1. Farmers Seed Rights
Legislative measures
CSA
Ramanjaneyulu
Centre for Sustainable Agriculture
Rights are the ones which is not given, but ones which cannot be taken away by law
2. Why emphasis on farmers seed rights?
• Increasing monopolies
• Erosion of diversity
• Undermining farmers knowledge and skills
• Privitizing resources and knowledge
• Seed technologies and link to food safety
• Quality, affordability and accountability
regimes
• Seed sovereignty
3. FRs in a global treaty
International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources
…agree that the responsibility for realising Farmers’ Rights, as
they relate to plant genetic resources for food and agriculture,
rests with national governments. In accordance with their
needs and priorities, each Contracting Party, should, as
appropriate, and subject to its national legislation, take
measures to protect and promote Farmers’ Rights…
4. Any legislation should ensure
• farmers’ rights of breeding, saving, using, exchanging, distributing
and selling seeds should be upheld as inalienable rights and not be
given as residual rights – in other words, control in the hands of
farmers over their seed resources
• should help increase biodiversity
• should help in farmer-level self sufficiency in the form of
community seed banks and seed networks
• farmers should also be given rights of affordable access to good
quality, desired seeds primarily from the public sector, followed by
the private sector if need be;
• farmers should be given protection rights in case of violation of
trust in terms of quality, quantity and price of seeds accountability
and liability clauses should be fixed both in terms of civil and
criminal damages
5. Exercising control on technology and market
Technological control
Hybrids
Transgenics
GURTechnologies
Legislative control
Plant Breeders Rights
UPOV
Patents
Market control
Mergers
Acquisitions
6. Background
1930: Plant Patent Act (PPA)
17 yr monopoly for asexually reproduced plants (fruits, nuts, flowers and other
ornamentals)
Food crops like potatoes and Jerusalem artichokes excluded
Focus on high value flowers and fruit trees
342 sps to 2361 breeders and 781 assignees (1995)
Costs about $490+preparation expenses and attorney fee
1970: Plant Variety Protection Act (PVPA)
Patent like protection for sexually propagated plant varieties which are new,
distinct, uniform, and stable for 25-30 yrs
Farmers, breeders allowed to sell, exchange, and breed new varieties from
protected material
1994 amendment, the exemptions removed
1985: Utility (Industrial) Plant Patents
Industrial patents to plants meeting patent criteria of novelty, utility, and non-
obviousness
Costs about$250,000 to get and maintain over life time
7. Union Pour la protection des Obtentions Vegetales (UPOV)
International Protection of new Varieties of Plants 1978
• The identity of the plant material must be established beyond doubt for
which the principle of Distinctness, Uniformity and Stability is applied
• Breeder is given exclusive rights to produce reproductive or vegetable
propagating material of his variety for the purpose of commercial
marketing and sale.
• Farmer can reuse the seed
• Article 5(3): provides for utilisation of protected variety for the purpose of
creating new one without authorisation of the breeder except in case of
an inbred line in commercial production of hybrid seed
• Article 8: Period of protection is not less than 8 yr
8. Union Pour la protection des Obtentions Vegetales (UPOV)
International Protection of new Varieties of Plants) 1991
Major modifications
• removal of ban on double protection so that the new member states have the
option to either maintain the ban, or allow simultaneous protection of varieties
under utility patents and Plant Variety Protection (PVP) certificates
• Member states are required to grant PVP to all botanical species without further
restrictions on cultivar or use
• Provisional protection during the processing of PVP application is mandatory
• widening of PBRs to include an extension of the list of infringing acts, extension of
PBRs to new materials and addition of rights beyond the protected cultivar to other
cultivars such as essentially derived varieties
9. IPRs relevant to Agriculture
IPRs are legal rights established over creative or inventive ideas
Patents
Novel: which is not known in the prior art
Non obviousness: which involves an inventive step
Usefulness: which is industrially applicable
Plant Breeders Rights
Sui generis, UPOV etc.
