1.
Members
agree to enter into
negotiations aimed at
increasing the
protection
of
individual geographical indications under Article
23. The
provisions of paragraphs 4 through 8 below shall not be used by
a
Member to
refuse to
conduct negotiations or to conclude
bilateral
or
multilateral agreements. In the
context of such
negotiations,
Members shall be willing to consider the continued applicability of
these
provisions to
individual geographical indications whose use was
the
subject of such
negotiations.
2. The
Council for TRIPS shall keep under
review the
application of the
provisions of this Section; the first such
review shall take
place
within two
years of the
entry into force of the WTO
Agreement. Any
matter
affecting the
compliance with the
obligations under these
provisions may be drawn to the
attention of the
Council, which, at
the
request of a
Member, shall consult with any
Member or
Members in
respect of such matter in
respect of which it has not been possible
to
find a
satisfactory solution through
bilateral or plurilateral
consultations between the
Members concerned. The
Council shall take
such
action as may be
agreed to
facilitate the
operation and further
the
objectives of this Section.
3. In
implementing this Section, a
Member shall not diminish the
protection
of
geographical indications that
existed in that
Member immediately
prior to the
date of
entry into force of the WTO
Agreement.
4. Nothing
in this Section shall require a
Member to
prevent continued and
similar use of a particular
geographical indication of another
Member
identifying wines or
spirits in
connection with
goods or
services by
any of its
nationals or domiciliaries who have used that
geographical
indication in a continuous
manner with
regard to the same or related
goods or
services in the
territory of that
Member either (a) for
at least 10
years preceding 15 April 1994 or (b) in
good
faith preceding that
date.
5. Where a
trademark has been applied for or
registered in
good faith, or where
rights to a
trademark have been acquired through use in
good faith
either:
(a) before the
date of
application of these
provisions in that
Member
as defined in Part VI; or
(b) before the
geographical indication is
protected in its
country of
origin;
measures
adopted to
implement this Section shall not
prejudice eligibility for
or the
validity of the
registration of a trademark, or the
right to
use a
trademark, on the basis that such a
trademark is
identical
with, or similar to, a
geographical indication.
6. Nothing
in this Section shall require a
Member to apply its
provisions in
respect of a
geographical indication of any other
Member with
respect
to
goods or
services for which the
relevant indication is
identical
with the
term customary in
common language as the
common name for
such
goods or
services in the
territory of that
Member. Nothing in
this Section shall require a
Member to apply its
provisions in
respect of a
geographical indication of any other
Member with
respect
to
products of the vine for which the
relevant indication is
identical with the customary
name of a grape
variety existing in the
territory of that
Member as of the
date of
entry into force of the
WTO
Agreement.
7. A
Member may provide that any
request made under this Section in
connection with the use or
registration of a trademark must be
presented within five
years after the
adverse use of the
protected
indication has become generally known in that
Member or after the
date of registration of the
trademark in that
Member provided that
the
trademark has been
published by that
date, if such
date is
earlier than the
date on which the
adverse use became generally known
in that
Member, provided that the
geographical indication is not used
or
registered in bad
faith.
8. The
provisions of this Section shall in no way
prejudice the
right of any
person to use, in the course of
trade, that
person's
name or
the
name of that
person's predecessor in
business, except where
such
name is used in such a
manner as to
mislead the
public.
9. There
shall be no
obligation under this
Agreement to
protect geographical
indications which are not or cease to be
protected in their
country
of origin, or which have fallen into
disuse in that
country.