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Answers

Question

You claim intellectual property rights when it comes to patents and suing your customers, yet when it comes to safety and nutrition you say the food produced from your seeds is no different from that produced from non-GMO seeds. How is this possible?

Submitted by: gmosrock


Answer

Expert response from Community Manager

Moderator for GMOAnswers.com

Thursday, 26/12/2013 17:40

Greg Conko, a senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, posted a response that addresses the patenting of biotech plant varieties and “urban legends” about suing farmers for patent infringement. Conko’s response is available here and included below. 

 

"Critics of biotechnology often ask: If genetic engineering is simply one of many tools for modifying plants at the genetic level and not fundamentally different from other breeding methods, why can new biotech varieties be patented?  The short answer is: Any new plant variety with a unique combination of traits can be patented, no matter what breeding method is used to develop it. In fact, many more nongenetically engineered plant varieties have been patented than genetically engineered ones.

 

"The United States Supreme Court confirmed in the landmark 2001 case, J.E.M. Ag Supply v. Pioneer Hi-Bred, that newly developed plant breeds could be patented. And the patented corn varieties at issue in that case were developed solely with simple hybridization: the mating of one corn plant with another. In short, the patenting of biotech plant varieties does not make them different from conventionally developed varieties; it makes them the same.

 

"Urban legends also claim that biotech seed companies troll the country, suing farmers for patent infringement when their crops have been accidentally cross-pollinated by a neighbor's genetically engineered plants. But not a single known case of this has actually occurred. The myth is spread by misrepresenting cases, such as that of Canadian farmer Percy Schmeiser, who claimed he was sued when patented Roundup Ready canola plants were discovered on his farm. But the Canadian court that heard his case concluded that Schmeiser had intentionally planted canola seeds containing the patented Roundup Ready gene and was not merely a victim of unintended cross-pollination.

 

"In 2011, the Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association and several other organizations filed a lawsuit seeking a judgment that farmers should not be liable when patented biotech plants are found unintentionally growing in their fields. But the plaintiffs could offer not a single example of a case where this had actually occurred, so the court dismissed the lawsuit on the grounds that there was no dispute to be resolved. The court explicitly held that every lawsuit the trade association offered as evidence of the biotech company's bad behavior involved a farmer who had intentionally planted patented seeds. It further concluded that the trade association's demand 'seems to have been nothing more than an attempt to create a controversy where none exists.'

 

"Biotechnology critics thrive on misinformation and out-of-context claims.  The myth that patenting biotech crops proves that genetic engineering is fundamentally different from more conventional breeding methods is simply that―a myth.  Whatever one's view of patents, or of intellectual property more generally, the fact is, many thousands of plant varieties developed with both conventional and genetic engineering techniques have been patented.  So intellectual property protection for biotech plants makes them no different from any other varieties."

 

Additionally, Cathleen Enright, executive director of the Council for Biotechnology Information, posted a response that explores this topic, available here.