Prevents third parties from commercially exploiting the protected material
Distinctness: distinguishable from earlier known varieties
Uniformity: display of the same essential characteristics in every plant
Stability: retention of the essential characteristics on reproduction
Geographical Indications
products originating from a country, region or locality where the quality,
reputation or other characteristics of the product are essentially attributable
to its geographical origin
Presently restricted only to wines and spirits
10. Trademarks
Seeds, chemicals, services etc.
To distinguish the goods and services of one enterprise from another
Prevents the wrongful use of commercial marks
Not limited in time, registration may have to be renewed from time to time
Trade secrets
Can be protected against third party misappropriation through law as
relating to unfair competition or to restrictive trade practices or to contract
law
Unlike patents no obligation to disclose the inventive or creative ideas to
society
Test data protection
Protection of test data submitted for obtaining marketing approval of
agricultural products for a limited period of time usually 5-10 yrs
11. TRIPS Article 27 Patentable subject matter
1. Subject to the provisions of paragraphs 2 and 3, patents shall be available for any
inventions, whether products or processes, in all fields of technology, provided that
they are new, involve an inventive step and are capable of industrial application […]
2. Members may exclude from patentability inventions, the prevention within their
territory of the commercial exploitation of which is necessary to protect ordre
public or morality, including to protect human, animal or plant life or health or in
order to avoid serious prejudice to the environment, provided that such exclusion is
not made merely because the exploitation is prohibited by their law.
3. Parties may also exclude from patentability
a. Diagnostic, therapeutic and surgical methods for the treatment of humans
or animals
b. Plants and animals other than microorganisms, and essentially biological
processes fro the production of plants or animals other than non-biological
and microbiological processes. However members shall provide for the
protection of plant varieties either by patents or by an effective sui generis
system or by any combination thereof. The provisions of this subparagraph
shall be reviewed four years after the date of entry into force of the WTO
Agreement.
12. In general, developing countries can make a choice amongst the following
policy options:
• To make provisions for the patent protection of plant varieties
• To join the International Union for the Protection of new Varieties of
Plants (UPOV) in either of both variants (UPOV 78 or 91)
• To provide for comparable Plant Variety Protection (PVP) without
formally joining the UPOV Convention
• To devise a sui generis system which is better designed to suit national
interests and to take into account the protection demands of informal
and local communities.
13. IPRs and biotechnology
The US additionally sought broad patent protection for all patentable
subject matter, including plants and living organisms. US biotech
industry sought two additional concessions during negotiations.
• a minimum term of patent protection of 20 yrs from the date of
filing, and
• an expansion on definition of what constitute patentable subject
matter.
Developing countries sought however to shorten the term of patent
protection, and to narrow the definition of patentable subject matter by
excluding plants and living organisms from the definition of patentable
subject matter.
14. • Patents are even granted to plant and bacterial gene sequences, animal inventions
and human genome sequences.
• Extreme cases of granting broad species patents in cotton and soybean.
• Often justified showing the high costs of research, development and
commercialization associated with biotech inventions
• Billions of dollars are invested in developing new technologies, and yet it is
estimated that only one in few thousand compounds/products ever reaches
commercial markets
• Costs of bringing a biotech product to market are compounded by the problems and
complex rules imposed by regulatory agencies before a new product is approved for
sale
• Biological inventions are particularly susceptible to piracy because, while they
typically require substantial expenditures to develop, they are often simple to
replicate.
