Convention or an earlier Act, it may consider a variety of recent creation existing at the date of such extension of protection to satisfy the condition of novelty defined in paragraph (1) even where the sale or disposal to others described in that paragraph took place earlier than the time limits defined in that paragraph.
(3)["Territory" in certain cases]
For the purposes of paragraph (1), all the Contracting Parties which are member States of
one and the same intergovernmental organization may act jointly, where the regulations of
that organization so require, to assimilate acts done on the territories of the States
members of that organization to acts done on their own territories and, should they do so,
shall notify the Secretary-General accordingly.
Article 7¡GDistinctness
The variety shall be deemed to be distinct if it is clearly distinguishable from any other
variety whose existence is a matter of common knowledge at the time of the filing of the
application. In particular, the filing of an application for the granting of a breeder's
right or for the entering of another variety in an official register of varieties, in any
country, shall be deemed to render that other variety a matter of common knowledge from
the date of the application, provided that the application leads to the granting of a
breeder's right or to the entering of the said other variety in the official register of
varieties, as the case may be.
Article 8¡GUniformity
The variety shall be deemed to be uniform if, subject to the variation that may be
expected from the particular features of its propagation, it is sufficiently uniform in
its relevant characteristics.
Article 9¡GStability
The variety shall be deemed to be stable if its relevant characteristics remain unchanged
after repeated propagation or, in the case of a particular cycle of propagation, at the
end of each such cycle.
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CHAPTER IV¡GAPPLICATION FOR THE
GRANT OF THE BREEDER'S RIGHT
Article 10¡GFiling of
Applications
(1)[Place of first application]
The breeder may choose the Contracting Party with whose authority he wishes to file his
first application for a breeder's right.
(2)[Time of subsequent applications]
The breeder may apply to the authorities of other Contracting Parties for the grant of
breeders' rights without waiting for the grant to him of a breeder's right by the
authority of the Contracting Party with which the first application was filed.
(3)[Independence of protection]
No Contracting Party shall refuse to grant a breeder's right or limit its duration on the
ground that protection for the same variety has not been applied for, has been refused or
has expired in any other State or intergovernmental organization.
Article 11¡GRight of Priority
(1)[The right; its period]
Any breeder who has duly filed an application for the protection of a variety in one of
the Contracting Parties (the "first application") shall, for the purpose of
filing an application for the grant of a breeder's right for the same variety with the
authority of any other Contracting Party (the "subsequent application"), enjoy a
right of priority for a period of twelve months. This period shall be computed from the
date of filing of the first application. The day of filing shall not be included in the
latter period.
(2)[Claiming the right]
In order to benefit from the right of priority, the breeder shall, in the subsequent
application, claim the priority of the first application. The authority with which the
subsequent application has been filed may require the breeder to furnish, within a period
of not less than three months from the filing date of the subsequent application, a copy
of the documents which constitute the first application, certified to be a true copy by
the authority with which that application was filed, and samples or other evidence that
the variety which is the subject matter of both applications is the same.
(3)[Documents and material]
The breeder shall be allowed a period of two years after the expiration of the period of
priority or, where the first application is rejected or withdrawn, an appropriate time
after such rejection or withdrawal, in which to furnish, to the authority of the
Contracting Party with which he has filed the subsequent application, any necessary
information, document or material required for the purpose of the examination under Article 12, as required by the laws of that Contracting Party.
(4)[Events occurring during the period]
Events occurring within the period provided for in paragraph (1), such as the filing of
another application or the publication or use of the variety that is the subject of the
first application, shall not constitute a ground for rejecting the subsequent application.
Such events shall also not give rise to any third-party right.
Article 12¡GExamination of the
Application
Any decision to grant a breeder's right shall require an examination for compliance with the conditions under Article 5 to Article 9. In the course of the examination, the authority may grow the variety or carry out other necessary tests, cause the growing of the variety or the carrying out of other necessary tests, or take into account the results of growing tests or other trials which have already been carried out. For the purposes of examination, the authority may require the breeder to furnish all the necessary information, documents or material.
Article 13¡GProvisional Protection
Each Contracting Party shall provide measures designed to safeguard the interests of the breeder during the period between the filing or the publication of the application for the grant of a breeder's right and the grant of that right. Such measures shall have the effect that the holder of a breeder's right shall at least be entitled to equitable remuneration from any person who, during the said period, has carried out acts which, once the right is granted, require the breeder's authorization as provided in Article 14. A Contracting Party may provide that the said measures shall only take effect in relation to persons whom the breeder has notified of the filing of the application.
