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International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants

The International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants or UPOV (French: Union internationale pour la protection des obtentions végétales) is a treaty body (non-United Nations intergovernmental organization) with headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. Its objective is to provide an effective system for plant variety protection. It does so by defining a blueprint regulation to be implemented by its members in national law. The expression UPOV Convention also refers to one of the three instruments that relate to the union, namely the 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention (UPOV 91), 1978 Act of the UPOV Convention (UPOV 78) and 1961 Act of the UPOV Convention with Amendments of 1972 (UPOV 61).

International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV)
Union internationale pour la protection des obtentions végétales
UPOV Headquarters
Legal statusIn force
HeadquartersGeneva, Switzerland
Secretary General
Daren Tang[1]
Vice Secretary-General
Peter Button[1]
Parent organization
WIPO
Websitewww.upov.int

History edit

UPOV was established by the International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV 61). The convention was adopted in Paris in 1961 and revised in 1972, 1978 and 1991.

The initiative for the foundation of UPOV came from European breeding companies, who 1956 called for a conference to define basic principles for plant variety protection.[2] The first version of the UPOV convention was agreed on in 1961 by 12 European countries.[3] By 1990 still only 19 countries were part of the convention, with South Africa being the only country from the Southern Hemisphere.[4] From the mid-1990s more and more countries from Latin America, Asia and Africa joined the convention. A reason for this development might be the TRIPS-Agreement that obliged WTO members to introduce plant variety protection in national law.[5] Later, many countries have been obliged to join UPOV through specific clauses in bilateral trade agreements, in particular with the EU, USA, Japan and EFTA.[6] The TRIPS-Agreement doesn't require adherence to UPOV but gives the possibility to define a sui generis system for plant variety protection.[5] In contrast, clauses in free trade agreement are more comprehensive and typically require adherence to UPOV.[6][7]

While the earlier versions of the convention have been replaced, UPOV 78 and UPOV 91 coexist. Existing members are free to decide whether they want to ratify UPOV 91 or stay with UPOV 78, whereas new members have to adhere to the more restrictive version from 1991.[8]

Membership edit

As of December 3, 2021 two intergovernmental organisations and 76 countries and were members of UPOV:[4] African Intellectual Property Organisation, Albania, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Bolivia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, Estonia, European Union,[9] Finland, France, Georgia,[10] Germany, Ghana,[11] Guatemala, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Morocco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, North Macedonia, Norway, Oman, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Poland, Portugal, Republic of Korea, Romania, Russian Federation, Serbia, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Tanzania, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Kingdom, the United States of America (with a reservation),[12] Uruguay, Uzbekistan, and Viet Nam.[13]

 
Members of UPOV - differentiated by the Act of the Convention to which the state is party


For a country or intergovernmental organisation to become member, it needs to implement the requirements of the actual convention in national law. UPOV's secretariat analyises the regulation of plant variety protection in national law and writes a recommendation to the council whether or not the applicant shall be granted membership.[14] In the past several countries have been refused memberships because their national plant variety protection laws granted exceptions for subsistence farmers to reuse and exchange seeds.[15][16][17]

In addition, a large number of countries (eg Pakistan), intergovernmental organisations (eg European Free Trade Association) and international non-governmental organisations (eg International Community of Breeders of Asexually Reproduced Ornamental and Fruit Varieties) have observer status.[18]

System of protection edit

The convention defines both how the organization must be governed and run, and the basic concepts of plant variety protection that must be included in the domestic laws of the members of the union. These concepts include:[19]

  • The criteria for new varieties to be protected: novelty, distinctness, uniformity, and stability.
  • The process for application for a grant.
  • Intellectual property rights conferred to an approved breeder.
  • Exceptions to the rights conferred to the breeder.
  • Required duration of breeder's right.
  • Events in which a breeder's rights must be declared null and void.

In order to be granted breeder's rights, the variety in question must be shown to be new. This means that the plant variety cannot have previously been available for more than one year in the applicant's country, or for more than four years in any other country or territory. The variety must also be distinct (D), that is, easily distinguishable through certain characteristics from any other known variety (protected or otherwise). The other two criteria, uniformity (U) and stability (S), mean that individual plants of the new variety must show no more variation in the relevant characteristics than one would naturally expect to see, and that future generations of the variety through various propagation means must continue to show the relevant distinguishing characteristics. The UPOV offers general guidelines for DUS testing.[20]

A breeder can apply for rights for a new variety in any union member country, and can file in as many countries as desired without waiting for a result from previous applications. Protection only applies in the country in which it was granted, so there are no reciprocal protections unless otherwise agreed by the countries in question. There is a right of priority, and the application date of the first application filed in any country is the date used in determining priority.

The rights conferred to the breeder are similar to other intellectual property rights, such as patents, even though there are important differences.[21] Their purpose is to create a temporary monopoly on a plant variety, to allow its breeder to redeem the costs he invested to create this innovation - typically the creation of a new variety takes 10 to 15 years and implies a substantial investment.[22] The breeder must authorize any actions taken in propagating the new variety, including selling and marketing, importing and exporting, keeping stock of, and reproducing. This means that the breeder can, for example, require a licensing fee for any company interested in reproducing his variety for sale. The breeder also has the right to name the new variety, based on certain guidelines that prevent the name from being deliberately misleading or too similar to another variety's name.