15. Proprietary technologies and materials
• Selectable markers
• Promoters
• Transformation systems
• Gene constructs
• Genetic markers
• Diagnostic probes
• Plant varieties
Ex: Bt/herbicide resistant plants at least 8 patents
Golden rice 72 patents IAAA
16. Implications to agriculture
Percy Schmeiser, Bruno, Saskatchewan, facing legal bills of about 600,000
Canadian dollars
ISAAA (International Service for the Acquisition of Agribiotech Applications)
identified 70 patents and 16 tangible property constraints (Material Transfer
Agreements- MTAs, licenses, agreements etc.) that could have implications for
commercialization of Golden Rice. The potential legal complexities of negotiating
these patent licenses led the inventors Potrykus and Beyer to strike a deal with
Greenovation (A University spin-off biotech company based in Freiburg, Germany)
and Astra Zeneca (A Multinational Life sciences company)
In 1994 CICR announced success in developing Bt cotton variety, not
commercialised due to IPRs not being in place
In 2012 CICR was forced to withdraw the Bt Bikeneri narma from market
All Bollgard 10 more Cotton hybrids with Bt developed by various companies are
pending with GEAC, all are under license from Monsanto paying royalty
AP government moved to MRTP to get the seed price reduced
17. Broad patents
Though patents are granted only for specific innovations, instances of broad
patents are surfacing
• Cohen/Boyer patent covers all DNA transfer
• US patent no. 5,004, 863 for Agrobacterium mediated gene transfer
• US patent no. 5,120, 657 for Accell=FE Gene gun
• US patent no. 5,159,135 covers all genetically engineered cotton plants
• EU patent no, 0,301,749,B1 covers all genetically engineered soybeans
• Similar broad cotton patent has been granted India and applications are
pending in Brazil and China
18. Biopiracy
• FAO-CGIAR Trusteeship Agreement established in 1994 to bring the
CGIAR’s germplasm collections under inter governmental authority.
• International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture
(2001) aims to facilitate access to genetic resources and benefit sharing
in 35 crops and 29 forages
• Article 12.3 (d) of the treaty states “ recipients shall not claim any
intellectual property or other rights… in the form received from the
multilateral system
• Patents cover Neem, Basmati, Aloe Vera, Indian Olibanum Tree,
Amaltas, Cummin seeds, Dudhi, Garden Balsam, Amla, Pomegranate,
Black Pepper, Rangoon Creeper, Castorseed, Black Nightshade, Arjun,
Harad, Tinospora, Aswagandha, Cotton, Potato, Tomato and many
more…
19. Neem
• There are over 217 patents on usage of neem and neem based products
• The US TNC, W.R. Grace has patents for neem-based biopesticides, including
Neemix for use on food crops. Neemix suppresses insect feeding behaviour and
growth in more than 200 species of insects.
"A method for controlling fungi on plants comprising contacting the fungi with a
neem oil formulation containing 0.1 to 10% of a hydrophoobic extracted neem oil
which is substantially free of azadirachtin, 0.005 to 5.0% of emulsifying surfactant,
and 0 to 99% water.“
• An US Company, AgriDyne has received two US patents for bioprocessing of neem
for bioinsecticidal products. The first patent is for a refining process that removes
fungal contaminants found in extracts from the neem seed, and is used in the
manufacture of technical-grade azadirachtin, and in the production of AgriDyne's
neem-based bioinsecticides. The second patent is for a method of producing stable
insecticide formulations containing high concentrations of azadirachtin.
