Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and honourable members of the committee, for providing Canada's generic pharmaceutical industry with the opportunity to contribute to your study of our domestic intellectual property regime.
As you mentioned, I am joined today by Ben Gray. Ben is vice-president and general counsel at Mylan Pharmaceuticals in Canada.
I have a couple of words to say about our generic pharmaceutical industry in Canada. We consider it Canada's life sciences success story.
We directly employ more than 12,000 Canadians in highly skilled research, development, and manufacturing positions, and we export our value-added products to more than 115 countries. Our industry, the generic industry, is a net exporter of value-added products and positively contributes to Canada's balance of trade in pharmaceuticals.
Canadian generic pharmaceutical manufacturers operate the largest life sciences companies in Ontario, Quebec, and Manitoba. Canada's single largest research and development spender in the life sciences sector is generic drug maker Apotex, which is Canada's largest pharmaceutical company and also the owner of Canada's largest biopharmaceutical company.
Today, we are talking about intellectual property. In our opinion, there is no link between increased intellectual property and pharmaceutical research and development. Any purported links between increased intellectual property and increased pharmaceutical research and development investments are dubious at best.
Patents have national treatment. Countries must grant the same protection regardless of where the research is done. Decisions about where to site research are not linked to intellectual property. Most investments by brand-name drug companies are today directed to corporate headquarters and to developing countries that are not renowned for their intellectual property protection, such as the BRIC—Brazil, Russia, India and China.
Given these investment realities, the question then becomes what is the appropriate level of IP protection to support therapeutic innovations conducted in other countries?
Canada has a small market size, representing just 2.5% of the global market for pharmaceuticals. Nevertheless, Canada has a very strong intellectual property regime for pharmaceuticals. In its totality, pharmaceutical intellectual property in Canada is stronger than that in any other industrial sector in Canada. In many ways it is stronger than pharmaceutical intellectual property in the United States and Europe.
For example, in Canada brand-name pharmaceutical companies benefit from a unique automatic injunction against generic entry up to 24 months long. Most often there are two rounds of patent infringement litigation on the same set of patents, which creates business uncertainty. In contrast, the U.S. patent linkage system, on which Canada's was based, does not allow for multiple rounds of litigation and provides much better business certainty.
In Canada, unlike in the U.S., we have no statutory incentive for generic pharmaceuticals to challenge patents. Our regulatory data protection lasts several years longer than the international average. In Canada, pharmaceutical patentees have the ability to obtain patents on multiple aspects of a drug, without any mechanism for generic companies to oppose such patents, except through litigation.
In fact, importantly, our Canadian system relies on generic patent challenges to operate effectively. This is not often discussed, but it is a key component of pharmaceutical patent policy in every developed country that requires a robust mechanism to ensure that only genuine inventions are afforded monopoly protection.
In Canada we have no mechanism for opposing the grant of a patent. Patents are reviewed and issued based on the representation of patent applicants, without any counterweight.
For pharmaceuticals, these unopposed patents can get listed on Health Canada's patent register and then automatically block approval of generic drugs for up to two years. Some of these patents are genuinely innovative and deserving of protection, but many are not.
This is where the generic industry comes in. The only disciplining agent on the effect of weak pharmaceutical patents in Canada is the generic industry. Generic companies challenge weak patents in the pharmaceutical sector in Canadian courts in order to launch their products in Canada. If we're successful, we open up the market to generic competition and generate substantial savings for Canadians.
However, reforms are needed in our system. Over the past several years stakeholders in the public and private sectors, including judges of the Federal Court, have increasingly expressed concern about the proliferation of complex pharmaceutical patent litigation in Canada. There have been more than 100 pharmaceutical intellectual property cases initiated in each of the past seven years. The current system is an inefficient use of our limited court resources and places the generic companies at a potentially grave financial risk upon launching a product in Canada.
I'll say just a few words about the complexity.
We have a system of patent linkage that links Health Canada's approval to the patent system. That's an extraordinarily powerful enforcement mechanism for a patentee. In Canada it blocks the health and safety approval of a new generic medicine by way of an automatic injunction without any upfront burden of proof. It is interesting to note that such a patent linkage system is actually illegal in the European Union under their competition laws.
Canada has a litigation system for pharmaceutical patents that also has no meaningful deterrents to discourage weak and frivolous patent litigation by brand-name pharmaceutical companies. This system has been described by the Supreme Court of Canada as draconian in terms of its treatment of generic manufacturers. Common law principles for damage injunctions are not available currently in Canada.
The complexity and unfairness of this environment has increased since regulatory amendments were made in October 2006. While positive changes were made at that time to reduce patent evergreening, a new legal tactic has emerged whereby generic manufacturers are routinely sued a second time for patent infringement. This means most generic medicines are launched at risk. This duplicative litigation system makes Canada an international outlier, with no other country providing both pre- and post-market litigation. The system is inefficient, increases business uncertainty, and has a chilling effect on the entry of new generics.
We have submitted proposals to Industry Canada—