In the 1991 convention there are four exceptions to the rights of the breeder owning a plant variety:[23]

  • Breeders exception: Even if a variety is protected it can be freely used by an other breeder as a source for new varieties, without the authorization of the owner of the original variety. With the introduction of the 1991 convention this exception has been narrowed down to exclude "essentially derived varieties".[8]
  • Farmers exception: In the 1978 Convention the reproduction of seeds, as well as their exchange with other farmers is implicitly allowed, because the exclusive right of the breeder only extend to the production for the purpose of marketing.[24] With the 1991 Convention the scope of breeders rights were expanded to include the multiplication of a variety.[6] However, there still is an optional exception that can be included in national legislation to allow reproduction of seeds of certain crops by farmers, but only "within reasonable limits and subject to the safeguarding of the legitimate interests of the breeder" which practically means that the farmers is obliged to pay license fees to the breeder. The only members of UPOV 91 allowing the free reproduction of seeds for some species by farmers are Switzerland[25][26] and United States of America.[27] UPOV secretariat never assessed if this implementation is in line with the convention as these countries already member of UPOV 1978 and national laws are only analysed for new members and not for existing members who update from UPOV 78 to UPOV 91.
  • Exception for private non-commercial use: While free private use is implicitly allowed in UPOV 78, in UPOV 91 a mandatory explicit exception has been introduced.[8] It allows the reproduction of protected varieties for private use, by amateur gardeners as well as by subsistence farmers. However, the exception only applies exclusively for the production of a food crop to be consumed by that farmer or gardener.[22] In any case the exchange or gift of seeds or propagating material of protected varieties are prohibited.
  • Exception for research: Acts done for experimental purpose are excluded from the scope of breeders rights UPOV 91,[8] something that was implicit in UPOV 78.[6]

The 1991 Convention specifies that the breeder's right must be granted for at least 20 years from grant date for perennial crops and at least 25 years in the case of varieties of trees or vines. In the 1978 convention minimum duration of breeders rights are 15 years for perennials and 18 years for trees and vines.

Finally, there are provisions for how to negate granted breeders' rights if the rights are determined to be unfounded. That is, if it is discovered after the application has been granted that the variety is not actually novel or distinct, or if it is discovered to not be uniform or stable, the breeder's rights are nullified. In addition, if it is discovered that the person who applied for protection of the variety is not the actual breeder, the rights are nullified unless they can be transferred to the proper person. If it is discovered after a period of protection that the variety is no longer uniform and stable, the breeder's rights are canceled.

WIPO Lex provides support for related IP legal collections, including UPOV Lex.[28]

Conflicts between breeders' rights and peasants' rights edit

Several international standards enacted by the United Nations oblige their member states to protect the rights of farmers to seeds: Article 19 of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas (UNDROP) grants peasants "The right to save, use, exchange and sell their farm-saved seed or propagating material."[29] The same right is also codified in Article 9 of the International Treaty for Plant Genetic Resources for Agriculture (ITPGRFA).[30] Furthermore, peasants rights to seeds are also mentioned in the Convention for Biological Diversity and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. UPOV standards violate this rights in the case of protected varieties, as farmers only are allowed to save seeds within very narrow limits and are not allowed to exchange or sell any seeds at all, according to UPOV 91.[31] Furthermore, as implementation of UPOV is based on predefined standards, there is little room for member states to fulfill their obligation to take into account possible effects on the human right situation in their countries and to allow for participation of farmers.[32] In many developing countries, small scale farmers have not been informed prior to adopting and implementation of new plant variety protection laws and had no possibility participate in these decisions.[33]

As UNDROP and UNDRIP are part of Human Rights standards, they are higher order norms and therefore they prevail over property rights on seeds, according to human rights experts.[34] As a consequence, states are obliged to revise regulations in national law that violate peasant's rights and adapt trade agreement or other intergovernmental obligations such as UPOV.

In a report on seeds and farmers' rights to the Human Rights Council, Special Rapporteur for the right to food Michael Fakhri states that UPOV 91 violates farmers' rights.[35] The report denounces pressures applied by industrialised countries on countries of the global South to join UPOV. It calls on UN member states to design and interpret seed policies and plant variety protection laws in a way that protects farmers rights and promotes farmers' seed systems rather than restricting them. Ethiopia, India, Malaysia and Thailand (all non-UPOV members) are mentioned as positive examples.

In 2021 the Supreme Court of Justice of Honduras deemed unconstitutional the Legislative Decree No. 21-2012 [36] containing the Law for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants. The supreme court sacked the UPOV 91-based law because it judged it to be in contradiction with a range of human rights as well as with the obligation of the State of Honduras to protect the envrionment.[37]

Impacts of UPOV edit

Impacts on development of seed sector and accessibility of seeds edit

A study published by UPOV in 2005 evaluated the impact of UPOV compliant regulations in Argentina, China, Kenya, Poland and South Korea.[38] The study found that in these countries the number of protected varieties of some crops has increased after these countries have joined UPOV. The report takes this as an indicator that farmers and the agricultural sector as whole has profited. However, the by far does not live up to the scientific standards for impact assessments and has been criticized being heavily biased.[39]

A report from 2005 commissioned by the World Bank looked at the impact of intellectual property rights regimes on the plant breeding industry in 5 developing countries. It concludes that intellectual property regimes have relatively little effect on the emergence of the private seed sector. India, the country with the most dynamic seed sector analysed in the report, is not a member of UPOV and has no strict plant variety protection regime. Contrarily, the report states that farmer's seed systems are the main source of seeds and new varieties in the countries studied and that strict intellectual property rights on seeds may reduce the effectiveness of these systems.[40] An analysis of the data from the Access to Seed Index[41] from 2019, came to a similar finding: Many of the developing having the most vibrant private seed sector are not member of UPOV but have their own system of plant variety protection or no plant variety protection at all.[42]

A study published by NGOs looked at the effects of the implementation of UPOV 1991 in francophone Africa in the 11 years after the accession of OAPI to UPOV.[43] It found that in the 17 member countries only 117 plant varieties have been newly protected during this period, half of them had already lapsed because of nonpayment of fees. At least half of them were varieties that had been available before. The study finds no increase in plant breeding activities in the region; while breeding by the public sector continued independent of plant variety protection, breeding by private companies remained largely non-existent.

