The Southwest Booster

Saskpulse VUA agreement undermines farmer control

- OPINION

The recent Saskpulse AGM had a lively debate on the resolution opposing Variety Use Agreements (VUAS) on varieties developed using levy (checkoff) funds.

VUAS are contracts that farmers must sign when they purchase certain new varieties, forcing them to pay an annual fee to the seed company if they want to plant farm saved seed in the following years.

The resolution was submitted to Saskpulse by pulse growers whose concerns go beyond one organizati­on, because the VUA issue goes to the heart of the very serious question of “who controls seed.”

Clearly, the voting results show there is no consensus and the debate is not over, especially with many farmers not yet aware of the topic or its implicatio­ns.

You probably remember the large public meetings held across the Prairies in 2018 when Agricultur­e and Agrifood Canada (AAFC) was consulting on which way farmers wanted to pay companies for permission to use their own farm-saved seed: End Point Royalties or Trailing Contracts.

The answer was a resounding NO – none of the above.

Hundreds of farmers came out to these meetings, and opposition was loud and clear.

As a result, AAFC backed off its plans to change the Plant Breeders Rights (PBR) regulation­s to make farmers pay royalties on farm saved seed. Instead, AAFC said it would wait for industry leadership.

It appears that the industry (by this, the government means the multinatio­nal seed companies, not farmers) has decided to go with VUAS – a private version of the Trailing Contract proposal.

In its deal with multinatio­nal seed giant Limagrain, Saskpulse agreed to pay the company $850,000 a year from farmer-paid levy funds in return for variety developmen­t in peas and lentils.

If and when any resulting varieties are released, they will only be available to farmers who agree to sign a contract obligating them to pay an annual fee to Limagrain if they use it for farm saved seed.

Instead of being sued for PBR infringeme­nt, farmers would be sued for breach of contract if they plant farm saved seeds without paying the company. Thus, Saskpulse has given Limagrain a monopoly over the use of seed developed using producer checkoff dollars.

What Limagrain could not get via regulation, Saskpulse has given the company, without a mandate or prior consultati­on with farmers.

Saskpulse says farmers who want to keep using farm-saved seed are welcome to use older varieties, yet they will continue to pay mandatory check-offs on every bushel of peas and lentils they sell, further subsidizin­g arrangemen­ts they oppose.

At the Saskpulse AGM debate, directors claimed some of the VUA money will flow back to Saskpulse, but they have not revealed how much, or whether others are also getting a piece of this pie. ‘

A director also argued that farmers should not be too worried about paying twice for seed research – that is, once with their check-off and again with a VUA — because eventually, we will just be paying the VUAS.

So, it appears Saskpulse directors are planning their own obsolescen­ce.

No check-off dollars means no Saskpulse! With no levy, farmers will have no leverage – no funds to apply to research based on farmers’ needs, no say in how funds are invested, and thus no reason to continue having crop developmen­t organizati­ons.

Seed companies like Limagrain aim to increase their revenues, and with no limits on the VUA fees they can charge, we can expect seed prices to rise – especially if VUAS become standard on all new varieties.

With the 2023 crop being the most expensive on record, why would Saskpulse agree to a system that adds to seed costs by making farmers pay for the seed they grew on their own farms?

There are many alternativ­es to giving away our power and our money to multinatio­nal seed corporatio­ns. Public plant breeding, done through the Crop Developmen­t Centre and other universiti­es, and at Agricultur­e Canada, with support and direction from farmer funding, provides exceptiona­l results for the entire agricultur­e sector and our economy as a whole, as U of S economist Dr. Richard Gray has demonstrat­ed.

Public plant breeding is tailored to the needs of Canadian farmers, and is not compromise­d by the conflicts of interests of private seed companies that also sell inputs and demand high rates of profit for their shareholde­rs.

Government underfundi­ng cannot be the excuse for us to give away our power – we must insist on a policy of adequate funding of our public breeders from the developmen­t of germplasm all the way to the release of new varieties that work for farmers.

Seed is the foundation of the food system.

Planting farm saved seed should not become an added financial burden or a legal problem for producers.

Kevin Beach and Donna Bryck-beach operate a mixed farm near Ernfold, Saskatchew­an, where they grow peas and lentils along with grain and forage crops, and raise beef cattle. They are members of the National Farmers Union as well as registered pulse growers who attended and voted at the 2024 Saskpulse AGM.

 ?? ?? KEVIN BEACH AND DONNA BRYCK-BEACH
KEVIN BEACH AND DONNA BRYCK-BEACH
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