20. Basmati
• Ricetec, a Texas based company had claimed a patent (5663484) for inventing
novel Basmati lines and grains
• Twenty claims were made including
• novel rice lines and to plants and grains of these lines
• method for breeding these lines
• novel means for determining the cooking and starch properties of rice
grains and its use in identifying desirable rice lines
• novel rice lines whose plants are semi-dwarf in stature, substantially
photoperiod insensitive and high yielding, and produce rice grains having
characteristics similar or superior to those of good quality Basmati rice
• In response to the Supreme Court direction in the Basmati case, the
Government of India filed petition in the USPTO for re-examination of the grant
of patent to RiceTec in respect of the its "claims from 15 to 17" which were
related to grain
• RFSTE and other NGOs made a letter campaign to USPTO
• All claims except 5 claims were withdrawn
21. Turmeric
US Patents 5401504, 5135796, 5047100
• Dr. Hari Har Cohly, Dr. Suman Das et.al from University of Mississippi (US)
obtained patent on turmeric (Curcuma longa) for monopoly control in the US
over the use of turmeric (also called haldi), an ingredient in Ayurvedic
medicine since antiquity, to promote wound healing
• In proceedings at the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), the Indian
Government argued the obvious to the "experts" in the US government:
Indians had been using turmeric for the same uses claimed in the "new"
"invention" for thousands of years. The USPTO admitted that India was correct
and rejected Mississippi's claims
• A narrower version of their turmeric claim has been submitted in an attempt
to hold on to at least part of the patent. The USPTO has yet to rule on this
reworked version.28
22. Wheat
• Monsanto obtained patent EP 445929 from European Patent Office, Munich (Two US
patents 5763741 and 5859315 were obtained in 1998-99)
• Galahad 7 by crossing traditional Indian variety NAP Hal with other plant Galhad
Novelty: meeting certain traits like special combination of visco-elasticity and
elasticity not satisfied by any other known variety of wheat
Non-obviousness: evolving a method for preparing such a variety not known ealrier
Usefulness: soft milling type doesn’t absorb much water suitable for biscuit making
• Apart from plant patent covers biscuits, flour and dough produced from wheat (total
22 claims)
• Monsanto can take legal action not only against farmers and scientists trying to
breed/grow varieties with similar genetic traits but also bakeries, confectionaries and
supermarkets if they produce or market products from the patented wheat
• Nap Hal is freely available in public germplasm collections
• Accession no. 1362, AFRC Institute of Plant Science Research, Norwich, UK
23. Dr. R. H. Richaria’s Rice collection, IGKVV, Raipur
• Since 1971 after leaving CRRI, Dr. Richaria initiated adaptive rice
research to evaluate and document all local rice varieties
• Aim: decentralised adaptive rice research for conservation and
development of rice varieties, which would act both as a repository of
public knowledge and help enhance local farming
• 22,792 local varieties were collected
• Syngenta entered into an agreement to take custody of the collection
• After farmers’ agitation company has withdrawn
24. Plant Variety Protection Act
8 yrs for Trees and vines and 5 yrs for plant varieties
Farmers rights Chapter IV. 40
1. Who has developed a new variety shall be entitled for registration in
like manner as a breeder
2. Who is engaged in the conservation of genetic resources of land races
and wild relatives of economic plants and their improvement through
selection and preservation shall be entitled in the prescribed manner a
reward under National Gene Fund
3. Shall be declared to be entitled to save, use, sow, exchange, share or
sell his farm produce including seed of the varieties protected under
this act in the same manner as he was entitled before the coming into
force of this act, provided that the farmer shall not be entitled to sell
branded seed of a variety protected under this act
25. Plant Variety Protection Act
Community rights Chapter IV
42 (1): any person, group of persons (whether actively engaged in farming or
not) or any govt. or non. Govt organization may on behalf of any village
or local community in India can file for the protection of the variety
Protection of innocent infringement
43 (i): a right established under this act shall not be damned to be infringed by a
farmer who at the time of such infringement was not aware of the
existence of such right
(ii): a relief which a court may grant in any suit for infringement refered to in
this section
26. Geographical Indicators law
• To prevent the rampant biopiracy of our plants and knowledge we need a
genuine `sui generis' system, which protects the collective, cumulative
innovations, embodied in traditional knowledge as a societal common
property
• Trademark challenge using GIs still needs to be made in the USPTO,
using the victory in the Patent Case on RiceTec selling Texmati &
Kasmati as Basmati
• GIs address only exports, of a small number of commodities, not the
rights of our farmers to use, save, exchange, and improve their seeds
for domestic production or protection of our indigenous knowledge
• Domestic laws on GIs are toothless without appropriate Amendments in
TRIPs
• GIs could work for protecting a few export commodities like, Alphonso
mangoes, Darjeeling Tea and Basmati Rice. They have no relevance in the
deeper conflicts and contests relating to patenting of life forms and
piracy of our traditional knowledge in agriculture and medicine.
