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David Hencke, Rob Evans and Tim Radford: Clinton/Blair to stop gene patents




This was circulated on Gregory Aharonian's list.

Jamie


    --  BLAIR(UK) AND CLINTON(US) PUSH TO STOP GENE PATENTS

David Hencke, Rob Evans and Tim Radford 
The Guardian, London
Monday September 20, 1999 

Tony Blair and Bill Clinton are negotiating an Anglo-American agreement
to protect the 100,000 genes that control the human body and provide the 
catalysts for medical advance. 

The extraordinary deal - initiated by Mr Blair - aims to prevent 
entrepreneurs profiting from gene patents and to ensure that the benefits
of research are freely available worldwide to combat or even eliminate 
diseases. The two leaders decided to act after an acceleration in the pace 
of discovery of the make-up of the human body. In 1997, 8,000 genes had been 
mapped; by 2003, the body's entire 100,000 genes will have been mapped. 

The deal aims to ensure that world's largest medical charity, the 
British-owned Wellcome Trust, and the US government owned National Institute 
of Health, publicise genes within 24 hours of their discovery - so that the 
benefits accrue entirely to the public. Research bodies, universities or 
laboratories, would be obliged to waive their rights to patent their work
in the public interest. 

To get the deal Mr Blair, through his science envoy, Lord Sainsbury, pressed 
the US government to scrap an agreement with an American entrepreneur 
scientist, Craig Venter, who set up his own company, Celera in Maryland,
to patent as many human genes as possible. 

As revealed in the Guardian last year, Dr Venter believed that he had 
developed a method to map the whole gene make-up before the international 
venture could do so - thus enabling him to patent the information. To 
protect his investment he tried to get a deal with the US Department of 
Energy, which the Wellcome Trust warned would inhibit development of drugs 
since companies would have to buy a licence to use a Venter gene. 

Documents released to the Guardian under the US Freedom of Information law 
show there have been discussions between Lord Sainsbury and Neal Lane, Bill 
Clinton's science and technology adviser, to turn what is known as the 
Bermuda accord - an informal agreement to release all research on human 
genes without claiming patents - into a full inter-governmental agreement. 
The two talked in Kyoto in Japan and Williamsburg in the US during the 
Carnegie group summits of G8 science ministers. 

One e-mail by Mr Lane to a colleague in Washington last December says:
"Tony Blair might approach the potus [Bill Clinton] about having a written 
agreement on cooperation re the human genome project. Lord Sainsbury is 
handling this matter for the PM. Harold Varmus [director of the US national 
institute of health] feels an agreement is not really needed but has no 
objection to having one if it is felt to be important." 

Another e-mail discloses talks this year with Ari Patrinos, head of the 
human genome project at the US department of energy, on how to draw up the 
Anglo-American agreement. 

The e-mail discloses that, before the talks, the Department of Energy 
withdrew its agreement with Celera and put up proposals to incorporate the 
company in a joint US-UK agreement. Officials are worried it may not agree, 
but the e-mail ends: "Bottom line is that, although [the energy department] 
did have an earlier agreement with Celera, they have since withdrawn it and 
are working with [the US health institute] and the Wellcome Trust as 
group on any future industry agreements." 

The Department of Trade and Industry said yesterday: "The US has proposed an 
inter-government agreement on the human genome project. We are currently 
negotiating."  The Wellcome Trust said it was keen on a deal that would 
develop the Bermuda accord. 
  
(c) Guardian Newspapers Limited 1999 
 
-- 
James Love, Director, Consumer Project on Technology
I can be reached at love@cptech.org, by telephone 202.387.8030,
by fax at 202.234.5176. CPT web page is http://www.cptech.org