In the case of Iceland, no new variety has been protected since its accession to UPOV 91 in 2006, while 49 varieties had been newly protected in the 10 years before.[44]

An increased number of protected varieties does not automatically increase the accessibility of seeds to farmers. In many developing countries the majority of seeds used by small scale farmers come from the farmers’ managed seed sector. Frequently, also seeds of protected varieties are saved, exchanged and sold.[45] As these practices are prohibited in UPOV 91, farmers lose access to an inexpensive source of seeds while commercial seeds remain unaffordable for many.[40]

Impacts on agricultural development and productivity edit

A study commissioned by UPOV examined the socioeconomic benefits of plant variety protection, 10 years after the accession of Viet Nam to UPOV 91.[46] The study found that the productivity of 3 major staple crops increased during this period: Yield gains were 18% for rice, 30% for corn and 43% for sweet potato. The study argues that improved varieties which had been introduced due to stricter plant variety protection contributed to this development, and that 74 million people could be fed with the additional sweet potatoes. However, in the case of sweet potato that had the highest gain, no new variety had been protected and also for the other crops, productivity gains can be explained with other factors.[47]  A Study published by an Asian NGO finds that implementation of UPOV 91 in Vietnam did not lead to an increase of investment in breeding or in gains of productivity. Instead, it strengthened international commercial breeders at the cost of weakening the public breeders and threatening the farmers' seed sector.[48]

Impacts on food security and poverty reduction edit

Smallholder farmers in the global South are amongst the groups most prone to poverty and hunger. They predominantly rely on seeds that are produced by farmers themselves,[49] often also including varieties originally bred by public and private breeders. These farmers’ seed systems are often highly resilient and more accessible to famers than seeds offered by breeding companies.[50] Through the implementation of strict plant variety protection in line with UPOV 91, and the restrictions on the use, exchange and sale of farm-saved seeds, farmers become more dependent on the seeds offered directely by breeding companies which often are unaffordable for the most vulnerable groups.[32] As a consequence, adherence to UPOV would most likely have negative effects for poverty reduction[51] and food security[35] in developing countries.

The risk for food security that come with the implementation of strict regulations for plant variety protection might be an important reason why many countries of the global South hesitate to join UPOV or to update from UPOV 78 to UPOV 91 as the latter puts narrow limits to the farmer's privilege to reuse farm saved seeds.[6]

In a report from 2009 the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Olivier De Schutter, analysed the impact of UPOV on the right to food. He found that IP-related monopoly rights could cause poor farmers to become "increasingly dependent on expensive inputs" and at risk of indebtedness. Further, the system risks neglecting poor farmers’ needs in favour of agribusiness needs, jeopardising traditional systems of seed saving and exchange, and losing biodiversity to "the uniformization encouraged by the spread of commercial varieties".These findings were by his successor Michael Fakhri in a report from 2022[35] and by the UN Secretary-General in a report from 2015.[52]

Impacts on biodiversity and genetic resources edit

Diverse genetic resources are the basis of all plant breeding and crop production. Breeders rely on farmers’ varieties and wild relatives as a source for interesting traits, such as resistance against pathogens and pests.[53] The number of varieties has decreased by 75% in the past century[54] and there is far less area planted to landraces worldwide as these have been replaced by scientifically bread varieties.[53] Furthermore, crop genetic diversity may decline with concentration of area planted in a few favoured varieties and reductions in “genetic distance” between these varieties.[53] The increasing dominance of few global seed producers and the implementation of increasingly strict plant variety regulation might have played a key role in this development. As the UN's Secretary General stated in a report from 2015, restrictions on seed management systems linked to UPOV 91 can lead to a loss of biodiversity and in turn harm the livelihoods of small-scale farmers as well as weaken the genetic base on which we all depend for our future supply of food.[49]

The design of plant variety protection facilitates appropriation of genetic resources and biopiracy. Due to the criteria defined by UPOV, most landraces and farmer varieties cannot be protected and are therefore open for appropriation. UPOV 91-based PVP law also does not include a requirement for applicants to disclose the origin of their material and prove that the plant genetic resources used in the breeding process were legally acquired.[32] In its guidelines, UPOV even explicitly forbids its members to request a declaration of lawful acquirement or prior informed consent (as required by the Convention on Biological Diversity) as precondition for granting PVP.[55]

The documentation of a case in West Africa shows that the risk of biopiracy is real: A French seed company tempted to claim plant variety protection for the traditional onion variety “Violette de Galmi”. The claim was challenged by the Nigerien government, the seed company withdrew the application and submitted a new application for the same variety but under another name.[56][43] The fact that challenging the application was only possible because the seed company used the original name of the traditional variety shows how easily varieties can be appropriated.

Critics and resistance edit

Several social movements and civil society organisations such as South Center, GRAIN, AFSA, SEARICE, Third World Network, and La Via Campesina[57] have criticised UPOV Secretariatpointed. Some of them have pointed out the resistance of the UPOV Secretariat and Member States to dialogue with all interested parties, in particular:

A study by Professor Graham Dutfield[59] concluded that UPOV's governance falls short in many different ways, UPOV officials know very little about actual farming, and how small-scale farmers actually develop new varieties and produce them, and that they knew much more about breeding, which favours commercial breeders. The UPOV system thus favours commercial breeders over farmers and producers, and private interests over public interests.

 
Activists protesting in front of UPOV headquarters

The intergovernmental organisation South Center critizises that, while conventions of UPOV 78 and UPOV 91 have been negotiated almost exclusively by industrialised countries, they are imposed to all countries including in the southern hemisphere.[15] GRAIN even blames UPOV of neo-colonialistic behaviour.[60]

At the occasion of UPOV's 60st anniversary on 2 December 2021, a coalition led by GRAIN organised the “Week of Action: Stop UPOV”, with a call for action with over 230 signatories across 47 countries.[61] In front of UPOV's headquarter group of activists from the Swiss Coalition for the Right to Seeds conducted a protest action, symbolicly freeing plants from the chains of UPOV.