27. TRIPS Plus
• EU has forced TRIPS-plus commitments regarding intellectual property on life
forms in almost 90 deve loping countries, including the ACP pack
• Under some of the agreements, the parties recognise the need to provide
adequate and effective protection of intellectual property rights, sometimes to
the level of “the highest international standards”, specifically include: patent
protection of plant varieties and of biotechnological inventions
• TRIPS has no provision about implementing or joining either UPOV or Budapest
treaty
• It does not require patent protection of plant varieties. And it doesn’t even
mention “biotechnological inventions”
Substantive Patent Law Treaty
• Aims at hormonizing IPR laws of member countries
• Proposes to curtail governments’ power to obstruct IPR in public
interest
• Though no legal obligation but would be a norm
28. Paradigm shift….
In terms of… Companies and Developing countries Actually needed
developed countries
Plant varieties Plant Breeders Rights Willing to provide plant Farmers’ rights and community
and patents breeders’ rights, with some rights
provision for a farmers’
“privilege”
Sui Generis UPOV standards Not clear what they want, but Real alternatives to IPRs
most go for UPOV
Patents No exclusions for any Certain exclusions No patents on life
subject matter
Ownership Market control State sovereignty Community sovereignty and
collective control
TRIPs review No amendments that Amendments to confirm with Exclude biodiversity and do not
lower standards of IPR CBD, but not challenging introduce traditional
protection patents on life or TK knowledge, or introduce
protection for traditional
knowledge
Access Free and unregulated State control Community control
Benefit sharing Through IPR Through IPR Through community intellectual
property regimes or
comprehensive resource rights
29. U and I would not have been there if Adam and Eve had
patents over propagation
30. Seed regulation should
• Regulate misbranding including false claims
through advertising and propaganda
• Regulate prices and royalties
• GM contamination issue
• Regulate quality with
• Fine and compensation proportionate to the
loss/damage caused
31. Some important legislations/policies
• Seeds Act 1966 & amendments (1972)
• Seeds Control Order 1983 under Essential Commodities Act,
1955
• National Agriculture Policy, 2000
• Plant Varieties Protection and Farmers’ Rights Act, 2001
• Biological Diversity Act, 2002
• National Seeds Policy, 2002
• Patents Amendment Act, 2005
• Environment Protection Act, 1986
• Consumer Protection Act, 1986
• Geographical Indication of Goods Act, 1999
• Plants, Fruits and Seeds (Regulation of Import into India)
Order, 1989
32. WRITTEN LAWS…
...are like spider's webs; they will catch,
it is true, the weak and the poor, but
would be torn in pieces by the rich
and powerful.
- Anacharsis, 600 BC, Scythian Philosopher
33. The Proposed Seeds Bill
Seeks to replace the Seeds Act of 1966 and seeks to regulate the quality of seeds for
sale, import and export. Referred to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on
Agriculture in December 2004 and report submitted in 2006 and is pending
• Seeks to “put a check on the sale of spurious and poor quality seeds and to
provide compensation to affected farmers”
• It “intends to increase private participation in seed production, distribution,
certification, seed testing, besides making provision for stringent penalty for non-
compliance of the rules and regulations”
• The proposed legislation “aims to liberalise import of seeds and planting materials
compatible with the World Trade Organisation (WTO) commitments”
• The revision of existing Seeds Act is proposed “to overcome its present
deficiencies”
• To create facilitative climate for growth of seed industry
• To enhance seed replacement rates for various crops
• To boost the export of seeds and encourage import of useful germplasm and
• To create conducive atmosphere for application of frontier sciences in varietal
development and for enhanced investment in research and development.
