The aim is to boost the collective mark ‘Aynok’ which was registered within the INDECOPI to distinguish processed quinoa. Yet, this is an ongoing technical advice to producers of quinoa from the Puno Region, so they “can obtain certification of organic products”.
The event is part of the framework of the 'Dissemination strategy and advocacy for Distinctive Signs - Strategic alliances with public and private organizations linked to the productive sectors'. Basically this agenda, developed by INDECOPI, aims to publicize the benefits that a sign may bring to the distinctiveness of a brand or a product, by labeling the place from which it originates.
INDECOPI acknowledges that there are many other bodies (such as “Ministry of Trade and Tourism (Mincetur), PromPeru, the Ministry of Environment (Minam), the International Trade Centre (ITC) and the Joint Andean Grains Program of the Office of the International Labour Organisation for Andean Countries”) which are participating and supporting the development of a distinctive sign for quinoa in the Puno Region.
Source INDECOPI.
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