The week of action was repeated in 2022 with further protests in a range of countries.[62]

See also edit

Internal links edit

External links edit

  • Official Website of UPOV
  • List of UPOV members, with date of accession and respective act of the convention to which it is party
  • Association for Plant Breeding for the Benefit of Society (APBREBES), civil society organisation with observer status to UPOV
  • SWISSAID Foundation

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ a b "Office of UPOV". International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV). September 23, 2019. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
  2. ^ Dutfield, Graham (2011). Food, Biological Diversity and Intellectual Property: The Role of the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV) (PDF). Quaker United Nations Office.
  3. ^ "Actes des conférences internationales pour la protection des obtentions végétales" (PDF). UPOV. 1974.
  4. ^ a b List of UPOV Members published by [1](PDF [2])
  5. ^ a b "Implementation of Article 27.3(b): Drafting and Enacting National Legislation (Sui Generis Systems)". FAO. Retrieved November 26, 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e Peschard, Karine (October 2021). "Searching for flexibility" (PDF). APBREBES.
  7. ^ "UPOV 91 and trade agreements Compromising farmers' right to save and sell seeds" (PDF). Both Ends. October 2018.
  8. ^ a b c d "1991 Act: International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants" (PDF). UPOV. March 19, 1991.
  9. ^ The European Community was the first intergovernmental organization to join; The European Union is its legal successor.
  10. ^ UPOV Notification No. 106, International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants, Accession by Georgia, October 29, 2008.
  11. ^ "UPOV Press Release 134" (PDF). UPOV. November 3, 2021.
  12. ^ "UPOV Notification No. 69: Ratification by the United States of America of the 1991 Act". UPOV. January 22, 1999. Retrieved May 5, 2014.
  13. ^ UPOV web site, Members of the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants, International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants, UPOV Convention (1961), as revised at Geneva (1972, 1978 and 1991) Status on May 12, 2009. Consulted on June 26, 2009. January 10, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ UPOV (October 26, 2017). Guidance On How to Become a Member of UPOV (PDF) (Report). Retrieved November 17, 2021.
  15. ^ a b Syam, Nirmalya; Syed, Shirin; Munoz-Tellez, Viviana (2023). The UPOV accession process: Preventing appropriate PVP laws for new members (PDF). APBREBES and South Centre.
  16. ^ "Examination of the Conformity of the Philippine Plant Variety Protection Act of 2002 With the 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention" (PDF). UPOV. March 5, 2007. Retrieved November 26, 2021.
  17. ^ "Examination of the Conformity of the Protection of New Plant Varieties Act 2004 of Malaysia With the 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention" (PDF). UPOV. February 2, 2005.
  18. ^ "Observers". Retrieved March 8, 2024.
  19. ^ UPOV System of Protection. http://www.upov.int/en/about/upov_system.htm December 18, 2005, at the Wayback Machine. 2002.
  20. ^ General introduction to the examination of distinctness, uniformity and stability and the development of harmonized descriptions of new varieties of plants (PDF) (Report). UPOV. April 19, 2002. Retrieved July 29, 2015.
  21. ^ "Patents and Plant Variety Protection". The Development Fund.
  22. ^ a b "Explanatory Notes on Exceptions to the Breeder's Right Under the 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention" (PDF). UPOV. October 22, 2009. Retrieved December 1, 2021.
  23. ^ "Exceptions to the Breeder's Right (1991 Act of the UPOV Convention)". UPOV.
  24. ^ "1978 Act: International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants" (PDF). UPOV. October 27, 1978.
  25. ^ "Verordnung über den Schutz von Pflanzenzüchtungen". Fedlex. June 28, 2008.
  26. ^ "Glossar: Begriffe und Erläuterungen im Sortenschutz" (PDF). BLW. October 10, 2013.
  27. ^ "PVP Act". United States Code. United States.
  28. ^ "WIPO Lex". wipolex.wipo.int. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
  29. ^ "United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas : resolution / adopted by the Human Rights Council on 28 September 2018". United Nations. September 28, 2018. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
  30. ^ "International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture". FAO. 2009. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
  31. ^ Shashikant, Sangeeta (November 1, 2016). "International Contradictions on Farmers Rights: The interrelations between the International Treaty, its Article 9 on Farmers' Rights and UPOV" (PDF). UPOV.
  32. ^ a b c Anja, Christinck; Tvedt, Morten Walløe (2015). The UPOV Convention, Farmers' Rights and Human Rights; An integrated assessment of potentially conflicting legal frameworks. Bonn and Eschborn, Germany: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH.
