05.12.2016 | permalink
Third World Network
Yesterday’s biopirate hid seeds in her boots, but
tomorrow’s may steal genetic sequence data. Faster and
cheaper gene sequencing is creating massive new digital
databases of biodiversity. Some of them contain the DNA
sequences of thousands, even tens of thousands, of
varieties of crops, crop wild relatives, medicinal plants, and
microbes. Almost none of these databases currently apply
access and benefit sharing (ABS) rules of the CBD and
Nagoya Procotol.
The technology for this “digital DNA” to be downloaded
and then introduced into new organisms is becoming a
reality, meaning that biodiversity can be moved across the
planet electronically and possibly without the material
transfer agreement (MTA) that many countries use to
implement ABS rules.
For example, European scientists might use an internet
database to obtain gene sequences from South American
tomatoes and tomato wild relatives. If they identify
valuable diversity, instead of going to South America to
negotiate an ABS agreement, they might instead use
CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing to reproduce that diversity in
European tomatoes - without an agreement with the
country of origin.