Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

How Monsanto judgment could affect farm sector

PATENT Activists contend GM cotton seed affects biodiversi­ty, farmers’, consumers’ rights

- Jayashree Nandi

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court ruling that Monsanto can claim patents on its geneticall­y modified (GM) Bollgard-ii Bt cotton seed technology that resists the bollworm pest is likely to aggravate the agrarian crisis in India, activists said.

Some cotton-growing farmer groups, however, say it won’t change the situation as domestic seed companies are as much to blame for rising prices. Monsanto, a US company, is the world’s biggest seed-maker.

Intellectu­al property rights experts say the judgment should be viewed with caution. “The case has gone back to the trial court. Yes, the Supreme Court has restored the injunction, so Monsanto wins for the time being. But we will have to wait and see. The trial court has to do a determinat­ion of the patent claim, which is very complex. The technology also needs to be assessed,” said Shamnad Basheer, founder of the website Spicyip, and former chair professor of intellectu­al property law at the West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences, Kolkata.

The Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM), an affiliate of the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh which is the ideologica­l parent of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, said the Centre should review the Patents Amendment Act, 2005, to see if there are any lacunae in the law that Monsanto used to convince the Supreme Court to allow its patent.

Ashwani Mahajan, SJM’S national co-convenor, said: “As per our estimates, Monsanto has already earned more than ~7,000 crore as royalty for Bt cotton seeds. Article 3 (j) of the Patents Amendment Act says an invention which causes serious prejudice to human, animal or plant life or health or to the environmen­t is not patentable. We should check how Monsanto proved that Bt cotton technology is not affecting the environmen­t,” said Mahajan. Farm activists and environmen­talists argue that Bt cotton technology affects biodiversi­ty as well as farmers’ and consumers’ rights.

According to farm activist Kiran Kumar Vissa’s impleadmen­t in the Monsanto Technology LLC and others Vs Nuziveedu Seeds Limited and others, Monsanto had filed for patent in 2001 for an invention titled ‘The method for transformi­ng plants to express Bacillus thuringien­sis delta endotoxins’.

Vissa, in his petition, said that Monsanto described the nucleic acid construct in Bt technology as a chemical compound, having a chemical structure but the function of genetic material. Activists have argued that under the Cartagena Biosafety Protocol, a “living modified organism (LMO)”

means any living organism that possesses a novel combinatio­n of genetic material and Bt technology falls under the LMO category, so Monsanto’s claim on the patent is contestabl­e.

The case goes beyond an intercorpo­ration dispute as it has implicatio­ns on the livelihood of farmers, insist activists.

“Bt cotton pushed up costs for farmers and resulted in farmer suicides. The government’s own affidavit has said that Bt cotton has pushed farmers to the edge. We wanted to point out to the court that it is in fact a matter of life and death,” said Kavitha Kuruganti of Alliance for Sustainabl­e & Holistic Agricultur­e, who impleaded with Kiran Vissa.

Rakesh Tikait, Bharatiya

Kisan Union chief, said, “We condemn the Supreme Court order. Farmers have been under severe economic stress because of failure of Bt cotton; it may also be unsafe for cattle which graze in cotton fields. We don’t want this technology in India.”

The cotton-growing belt of Vidarbha and Marathwada in Maharashtr­a, which is India’s largest cotton-producing state, will not be affected by the judgment, say farmer leaders from the region. “This decision has no real impact on farmers, it is between Monsanto and local seed companies. The real issue is that Indian seed companies sell BT seeds at inflated costs and there is no check on this,” said Vijay Jawandia, a farmer leader.

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