34. What about Seeds Act 1966?
• For regulating the quality of “certain seed” for sale
• Regulation mainly through notification of kinds and varieties and checks
• Central Seed Committee and Central Seed Certification Board set up along
with Seed Testing Laboratories, Certification Agencies, Seed Inspectors and
Seed Analysts (to be appointed by state governments)
• Central Government, if it is necessary or expedient to regulate the quality of
seed of any kind or variety, by notification in the Official Gazette, will declare
such kind or variety to be a notified kind or variety. Then, the Committee lays
down minimum standards of germination, purity etc.
• No person shall sell, keep for sale, offer to sell, barter or otherwise supply any
seed of any notified kind or variety unless – such seed is identifiable as to its
kind or variety; conforms to the PRESCRIBED STANDARDS; container bears the
mark or label containing correct particulars, in the prescribed manner
• Certification is voluntary
• Penalty is Rs. 500/- for first offence & 6 months prison and/or Rs. 1000/- and
seed may be forfeited to the government
• Exemption: “Nothing in this Act shall apply to any seed of any notified kind or
variety grown by a person and sold or delivered by him on his own premises
direct to another person for being used by that person for the purpose of
sowing or planting”
35. The Seeds Control Order, 1983
• Dealer in Seed to be licensed for 3 years at a time - No person
shall carry on the business of selling, exporting or importing
seeds at any place except under and in accordance with the
terms and conditions of license granted to him under this
order. This is applicable to ANY SEED and not just NOTIFIED
KINDS OR VARIETIES
• Dealers to display stock and price list
• Dealer to give cash or credit memorandum to purchaser
• Power to distribute seeds with Seeds Controller, when
considered to be in public interest
• Licensing Authority to be set up by State Government
• State Governments to appoint Inspectors to inspect and draw
samples of any seed
36. Proposed Seeds Bill 2004
• To cover non-notified varieties also
• To make registration of seed varieties compulsory
• To cover commercial crops and plantation crops under the
purview of the legislation
• To expand the scope of certification beyond the State Seed
Certification Agencies
• To provide for regulation of transgenic material
• To overcome the mild penalties that exist for infringement
right now
• For instance, Seed Inspectors under the 1966 Act can inspect
places of growing, storage and sale of only notified seeds
while Seeds Control Order allows Inspectors to inspect and
draw samples of any seed – the Bill now proposes to give such
powers
37. What does the Bill propose to do?
A Bill to provide for regulating the quality of seeds for sale,
import and export and to facilitate production and supply of
seeds of quality
• Compulsory registration of varieties based on agronomic
performance
• Private accredited Certification Agencies
• Accreditation of agencies to conduct agronomic trials
(universities, ICAR bodies, private agencies etc.)
• Maintenance of National Register of Varieties
• Private accredited seed testing laboratories
• Enhancement of penalty for Major & Minor Infringements
• Provisions to regulate GM crops
• Regulation of import and export of seeds
38. How?
• Every Dealer and every Producer brought into the ambit
• Agriculture here includes horticulture, forestry, cultivation of plantation,
medicinal and aromatic plants
• “producer” means a person, group of persons, firm or organisation who
grows or organizes the production of seeds and “farmer” means any
person who cultivates crops either by cultivating the land himself or
through any other person but does not include any individual, company,
trader or dealer who engages in the procurement and sale of seeds on a
commercial basis
• Definitions of Misbranded and Spurious Seeds given
• Central Seeds Committee, Registration Sub-Committee, Seed Inspectors,
Seed Analysts, Seed Certification Agencies, Seed Testing Laboratories etc.,
are the mechanisms
• Minimum limits of germination, genetic & physical purity, seed health etc.,
prescribed by the Central Seeds Committee
• Registration Committee to register seed varieties after scrutinising claims
made in the applications and maintain a National Register of Seeds
• NO SEED CAN BE SOLD UNLESS REGISTERED (for 15 years for most seeds
and 18 years for long duration perennial crops)
• However, Self Certification & Voluntary Certification continued
39. How else?
• State Seed Committee to advise the State Government on registration of
seed producing units, seed processing units, seed dealers and horticulture
nurseries etc.