  33. ^ Braunschweig, Thomas; Meienberg, François; Pionetti, Carine; Shashikant, Sangeeta; Dommen, Caroline (2014). Owning Seeds, Accessing Food, A human rights impact assessment of UPOV 1991. The Berne Declaration.
  34. ^ Golay, Christophe. "Research Brief: The Right to Seeds and Intellectual Property Rights" (PDF). Geneva Academy. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
  35. ^ a b c Fakri, Michael (December 30, 2021). "Seeds, right to life and farmers' rights - Report of the Special Rapporteur on the right to food, Michael Fakhri". UN Digital Library. United Nations. Retrieved March 31, 2022.
  36. ^ "Sentence by the Supreme Court of Justice of Honduras, declaring the Law for the Protection of Plant Varieties unconstitutional" (PDF). APBREBES.
  37. ^ "Views, Experiences and Best Practices as an example of possible options for the national implementation of Article 9 of the International Treaty" (PDF). FAO - ITPGRFA. FIAN International.
  38. ^ UPOV Report on the Impact of Plant Variety Protection (PDF). Geneva: UPOV. 2005.
  39. ^ Lieberherr, Silva; Meienberg, François (2014). UPOV report on the impact of plant variety protection - A critique (PDF). Zürich: Berne Declaration.
  40. ^ a b Impacts of strengthened intellectual property rights on the plant breeding industry in developing countries : a synthesis of five case studies. N.P. Louwaars. Wageningen: Wageningen UR. 2005. ISBN 90-73384-59-1. OCLC 66478173.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  41. ^ "Access to Seed Index". Access to Seeds Foundation. Retrieved July 13, 2022.
  42. ^ "Access to Seed Index Shows: Implementation of UPOV 1991 Unnecessary For the Development of a Strong Seed Market - A Policy Brief by the Association for Plant Breeding for the Benefit of Society (APBREBES)" (PDF). Association for Plant Breeding for the Benefit of Society (APBREBES). Retrieved July 7, 2022.
  43. ^ a b Coulibaly, Mohamed; Brac de la Perrière, Robert Ali (2019). A Dysfunctional Plant Variety Protection System: Ten Years of UPOV Implementation in Francophone Africa (PDF). APBREBES and BEDE.
  44. ^ "PLUTO Plant Variety Database". UPOV. Retrieved January 7, 2022.
  45. ^ Sperling, Louise (2021). "The Informal Seed Business: Focus on Yellow Bean in Tanzania". Sustainability. 13 (16): 8897. doi:10.3390/su13168897.
  46. ^ Noleppa, Steffen (2017). The socio-economic benefits of UPOV membership in Viet Nam: An ex-post assessment on plant breeding and agricultural productivity after ten years (PDF). HFFA Research GmbH.
  47. ^ "UPOV Misleads Developing Countries with Absurdly Incorrect Information". APBREBES. March 1, 2021. Retrieved January 13, 2021.
  48. ^ Manalo, Cid Ryan P.; Igna, Normita G. (2021). Plant Variety Protection in Practice in Vietnam: The Pains in the Gains Achieved (PDF). Philippines: Searice.
  49. ^ a b Ki-Moon, Ban (August 18, 2015). "Agriculture development, food security and nutrition - Report of the Secretary-General". UN docs. Retrieved March 31, 2022.
  50. ^ Birachi, E.A. (September 1, 2021). "Analysis of the Yellow Bean Corridor in Tanzania" (PDF). USAID.
  51. ^ Oberthür, Sebastian (December 19, 2011). "Intellectual Property Rights on Genetic Resources and the Fight Against Poverty" (PDF). European Parliament. Directorate-General for External Policies of the Union. Retrieved March 31, 2022.
  52. ^ UN Secretary-General. "Agriculture development, food security and nutrition. Report of the Secretary-General" (PDF). United Nations General Assembly.
  53. ^ a b c Rubenstein, Kelly Day (June 2006). "Crop Genetic Resources An Economic Appraisal" (PDF). USDA ESR Report Summary. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
  54. ^ "What is happening to agrobiodiversity?". FAO. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
  55. ^ "Guidance for the Preparation of Laws Based on the 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention" (PDF). UPOV Council. April 6, 2017.
  56. ^ "Farmers' Seed, the regulatory framework, and seed policy in Niger" (PDF). SWISSAID. April 2019. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
  57. ^ UPOV – ITPGRFA 2016 See in particular the interventions of Bram de Jonge, Seed Policy Officer, Oxfam and Sangeeta Shashikant, Legal Advisor, Third World Network, and the final comments of Guy Kastler from Via Campesina
  58. ^ UPOV to decide on farmers’ and civil society participation in its sessions European Coordination Via Campesina (ECVC) & Association for Plant Breeding for the Benefit of Society (APBREBES) January 10, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  59. ^ Graham Dutfield: Food, Biological Diversity and Intellectual Property – The Role of the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV) March 23, 2012, at the Wayback Machine 2011
  60. ^ "Colonization never ended". Twitter. @GRAIN_org. December 6, 2021. Retrieved May 2, 2023.
  61. ^ "GRAIN in 2021: Highlights of our activities" (PDF). GRAIN.org.
  62. ^ "STOP UPOV". Facebook.

