Vineet Bhagat addresses the gathering & Guest Speakers seated

Vineet Bhagat addresses the gathering & Guest Speakers seated
Vineet Bhagat addresses the gathering & Guest Speakers seated

Friday, April 20, 2012


4 Factors That Determine How a Seed Company Can Benefit or Lose Out on Protection of Plant Varieties

My tryst with the Bt Cotton controversy in the Year 2003 by way of representing the Seed Company before Court and GEAC led to my assisting Clients in the field of Agriculture over the last 9 years now.
I have been witness to the evolution of law in this sector, especially Protection of Plant Varieties & Farmers’ Rights Act, 2001 (PPV&FR Act) which has taken center stage in recent years. I attended Seed Congress at Hyderabad in 2011 and recently at Pune, which entailed meetings with PPV&FR officials, numerous meetings with specialists in the seed companies and attempts to simplify the maze of complicated laws/documents. I wish to share some of these with you in this communication.
The benefit of registering plant varieties gives EXCLUSIVE right to the Breeder or his assignee company to produce, sell, market, distribute, import or export the registered variety for 15 years[i]. It is equivalent to a Patent in India. Indian patent laws exclude plant varieties and thus PPV&FR is the only option for plant varieties.
If your company has bred a plant variety and has not commercialized it for more than One year, then you can register it as a “New Variety”, whether, inbred, hybrid or GMO[ii].  If you have commercialized your variety for more than one year, then your choices are limited to the categories of either “Extant Variety” or “Essentially Derived Variety”. The later is from an act of derivation (including hybridization) where some characteristics are retained and some characters come up from derivation. in my considered view, this definition is vague and is a futile exercise in semantics[iii].
PPV&FR notifies the crops for which registration is now open, see a list of these 54 crops in the end note[iv].
Extant varieties have 1423 pending applications[v] where their fate is ambiguous. The time limit to register your variety as Extant variety is 3 years from the date of notification[vi].
If your variety falls into the black box of ‘Extant Variety’, then, either the Central or State Government is deemed to be owner of the exclusive rights to produce, sell, market, distribute, import or export your extant varieties and the Breeder or his Assignee Company has to establish his rights to be a part or whole owner of the above rights before the PVP&FR Authority after registration[vii]
Let us consider a hypothetical situation: if the Seed Company files for registration after one year of commercialization because the crop was not notified by PVP&FR at appropriate time or internal delays in decision to register, it can not claim registration of it as a new variety and has to fight for its rights from the Government in the category of “Extant Variety”. Let us say that you do not register your variety in this narrow window of opportunity, then, the product of your intellectual property in that variety is everybody’s property. Not a desirable proposition because it opens a window for a potential loss to your Seed Company?
My IPR team keeps an eye on spurious attempts of someone trying to register variety of our Clients, and file oppositions within the given discipline of time.
The benefit of exclusivity in production and sale from successful registration comes at the end of a lengthy process that encompasses: 1) Application submission, 2) Acceptance, 3) Advertisement in Plant Variety Journal, 4) Opposition, if any, 5) Distinctiveness, Uniformity and Stability (DUS) testing, 6) Registration and finally Benefit sharing.
A silver lining for Essentially Derived Variety is that DUS testing which takes 2 years in two crop seasons is not necessary but DUS testing is necessary for New Varieties.
Delays are considerable which makes one wonder if they mitigate the benefits. I am told that most of hybrids have a commercial life span of about 5 years. From the fifty one entries contained in Plant Variety Journal of January 2012, we calculated from the data of the recent past 4 years between Submission of Application to Acceptance by PVP&FR to be average of 563 days, a whopping One and One Half Years. Something is terribly wrong.
Four major factors seem to be responsible for this inordinate long delay of one and one half years even at this initial step in registration. These are
FIRST, a complex set of instructions of PVP&FR;
SECOND, hesitation in providing the pedigree/ geneology;
THIRD, characteristics of the candidate variety and
FOURTH, candidate variety’s correct category supported by documentation.
Registrar of PVP&FR authority has the right to reject the application[viii].
I feel that PVP&FR Authority should develop and sign a confidentiality agreement with the applicant and include in this confidentiality agreement the information on Pedigree/ Geneology and protection of parental lines seeds. US Patents have such a provision to protect the investment made by patent holder. Hoping this to happen in India is a HOPE.
Unlike many previous Indian Acts, this Act and its rules enacted in 2003, 2006, 2009 and 2010 are both confusing and certainly not user friendly and slanted towards public sector.
This Indian system of protection of plant varieties is Sui generis[ix]. An example of sui generis system is European Union, which is neither a federal nor a state system but a unique combination of Independent Nations banded together with certain things such as Euro and the system evolves with time. Such are our Laws for Protection of Plant Varieties.
Have queries; feel free to contact me at <vineetbhagat@gmail.com>; and finally
Good Information = Good Decision
Adv. Vineet Bhagat is a practicing Lawyer in the Supreme Court of India and is a Managing Partner of KG Bhagat & Co. in New Delhi.


[i] PPVP&FR Act Section 24, last paragraph, page 17
[ii] PPVP&FR Act Section 15 (3) (a) (i), page 10
[iii] PPVP&FR Act Section 2, (i), page 3
[iv] http://www.plantauthority.gov.in/index.htm   Accessed on 29 March 2012, 54 Crops in alphabetical order are 11) Bean- Kidney, 2) Brahmi, 3) Brinjal, 4) Cabbage, 5) Cardamom- small Elettaria cardamomum, 6) Castor 7) Cauliflower, 8) Chickpea, 9) Coconut, 10) Cotton- Diploid  Gossypium arboretum, 11) Cotton- Diploid Gossypium herbaceum, 12) Cotton- Tetraploid Gossypium barbadense, 13) Cotton- Tetraploid Gossypium hirsutum, 14) Crysanthemum, 15) Garlic, 16) Ginger, 17) Groundnut, 18) Isabgol, 19) Jute Corchorus capsularis, 20) Jute Corchorus olitorieus, 21) Lentil, 22) Linseed, 23) Maize, 24) Mango, 25) Mint- Menthol, 26) Mungbean, 27) Mustard Indian Brassica juncea, 28) Mustard Rai Karan Brassica carinata, 29) Mustard Sarson Gobhi Brassica napus, 30) Mustard Rapeseed  Brassica rapa, 31) Okra, 32) Onion, 33) Pea-Field, Pearl Millet, 34) Pepper – Black, 35) Periwinkle, 36) Pigeon pea, 37) Potato, 38) Rapeseed, 38) Rice, 40) Rose Rosa spp. other than R. damascene, 41) Rose Damask Rosa damascene, 42) Safflower, 43) Sesame 44) Sorghum, 45) Soyabean, 46) Sugarcane, 47) Sunflower, 48) Tomato, 49) Turmeric, 50) Urdbean, 51) Wheat- Bread, 52) Wheat- Dicoccum, 53) Wheat- Durum, 54) Wheat Other Triticum species.
[v] List of extant varieties- 1423, http://www.plantauthority.gov.in/pdf/extant.pdf accessed on 29th March 2012
[vi] G.S.R. 783(E), dated 27th October 2009
[vii] PPVP&FR Act Section 28, second paragraph, page 18
[viii] PPVP&FR Act Section 20 (1), page 14
[ix] sui generis noun in its own category, in its own group, of its own character, of its own class, of its own classification, of its own denomination, of its own designation, of its own genre, of its own kind, of its own nature, of its own type, of its own variety, peculiar, special, the only one of its kind, unique. Source: http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/sui+generis accessed on 29 March 2012

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