• No producer shall produce seed or organise production of seed unless
registered…
• Special Provision for Registration of Transgenic Varieties
• Compensation to Farmers: Where the seed of any registered kind or
variety is sold to a farmer, the producer, distributor or vendor, as the case
may be, shall disclose the expected performance of such kind or variety to
the farmer under given conditions, and if, such registered seed fails to
provide the expected performance under such given conditions, the
farmer may claim compensation from the producer, distributor or vendor
under the Consumer Protection Act, 1986
• Seed Dealers: Every person who desires to carry on the business of selling,
keeping for sale, offering to sell, bartering, import or export or otherwise
supply any seed by himself, or by any other person on his behalf shall
obtain a registration certificate as a dealer in seeds from the State
Government
40. Offences & Punishments proposed
• Misbranded seed or without registration certificate or
violation of minimum standards: fine of 5000/- to 25000/-
rupees
• Spurious seed or spurious transgenic seed or any non-
registered seed: imprisonment upto 6 months and/or fine
upto Rs50,000/-
• This is applicable to any person who imports, sells, stocks or
exhibits for sale or barters
Exemption from Registration:
• Nothing in this Act shall restrict the right of the farmer to
save, use, exchange, share or sell his farm seeds and planting
material, except that he shall not sell such seed or planting
material under a brand name or which does not conform to
the minimum limit of germination, physical purity, genetic
purity prescribed
41. What are the concerns, then?
• Regulation of Industry Vs Regulation of Farmers: It brings all farmers who are seed
producers under its ambit – they would now be subjected to unneeded harassment –
regulation from post-production should be enough; It also covers farmers’ traditional
systems of seed exchange and wants to prescribe minimum standards for seed
exchanged thus
• Facilitation of the entry and freer operation of many private entities, with several
“conflict of interest” elements thrown in – public sector to be strengthened
• Registration of Seeds overlaps with the domain of ownership/parentage of seeds and
can take away farmers’ rights as breeders – especially given that the PPVFR is not yet
operational. No obligation to disclose origin or get prior informed consent
• Compensation clauses not satisfactory-should have farmer-friendly mechanisms
• Inadequate mechanisms to ensure seed pricing and seed supply
• Unclear clause on Provisional Registration for Transgenic Seeds
• No vision for decentralised regulation – for instance, Panchayats can monitor
performance and certify failure
• No mechanisms that can take care of better seed planning and production
• Penalties should be based on the extent of losses – real and potential
• Impracticability of National Register of Seeds
• Do we need so many private players?
42. What are we suggesting?
• Regulation to include seed pricing, seed supply, seed
planning in addition to seed quality
• No registration – only licensing of seed producers
and dealers, post-production
• Licensing for 3-5 years only – compulsory reviews
• Strong punitive clauses, better compensation
mechanisms
• Decentralised mechanisms for regulation
• All traditional practices of farmers saving, selling,
exchanging/bartering seed to be excluded
• Should create a situation which should increase
farmer self-reliance and agro-diversity, not the other
way around
43. LIABILITY MECHANISMS IN THE PROPOSED
LEGISLATION – PENALTY & COMPENSATION:
• The proposed “Offences & Penalties” sections fall woefully short of the kind of
proposals needed to make penalties into effective deterrents, and to pay
compensation to farmers against the claims made. Here, it is important to have
penalty clauses which are in proportion to damage caused and the seed stocks
produced or stored by the offender and which act as real deterrents.
• Further, the compensation awarded should have a formula to cover the costs
incurred and should also be against the claims made for the performance of
that variety at the time of registration. The compensation should be paid
within three months of the award of the compensation so that the farmer’s
next growing season is not affected and this should be incorporated into the
legislation. Any farmer aggrieved by the decision of the Compensation
Committee should be able to appeal to a prescribed authority which shall
dispose off the appeal within a specified time and manner that is prescribed.
