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National Parks Service considers opening parks to 'bioprospecting'

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donsu Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-24-06 12:24 PM
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National Parks Service considers opening parks to 'bioprospecting'


http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?ItemID=21676


Everything's for sale
National Parks Service considers opening parks to 'bioprospecting'



-snip-

The latest evidence of this comes from, of all places, one of the most trusted and admired of federal agencies. The National Park Service (NPS) is quietly taking public comment through December 15 on a proposal to allow private companies to "bioprospect" in our national parks: to commercially mine, not the mineral riches of a park, but the genetic resources of plants, animals, and microorganisms in territories specifically set aside for stewardship in the public trust.

The proposal is contained in a September 15, 2006 court-ordered Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), an outgrowth of a lawsuit over a similar 1997 proposal at Yellowstone National Park during the Clinton administration. Steady privatization has been underway at the Park Service for more than 20 years, but the requirement that the NPS actually study the effects of bioprospecting seemed to shelve this particular bad idea.

And then, magically, seven years later, the EIS appears, laying out three options that would cover not just Yellowstone but all parks. The document, subtly entitled "Benefits-Sharing," reads less like an environmental study and more like a sales pitch for its preferred choice, "option B," to allow commercial bioprospecting but require "benefits-sharing" agreements and potentially some degree of public disclosure of those agreements. (Or, potentially, not.) The other two choices the public is to comment on are option A, to do nothing -- thus allowing bioprospecting without so-called benefit-sharing; and option C, which is to only allow this genetic mining for "noncommercial or public interest research." Not exploiting our parks' genetic treasures at all is not even listed as an option in the document.

In the Global South, home to much of the world's genetic diversity, this battle has already been underway for decades. In a process reminiscent of Columbus, transnational corporations have been using Western courts and laws to patent genetic codes and plant and animal life that existed long before any humans were around to "discover" them or own their "rights." The struggle against such legal chicanery has often been led by indigenous peoples who've relied upon the riches of their environments for millennia without the assistance of lawyers or scientists (or shareholders). Suddenly, they've been told they no longer have the right to use those riches -– or, worse, they can use them, for a price, paid to distant companies with no truly legitimate claim to their use.

-snip-

An even scarier aspect of the NPS proposal is the precedent it sets, and the question of where that precedent stops. Can any life form or portion thereof existing in the parks be given away (or "benefit-shared," if the public agency gets a cut)? In any public lands? Using eminent domain, anywhere at all? What's to stop the government, using existing law and schemes such as this, from deciding by regulatory fiat that your genome should be "benefit-shared" by some state agency? It's an awfully slippery slope, one in which, thanks to two decades' worth of privatization of public resources, we're already well downhill of the crest.

-snip-

Only a few weeks remain for public comment on the NPS proposal. Take some time to weigh in. Otherwise, some big corporation –- let's call it Helixco –- will be using tweezers, small but lucrative ones, for its Christmas stocking this year.
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sigh
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Annces Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-24-06 12:51 PM
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1. rape and pillage
I hope democrats reverse these onslaughts.
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