international, union, protection, varieties, plants, upov, french, union, internationale, pour, protection, obtentions, végétales, treaty, body, united, nations, intergovernmental, organization, with, headquarters, geneva, switzerland, objective, provide, effe. The International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants or UPOV French Union internationale pour la protection des obtentions vegetales is a treaty body non United Nations intergovernmental organization with headquarters in Geneva Switzerland Its objective is to provide an effective system for plant variety protection It does so by defining a blueprint regulation to be implemented by its members in national law The expression UPOV Convention also refers to one of the three instruments that relate to the union namely the 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention UPOV 91 1978 Act of the UPOV Convention UPOV 78 and 1961 Act of the UPOV Convention with Amendments of 1972 UPOV 61 International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants UPOV Union internationale pour la protection des obtentions vegetalesUPOV HeadquartersLegal statusIn forceHeadquartersGeneva SwitzerlandSecretary GeneralDaren Tang 1 Vice Secretary GeneralPeter Button 1 Parent organizationWIPOWebsitewww wbr upov wbr int Contents 1 History 2 Membership 3 System of protection 4 Conflicts between breeders rights and peasants rights 5 Impacts of UPOV 5 1 Impacts on development of seed sector and accessibility of seeds 5 2 Impacts on agricultural development and productivity 5 3 Impacts on food security and poverty reduction 5 4 Impacts on biodiversity and genetic resources 6 Critics and resistance 7 See also 7 1 Internal links 7 2 External links 7 3 Notes and referencesHistory editUPOV was established by the International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants UPOV 61 The convention was adopted in Paris in 1961 and revised in 1972 1978 and 1991 The initiative for the foundation of UPOV came from European breeding companies who 1956 called for a conference to define basic principles for plant variety protection 2 The first version of the UPOV convention was agreed on in 1961 by 12 European countries 3 By 1990 still only 19 countries were part of the convention with South Africa being the only country from the Southern Hemisphere 4 From the mid 1990s more and more countries from Latin America Asia and Africa joined the convention A reason for this development might be the TRIPS Agreement that obliged WTO members to introduce plant variety protection in national law 5 Later many countries have been obliged to join UPOV through specific clauses in bilateral trade agreements in particular with the EU USA Japan and EFTA 6 The TRIPS Agreement doesn t require adherence to UPOV but gives the possibility to define a sui generis system for plant variety protection 5 In contrast clauses in free trade agreement are more comprehensive and typically require adherence to UPOV 6 7 While the earlier versions of the convention have been replaced UPOV 78 and UPOV 91 coexist Existing members are free to decide whether they want to ratify UPOV 91 or stay with UPOV 78 whereas new members have to adhere to the more restrictive version from 1991 8 Membership editAs of December 3 2021 two intergovernmental organisations and 76 countries and were members of UPOV 4 African Intellectual Property Organisation Albania Argentina Australia Austria Azerbaijan Belarus Belgium Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegovina Brazil Bulgaria Canada Chile China Colombia Costa Rica Croatia Czech Republic Denmark Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt Estonia European Union 9 Finland France Georgia 10 Germany Ghana 11 Guatemala Hungary Iceland Ireland Israel Italy Japan Jordan Kenya Kyrgyzstan Latvia Lithuania Mexico Moldova Montenegro Morocco the Netherlands New Zealand Nicaragua North Macedonia Norway Oman Panama Paraguay Peru Poland Portugal Republic of Korea Romania Russian Federation Serbia Singapore Slovakia Slovenia South Africa Spain Sweden Switzerland Tanzania Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Ukraine the United Kingdom the United States of America with a reservation 12 Uruguay Uzbekistan and Viet Nam 13 nbsp Members of UPOV differentiated by the Act of the Convention to which the state is party For a country or intergovernmental organisation to become member it needs to implement the requirements of the actual convention in national law UPOV s secretariat analyises the regulation of plant variety protection in national law and writes a recommendation to the council whether or not the applicant shall be granted membership 14 In the past several countries have been refused memberships because their national plant variety protection laws granted exceptions for subsistence farmers to reuse and exchange seeds 15 16 17 In addition a large number of countries eg Pakistan intergovernmental organisations eg European Free Trade Association and international non governmental organisations eg International Community of Breeders of Asexually Reproduced Ornamental and Fruit Varieties have observer status 18 System of protection editThe convention defines both how the organization must be governed and run and the basic concepts of plant variety protection that must be included in the domestic laws of the members of the union These concepts include 19 The criteria for new varieties to be protected novelty distinctness uniformity and stability The process for application for a grant Intellectual property rights conferred to an approved breeder Exceptions to the rights conferred to the breeder Required duration of breeder s right Events in which a breeder s rights must be declared null and void In order to be granted breeder s rights the variety in question must be shown to be new This means that the plant variety cannot have previously been available for more than one year in the applicant s country or for more than four years in any other country or territory The variety must also be distinct D that is easily distinguishable through certain characteristics from any other known variety protected or otherwise The other two criteria uniformity U and stability S mean that individual plants of the new variety must show no more variation in the relevant characteristics than one would naturally expect to see and that future generations of the variety through various propagation means must continue to show the relevant distinguishing characteristics The UPOV offers general guidelines for DUS testing 20 A breeder can apply for rights for a new variety in any union member country and can file in as many countries as desired without waiting for a result from previous applications Protection only applies in the country in which it was granted so there are no reciprocal protections unless otherwise agreed by the countries in question There is a right of priority and the application date of the first application filed in any country is the date used in determining priority The rights conferred to the breeder are similar to other intellectual property rights such as patents even though there are important differences 21 Their purpose is to create a temporary monopoly on a plant variety to allow its breeder to redeem the costs he invested to create this innovation typically the creation of a new variety takes 10 to 15 years and implies a substantial investment 22 The breeder must authorize any actions taken in propagating the new variety including selling and marketing importing and exporting keeping stock of and reproducing This means that the breeder can for example require a licensing fee for any company interested in reproducing his variety for sale The breeder also has the right to name the new variety based on certain guidelines that prevent the name from being deliberately misleading or too similar to another variety s name In the 1991 convention there are four exceptions to the rights of the breeder owning a plant variety 23 Breeders exception Even if a variety is protected it can be freely used by an other breeder as a source for new varieties without the authorization of the owner of the original variety With the introduction of the 1991 convention this exception has been narrowed down to exclude essentially derived varieties 8 Farmers exception In the 1978 Convention the reproduction of seeds as well as their exchange with other farmers is implicitly allowed because the exclusive right of the breeder only extend to the production for the purpose of marketing 24 With the 1991 Convention the scope of breeders rights were expanded to include the multiplication