What is the open-source seeds movement?
- Farmers have innovated and shared seeds without any intellectual property rights (IPR) for centuries.
- They also haven’t sought exclusive rights over seeds and germplasm to prevent others from innovating on the seeds.
- However, with the emergence of the global IPR regime over plant varieties, there was a dire need to ‘open-source’ seeds.
What are plant-breeders’ rights and patents?
- The advent of hybrid seeds, scientific plant-breeding, and some other factors conferred developers of new varieties with the so-called plant breeders’ rights (PBR) and patents, particularly in the U.S.
- In this regime, rights-holders could demand royalty on seeds and legally enforce IPR.
- Rights-holders can also restrict the unauthorised use of seeds to develop new varieties.
- In 1994, the establishment of the World Trade Organization cast a global IPR regime over plant varieties.
- The Trade-Related IPR Agreement (TRIPS) required countries to provide at least one form of intellectual property (IP) protection.
- This consolidation of rights in the seeds sector raised concerns about the freedom to innovate.
How is IP protected in agriculture?
- Two modes of IPR protection in agriculture
- Plant-breeders’ rights
- Patents.
- Together, they restrict farmers’ rights and the freedom to develop new varieties using germplasm from IP-protected varieties, and have thus increased the number of IP-protected plant varieties.
- The high prices of genetically modified seeds and IP claims triggered many problems and issues, including the State’s intervention in Bt cotton seeds in India.
- As public sector breeding declined and the private sector began to dominate the seed sector, the need for alternatives became keenly felt.
- This is when the success of open-source software inspired a solution.
- In 1999, plant-breeder named T.E. Michaels suggested an approach to seeds innovation based on the principles of open-source software.
What are ‘open-source seeds’?
- In 2002, Boru Douthwaite and Krishana Ravi Srinivas (independently) proposed an open-source model for seeds and plant varieties and scholars and civil-society members built on it.
- The German NGO Agrecol followed with a similiar initiative in Europe.
- Agrecol’s model: User agrees inter alia to not patent seeds bought under the open-source licence.
- In the U.S., the open source seeds initiative opted for a pledge based model for sharing seeds.
India’s Position
- In India, the Centre for Sustainable Agriculture (CSA), Hyderabad, developed a model that included an agreement between CSA and the recipient of the seed/germplasm.
- It is trying to use this approach through three farmer producer organisations engaged in seed production.
- Under India’s Plant Variety Protection and Farmers’ Rights Act 2001, farmers can register ‘farmer varieties’ if they meet certain conditions, and have the right to reuse, replant, and exchange seeds.
- However, they can’t breed and trade in varieties protected under the Act for commercial purposes.
Potnetial Applications
- One potential application of the open-source approach is to use it in farmer-led seed conservation and distribution systems.
- The model can also be used to promote farmer-led participatory plant-breeding exercises.
- Open-source principles can help overcome these two challenges by facilitating testing, improvisation, and adoption.
Conclusion
- All of these will ultimately be beneficial to India’s food security and climate resilience.