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CHAPTER V¡GTHE RIGHTS OF THE BREEDER
Article 14¡GScope of the Breeder's Right
(1)[Acts in respect of the propagating material]
(a) Subject to Article 15 and Article 16, the following acts in respect of the propagating material of the protected variety shall require the authorization of the breeder:
(i) production or reproduction (multiplication),
(ii) conditioning for the purpose of propagation,
(iii) offering for sale,
(iv) selling or other marketing,
(v) exporting,
(vi) importing,(vii) stocking for any of the purposes mentioned in (i) to (vi), above.
(b)The breeder may make his authorization subject to conditions and limitations.
(2)[Acts in respect of the harvested material]
Subject to Article 15 and Article 16,
the acts referred to in items paragraph (1)(a)(i) to paragraph (1)(a)(vii) in respect of
harvested material, including entire plants and parts of plants, obtained through the
unauthorized use of propagating material of the protected variety shall require the
authorization of the breeder, unless the breeder has had reasonable opportunity to
exercise his right in relation to the said propagating material.
(3)[Acts in respect of certain products]
Each Contracting Party may provide that, subject to Article 15
and Article 16, the acts referred to in items paragraph
(1)(a)(i) to paragraph (1)(a)(vii) in respect of products made directly from harvested
material of the protected variety falling within the provisions of paragraph (2) through
the unauthorized use of the said harvested material shall require the authorization of the
breeder, unless the breeder has had reasonable opportunity to exercise his right in
relation to the said harvested material.
(4)[Possible additional acts]
Each Contracting Party may provide that, subject toArticle 15
and Article 16, acts other than those referred to in items
paragraph (1)(a)(i) to paragraph (1)(a)(vii) shall also require the authorization of the
breeder.
(5)[Essentially derived and certain other varieties]
(a) The provisions of paragraph (1) to paragraph (4) shall also apply in
relation to
(i) varieties which are essentially derived from the protected variety, where the protected variety is not itself an essentially derived variety,
(ii) varieties which are not clearly distinguishable in accordance with Article 7 from the protected variety and
(iii) varieties whose production requires the repeated use of the protected variety.
(b) For the purposes of subparagraph (a)(i), a variety shall be deemed to be essentially derived from another variety ("the initial variety") when
(i) it is predominantly derived from the initial variety, or from a variety that is itself predominantly derived from the initial variety, while retaining the expression of the essential characteristics that result from the genotype or combination of genotypes of the initial variety,
(ii it is clearly distinguishable from the initial variety and
(iii) except for the differences which result from the act of derivation, it conforms to the initial variety in the expression of the essential characteristics that result from the genotype or combination of genotypes of the initial variety.
(c) Essentially derived varieties may be obtained for example by the
selection of a natural or induced mutant, or of a somaclonal variant, the selection of a
variant individual from plants of the initial variety, backcrossing, or transformation by
genetic engineering.
Article 15¡GExceptions to the
Breeder's Right
(1)[Compulsory exceptions]
The breeder's right shall not extend to
(i) acts done privately and for non-commercial purposes,
(ii) acts done for experimental purposes and
(iii) acts done for the purpose of breeding other varieties, and, except where the provisions of Article 14(5) apply, acts referred to in Article 14(1) to Article 14(4) in respect of such other varieties.
(2)[Optional exception]
Notwithstanding Article 14, each Contracting Party may, within
reasonable limits and subject to the safeguarding of the legitimate interests of the
breeder, restrict the breeder's right in relation to any variety in order to permit
farmers to use for propagating purposes, on their own holdings, the product of the harvest
which they have obtained by planting, on their own holdings, the protected variety or a
variety covered by Article 14(5)(a)(i) or Article
14(5)(a)(ii).
Article 16¡GExhaustion of the
Breeder's Right
(1)[Exhaustion of right]
The breeder's right shall not extend to acts concerning any material of the protected
variety, or of a variety covered by the provisions of Article 14(5),
which has been sold or otherwise marketed by the breeder or with his consent in the
territory of the Contracting Party concerned, or any material derived from the said
material, unless such acts
(i) involve further propagation of the variety in question or
(ii) involve an export of material of the variety, which enables the propagation of the variety, into a country which does not protect varieties of the plant genus or species to which the variety belongs, except where the exported material is for final consumption purposes.