44. MRTP Case
2006: AP government filed a case with MRTP Commission requesting that
Commission to declare the agreement between Indian seed companies and
MMB as void as it is leading to monopoly and increase in seed prices
– MMB maintained that it is not monopoly as other events (Nath seeds and JK agri
genetics) were approved. MRTP ruled that the royalty collected is higher the state
government should take action to reduce it.
– As there was no law to regulate the seed prices, AP state government used its
power under granting trade licenses under Seed Control Order based on Essential
Commodities act, 1955
– The prices of Bt cotton seed were fixed at Rs 750 a packet (450 gm) and Rs 925 in
2006 for Bt 1 and Bt 2 respectively. This was further reduced to Rs 650 and Rs 750
respectively in 2008.
– As the Agreement between MMB and Indian Seed Companies continues to exists
they still have to pay the royalty as demanded by the company.
45. Post MRTP case
• The industry quickly changed the recommendation
from one packet (of 450 g to two packets of 450 g per
acre) which quickly doubled their business.
• MMB was collecting royalty of Rs 150 and Rs 225 on
Bollgard-I and Bollgard-II respectively.
• In 2006, after MRTP commission’s ruling to reduce the
bt cotton seed price, AP government reduced the
cotton seed prices to Rs. 650 and Rs. 750 for bollgard I
and II. Challenging this, MMB moved to Delhi high
court on this issue.
46. Meddling with Essential Commodities Act
• 2007: Central government has amended the Essential
Commodities Act removing ‘Cotton seed’ from the list. This
nullified the seed control order.
• When Agriculture officers in Warangal district found that
Mahyco Bt hybrids are being sold in Warangal market, they
raided and seized the shop. Mahyco challenged that cotton
seed was removed from Essential Commodities Act, hence
Seed control order which draws powers from EC Act does
not apply to cotton.
• AP Government came up with a new act to regulate the
Transgenic cotton seed which was more stringent..
• 2008: Cotton seed was brought back into Essential
Commodities Act
47. Cost of a 450 g seed bag
Companies don’t want to cut royalty case
Unregulated Royalties
• 2010: Seed companies approached the
Seed procurement, Rs. 288.00 govts to increase the seed prices as
processing, treatment and they have to pay the royalties up to Rs.
production 156.00
Supervision, quality control, Rs. 60.00 • AP government didn’t agree to reduce
seed price, but fixed prices as Rs. 650
Packing etc (450 g) BG-I, Rs. 750 for BG-II which effectively
Refuge Rs. 20 reduced the royalty to Rs. 50/- for
(pigeonpea)/ Rs. Bollgard-I and Rs. 90/- for Bollgard-II
73.00 • In 2010, Monsanto filed case in AP High
Court requesting to stop state govt
Distribution & after sales Rs. 38.00 from reducing the royalty arguing that
service , Market it does not have any power to do so.
The case is still pending in the court.
Financial and Admin costs Rs. 92.00
• 2011: Bt cotton seed for 2011-12 to Rs
Research cost Rs. 95.00 830 for BG-I trait and Rs 930 for BG-II
trait.
Total cost per packet (450 g) Rs. 593.00
• 2012: Rs 850 for BG-I and Rs 1,050 for
Trait free payable Rs. 165.00 BG-II
Distribution retail costs Rs. 198.09
(21.5%)
Total Rs. 773.00
(National Seedmen Association of India)
48. SEED PRICE AND ROYALTY FIXING AUTHORITY WITH STATE
GOVERNMENTS
• State governments have the authority through the Seeds Bill to fix
the retail seed price and royalty charges applicable for any
technology sub-licensing agreements.
• Further, given that the Seeds Control Order of 1983 will get nullified
after the Seeds Bill is notified, it is important to incorporate all the
powers that state governments have under the Order into the
proposed Seeds Bill, including the ‘Power to Distribute Seed’.
• State governments should also be empowered to register seeds
that are locally suitable and appropriate, in addition to the national
registry. Authorisation of all seed production, processing, storage,
distribution and sale should be with the state government through
a compulsory licensing system.