There
has been a sea change in the Rooibos industry, following the signing of
an Access and Benefit-sharing (ABS) agreement between the Rooibos
Industry, represented
by the SA Rooibos Council (SARC) and the Khoi-Khoi and San, represented
by the National Khoi-San Council (NKC) and the South African San
Council (SASC). This agreement will see the Khoi-Khoi and San
communities benefit from the commercialisation of Rooibos.
Today, a special ceremony to mark the historic occasion was held in !Khwa ttu, close to Cape Town, with representatives from the
Department of Environment, Forestry and Fisheries (DEFF), the Rooibos industry and Khoi and San Councils in attendance.
SARC
chairperson, Martin Bergh says the protection and preservation of the
Rooibos industry and its people remain critical to the SA Rooibos
Council.
“The
industry recognises that the Khoi-Khoi and San people had knowledge of
the Rooibos plant and that including them as beneficiaries in this
agreement, is the right
thing to do.”
The
NKC and SASC also welcomes the move which they say will contribute a
great deal to the development and empowerment of the Khoi-Khoi and San
communities they represent.
As
a signatory to the Nagoya Protocol, South Africa requires industries
that trade in indigenous biological resources, such as Rooibos, to share
benefits with traditional
knowledge holders in a fair and equitable way.
When
the DEFF first recognised the Khoi-Khoi and San people as the rightful
traditional knowledge holders of Rooibos, a Working Group, which
included the SARC, NKC and
SASC was formed to negotiate on benefit sharing in accordance with the
National Environmental Management Biodiversity Act (NEMBA).
After
four years of negotiations, an agreement was reached, which included a
benefit-sharing levy at 1.5% of the farm gate price of Rooibos,
effective from 1 January
2019. In rand terms this currently equates to an estimated R9-million
per annum, but may differ year-on-year based on the price and volumes of
Rooibos traded.
How
the benefit-sharing levy will be used, will be independently decided by
the National Khoi-San Council and South African San Council, but it is
primarily intended
for the upliftment of the Khoi-Khoi and San communities. An annual
report, detailing the distribution of funds, will be submitted to the
DEFF to ensure complete transparency.
Bergh
has hailed the agreement as a best practice example, which provides a
robust framework for other bioprospecting, access and benefit-sharing
agreements in SA and
abroad.
“It’s
the first agreement of its kind in the world – both in terms of the
interpretation and application of the Nagoya Protocol. Previous ABS
agreements involved specific
companies and traditional knowledge holders, whereas the Rooibos
agreement encompasses the entire industry, ensuring all volumes of
Rooibos sold will be levied through one process.”
The
accord is regarded as an important milestone in the history of global
governance for the preservation of genetic biodiversity, associated
traditional knowledge and
poverty relief.
The Minister of Environment, Forestry and Fisheries, Ms Barbara
Creecy also described the signing as a landmark moment.
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