(2)[Meaning of "material"]
For the purposes of paragraph (1), "material" means, in relation to a variety,
(i) propagating material of any kind,
(ii) harvested material, including entire plants and parts of plants, and
(iii) any product made directly from the harvested material.
(3)["Territory" in certain cases]
For the purposes of paragraph (1), all the Contracting Parties which are member States of
one and the same intergovernmental organization may act jointly, where the regulations of
that organization so require, to assimilate acts done on the territories of the States
members of that organization to acts done on their own territories and, should they do so,
shall notify the Secretary-General accordingly.
Article 17¡GRestrictions on the
Exercise of the Breeder's Right
(1)[Public interest]
Except where expressly provided in this Convention, no Contracting Party may restrict the
free exercise of a breeder's right for reasons other than of public interest.
(2)[Equitable remuneration]
When any such restriction has the effect of authorizing a third party to perform any act
for which the breeder's authorization is required, the Contracting Party concerned shall
take all measures necessary to ensure that the breeder receives equitable remuneration.
Article 18¡GMeasures Regulating
Commerce
The breeder's right shall be independent of any measure taken by a Contracting Party to
regulate within its territory the production, certification and marketing of material of
varieties or the importing or exporting of such material. In any case, such measures shall
not affect the application of the provisions of this Convention.
Article 19¡GDuration of the
Breeder's Right
(1)[Period of protection]
The breeder's right shall be granted for a fixed period.
(2)[Minimum period]
The said period shall not be shorter than 20 years from the date of the grant of the
breeder's right. For trees and vines, the said period shall not be shorter than 25 years
from the said date.
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CHAPTER VI¡GVARIETY DENOMINATION
Article 20¡GVariety Denomination
(1)[Designation of varieties by denominations; use of the
denomination]
(a) The variety shall be designated by a denomination which will be its
generic designation.
(b) Each Contracting Party shall ensure that, subject to paragraph (4), no rights in the designation registered as the denomination of the variety shall hamper the free use of the denomination in connection with the variety, even after the expiration of the breeder's right.
(2)[Characteristics of the denomination]
The denomination must enable the variety to be identified. It may not consist solely of
figures except where this is an established practice for designating varieties. It must
not be liable to mislead or to cause confusion concerning the characteristics, value or
identity of the variety or the identity of the breeder. In particular, it must be
different from every denomination which designates, in the territory of any Contracting
Party, an existing variety of the same plant species or of a closely related species.
(3)[Registration of the denomination]
The denomination of the variety shall be submitted by the breeder to the authority. If it
is found that the denomination does not satisfy the requirements of paragraph (2), the
authority shall refuse to register it and shall require the breeder to propose another
denomination within a prescribed period. The denomination shall be registered by the
authority at the same time as the breeder's right is granted.
(4)[Prior rights of third persons]
Prior rights of third persons shall not be affected. If, by reason of a prior right, the
use of the denomination of a variety is forbidden to a person who, in accordance with the
provisions of paragraph (7), is obliged to use it, the authority shall require the breeder
to submit another denomination for the variety.
(5)[Same denomination in all Contracting Parties]
A variety must be submitted to all Contracting Parties under the same denomination. The
authority of each Contracting Party shall register the denomination so submitted, unless
it considers the denomination unsuitable within its territory. In the latter case, it
shall require the breeder to submit another denomination.
(6)[Information among the authorities of Contracting
Parties]
The authority of a Contracting Party shall ensure that the authorities of all the other
Contracting Parties are informed of matters concerning variety denominations, in
particular the submission, registration and cancellation of denominations. Any authority
may address its observations, if any, on the registration of a denomination to the
authority which communicated that denomination.
(7)[Obligation to use the denomination]
Any person who, within the territory of one of the Contracting Parties, offers for sale or
markets propagating material of a variety protected within the said territory shall be
obliged to use the denomination of that variety, even after the expiration of the
breeder's right in that variety, except where, in accordance with the provisions of
paragraph (4), prior rights prevent such use.
(8)[Indications used in association with denominations]
When a variety is offered for sale or marketed, it shall be permitted to associate a
trademark, trade name or other similar indication with a registered variety denomination.
If such an indication is so associated, the denomination must nevertheless be easily
recognizable.
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