of a variety 6 However there still is an optional exception that can be included in national legislation to allow reproduction of seeds of certain crops by farmers but only within reasonable limits and subject to the safeguarding of the legitimate interests of the breeder which practically means that the farmers is obliged to pay license fees to the breeder The only members of UPOV 91 allowing the free reproduction of seeds for some species by farmers are Switzerland 25 26 and United States of America 27 UPOV secretariat never assessed if this implementation is in line with the convention as these countries already member of UPOV 1978 and national laws are only analysed for new members and not for existing members who update from UPOV 78 to UPOV 91 Exception for private non commercial use While free private use is implicitly allowed in UPOV 78 in UPOV 91 a mandatory explicit exception has been introduced 8 It allows the reproduction of protected varieties for private use by amateur gardeners as well as by subsistence farmers However the exception only applies exclusively for the production of a food crop to be consumed by that farmer or gardener 22 In any case the exchange or gift of seeds or propagating material of protected varieties are prohibited Exception for research Acts done for experimental purpose are excluded from the scope of breeders rights UPOV 91 8 something that was implicit in UPOV 78 6 The 1991 Convention specifies that the breeder s right must be granted for at least 20 years from grant date for perennial crops and at least 25 years in the case of varieties of trees or vines In the 1978 convention minimum duration of breeders rights are 15 years for perennials and 18 years for trees and vines Finally there are provisions for how to negate granted breeders rights if the rights are determined to be unfounded That is if it is discovered after the application has been granted that the variety is not actually novel or distinct or if it is discovered to not be uniform or stable the breeder s rights are nullified In addition if it is discovered that the person who applied for protection of the variety is not the actual breeder the rights are nullified unless they can be transferred to the proper person If it is discovered after a period of protection that the variety is no longer uniform and stable the breeder s rights are canceled WIPO Lex provides support for related IP legal collections including UPOV Lex 28 Conflicts between breeders rights and peasants rights editSeveral international standards enacted by the United Nations oblige their member states to protect the rights of farmers to seeds Article 19 of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas UNDROP grants peasants The right to save use exchange and sell their farm saved seed or propagating material 29 The same right is also codified in Article 9 of the International Treaty for Plant Genetic Resources for Agriculture ITPGRFA 30 Furthermore peasants rights to seeds are also mentioned in the Convention for Biological Diversity and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples UPOV standards violate this rights in the case of protected varieties as farmers only are allowed to save seeds within very narrow limits and are not allowed to exchange or sell any seeds at all according to UPOV 91 31 Furthermore as implementation of UPOV is based on predefined standards there is little room for member states to fulfill their obligation to take into account possible effects on the human right situation in their countries and to allow for participation of farmers 32 In many developing countries small scale farmers have not been informed prior to adopting and implementation of new plant variety protection laws and had no possibility participate in these decisions 33 As UNDROP and UNDRIP are part of Human Rights standards they are higher order norms and therefore they prevail over property rights on seeds according to human rights experts 34 As a consequence states are obliged to revise regulations in national law that violate peasant s rights and adapt trade agreement or other intergovernmental obligations such as UPOV In a report on seeds and farmers rights to the Human Rights Council Special Rapporteur for the right to food Michael Fakhri states that UPOV 91 violates farmers rights 35 The report denounces pressures applied by industrialised countries on countries of the global South to join UPOV It calls on UN member states to design and interpret seed policies and plant variety protection laws in a way that protects farmers rights and promotes farmers seed systems rather than restricting them Ethiopia India Malaysia and Thailand all non UPOV members are mentioned as positive examples In 2021 the Supreme Court of Justice of Honduras deemed unconstitutional the Legislative Decree No 21 2012 36 containing the Law for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants The supreme court sacked the UPOV 91 based law because it judged it to be in contradiction with a range of human rights as well as with the obligation of the State of Honduras to protect the envrionment 37 Impacts of UPOV editImpacts on development of seed sector and accessibility of seeds edit A study published by UPOV in 2005 evaluated the impact of UPOV compliant regulations in Argentina China Kenya Poland and South Korea 38 The study found that in these countries the number of protected varieties of some crops has increased after these countries have joined UPOV The report takes this as an indicator that farmers and the agricultural sector as whole has profited However the by far does not live up to the scientific standards for impact assessments and has been criticized being heavily biased 39 A report from 2005 commissioned by the World Bank looked at the impact of intellectual property rights regimes on the plant breeding industry in 5 developing countries It concludes that intellectual property regimes have relatively little effect on the emergence of the private seed sector India the country with the most dynamic seed sector analysed in the report is not a member of UPOV and has no strict plant variety protection regime Contrarily the report states that farmer s seed systems are the main source of seeds and new varieties in the countries studied and that strict intellectual property rights on seeds may reduce the effectiveness of these systems 40 An analysis of the data from the Access to Seed Index 41 from 2019 came to a similar finding Many of the developing having the most vibrant private seed sector are not member of UPOV but have their own system of plant variety protection or no plant variety protection at all 42 A study published by NGOs looked at the effects of the implementation of UPOV 1991 in francophone Africa in the 11 years after the accession of OAPI to UPOV 43 It found that in the 17 member countries only 117 plant varieties have been newly protected during this period half of them had already lapsed because of nonpayment of fees At least half of them were varieties that had been available before The study finds no increase in plant breeding activities in the region while breeding by the public sector continued independent of plant variety protection breeding by private companies remained largely non existent In the case of Iceland no new variety has been protected since its accession to UPOV 91 in 2006 while 49 varieties had been newly protected in the 10 years before 44 An increased number of protected varieties does not automatically increase the accessibility of seeds to farmers In many developing countries the majority of seeds used by small scale farmers come from the farmers managed seed sector Frequently also seeds of protected varieties are saved exchanged and sold 45 As these practices are prohibited in UPOV 91 farmers lose access to an inexpensive source of seeds while commercial seeds remain unaffordable for many 40 Impacts on agricultural development and productivity edit A study commissioned by UPOV examined the socioeconomic benefits of plant variety protection 10 years after the accession of Viet Nam to UPOV 91 46 The study found that the productivity of 3 major staple crops increased during this period Yield gains were 18 for rice 30 for corn and 43 for sweet potato The study argues that improved varieties which had been introduced due to stricter plant variety protection contributed to this development and that 74 million people could be fed with the additional sweet potatoes However in the case of sweet potato that had the highest gain no new variety had been protected and also for the other crops productivity gains can be explained with other