Patenting Plants
PRESS RELEASE from PHYSICIANS AND SCIENTISTS FOR
RESPONSIBLE GENETICS
5 October 2001
Patenting Plants
Physicians and Scientists for Responsible Genetics welcome the US Supreme Court looking to find a balance between farmers’ traditional rights and those of researchers when awarding patents on plants.
PSRG urge the New Zealand government to establish appropriate legislation.
The question asked is should certain plants receive patents which give protection to the patent holder for up to 20 years. Patents were not intended to cover living organisms and opponents say that a patent on a living organism is theft from nature.
Through patents,
companies spending millions on research are compensated.
They claim they should be rewarded for innovation and
encouraged to pursue research.
Farm suppliers claim
companies can secure the genes of plant varieties and
control planting and research.
Farmers say patents force seed costs up and farmers to dispose of seed from a previous harvest, and the patent holder can even control seed created in farmers' fields through natural reproduction.
North American growers have first-hand
experience of the cost in royalties and proprietary
chemicals on patented transgenic crops, and some - if found
saving seed, or knowingly or unknowingly growing such
proprietary seed - know the cost in court fines. Canadian
farmer, Percy Schmeiser, not only lost his case, he also had
his crop confiscated. Schmeiser did not buy seed. His crop
was the result of seed selection and crop improvement over a
lifetime. (See
In the current hearing, Justices did not discuss genetically
engineered crops or any other agricultural technology, but
simply looked at the impact of patents on farmers.
The last such patent case was heard in 1980. Justices then
ruled patents can be given to bacteria. Following that
decision, patents have been granted to new varieties of
plants produced from seeds. The US Congress established a
system for registering products. The US Patent and
Trademark Office has granted patents for sexually
reproduced plants for 15 years. The Supreme Court will
decide if Congress intended to allow plant breeders to get
both certificates and patents. PSRG urge government to
pre-empt problems with patent applications in New Zealand by
establishing appropriate NZ legislation early. Telephone or fax 64 7 576 5721 E-mail
roberta@clear.net.nz 5 October
2001
(351
words)
440a Otumoetai Road, TAURANGA, NEW
ZEALAND