factors 47 A Study published by an Asian NGO finds that implementation of UPOV 91 in Vietnam did not lead to an increase of investment in breeding or in gains of productivity Instead it strengthened international commercial breeders at the cost of weakening the public breeders and threatening the farmers seed sector 48 Impacts on food security and poverty reduction edit Smallholder farmers in the global South are amongst the groups most prone to poverty and hunger They predominantly rely on seeds that are produced by farmers themselves 49 often also including varieties originally bred by public and private breeders These farmers seed systems are often highly resilient and more accessible to famers than seeds offered by breeding companies 50 Through the implementation of strict plant variety protection in line with UPOV 91 and the restrictions on the use exchange and sale of farm saved seeds farmers become more dependent on the seeds offered directely by breeding companies which often are unaffordable for the most vulnerable groups 32 As a consequence adherence to UPOV would most likely have negative effects for poverty reduction 51 and food security 35 in developing countries The risk for food security that come with the implementation of strict regulations for plant variety protection might be an important reason why many countries of the global South hesitate to join UPOV or to update from UPOV 78 to UPOV 91 as the latter puts narrow limits to the farmer s privilege to reuse farm saved seeds 6 In a report from 2009 the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food Olivier De Schutter analysed the impact of UPOV on the right to food He found that IP related monopoly rights could cause poor farmers to become increasingly dependent on expensive inputs and at risk of indebtedness Further the system risks neglecting poor farmers needs in favour of agribusiness needs jeopardising traditional systems of seed saving and exchange and losing biodiversity to the uniformization encouraged by the spread of commercial varieties These findings were by his successor Michael Fakhri in a report from 2022 35 and by the UN Secretary General in a report from 2015 52 Impacts on biodiversity and genetic resources edit Diverse genetic resources are the basis of all plant breeding and crop production Breeders rely on farmers varieties and wild relatives as a source for interesting traits such as resistance against pathogens and pests 53 The number of varieties has decreased by 75 in the past century 54 and there is far less area planted to landraces worldwide as these have been replaced by scientifically bread varieties 53 Furthermore crop genetic diversity may decline with concentration of area planted in a few favoured varieties and reductions in genetic distance between these varieties 53 The increasing dominance of few global seed producers and the implementation of increasingly strict plant variety regulation might have played a key role in this development As the UN s Secretary General stated in a report from 2015 restrictions on seed management systems linked to UPOV 91 can lead to a loss of biodiversity and in turn harm the livelihoods of small scale farmers as well as weaken the genetic base on which we all depend for our future supply of food 49 The design of plant variety protection facilitates appropriation of genetic resources and biopiracy Due to the criteria defined by UPOV most landraces and farmer varieties cannot be protected and are therefore open for appropriation UPOV 91 based PVP law also does not include a requirement for applicants to disclose the origin of their material and prove that the plant genetic resources used in the breeding process were legally acquired 32 In its guidelines UPOV even explicitly forbids its members to request a declaration of lawful acquirement or prior informed consent as required by the Convention on Biological Diversity as precondition for granting PVP 55 The documentation of a case in West Africa shows that the risk of biopiracy is real A French seed company tempted to claim plant variety protection for the traditional onion variety Violette de Galmi The claim was challenged by the Nigerien government the seed company withdrew the application and submitted a new application for the same variety but under another name 56 43 The fact that challenging the application was only possible because the seed company used the original name of the traditional variety shows how easily varieties can be appropriated Critics and resistance editSeveral social movements and civil society organisations such as South Center GRAIN AFSA SEARICE Third World Network and La Via Campesina 57 have criticised UPOV Secretariatpointed Some of them have pointed out the resistance of the UPOV Secretariat and Member States to dialogue with all interested parties in particular by keeping meetings secret by not making its documents publicly available by refusing farmers organisations NGO observer status with UPOV 58 A study by Professor Graham Dutfield 59 concluded that UPOV s governance falls short in many different ways UPOV officials know very little about actual farming and how small scale farmers actually develop new varieties and produce them and that they knew much more about breeding which favours commercial breeders The UPOV system thus favours commercial breeders over farmers and producers and private interests over public interests nbsp Activists protesting in front of UPOV headquarters The intergovernmental organisation South Center critizises that while conventions of UPOV 78 and UPOV 91 have been negotiated almost exclusively by industrialised countries they are imposed to all countries including in the southern hemisphere 15 GRAIN even blames UPOV of neo colonialistic behaviour 60 At the occasion of UPOV s 60st anniversary on 2 December 2021 a coalition led by GRAIN organised the Week of Action Stop UPOV with a call for action with over 230 signatories across 47 countries 61 In front of UPOV s headquarter group of activists from the Swiss Coalition for the Right to Seeds conducted a protest action symbolicly freeing plants from the chains of UPOV The week of action was repeated in 2022 with further protests in a range of countries 62 See also editInternal links edit Community Plant Variety Office CPVO Plant Variety Protection Act of 1970 Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers Rights Act 2001 Plant variety the legal term vs variety the botanical taxonomy term International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture Plant Treaty or ITPGRFA Convention on Biological Diversity CBD Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Use Nagoya Protocol United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Peasants UNDROP Bioprospecting and biopiracy Plant genetic resources PGR World Intellectual Property Organization WIPO External links edit Official Website of UPOV List of UPOV members with date of accession and respective act of the convention to which it is party Association for Plant Breeding for the Benefit of Society APBREBES civil society organisation with observer status to UPOV SWISSAID Foundation Notes and references edit a b Office of UPOV International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants UPOV September 23 2019 Retrieved December 22 2021 Dutfield Graham 2011 Food Biological Diversity and Intellectual Property The Role of the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants UPOV PDF Quaker United Nations Office Actes des conferences internationales pour la protection des obtentions vegetales PDF UPOV 1974 a b List of UPOV Members published by 1 PDF 2 a b Implementation of Article 27 3 b Drafting and Enacting National Legislation Sui Generis Systems FAO Retrieved November 26 2021 a b c d e Peschard Karine October 2021 Searching for flexibility PDF APBREBES UPOV 91 and trade agreements Compromising farmers right to save and sell seeds PDF Both Ends October 2018 a b c d 1991 Act International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants PDF UPOV March 19 1991 The European Community was the first intergovernmental organization to join The European Union is its legal successor UPOV Notification No 106 International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants Accession by Georgia October 29 2008 UPOV Press Release 134 PDF UPOV November 3 2021 UPOV Notification No 69 Ratification by the United States of America of the 1991 Act UPOV January 22 1999 Retrieved May 5 2014 UPOV web site Members of the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants UPOV Convention 1961 as revised at Geneva 1972 1978 and 1991 Status on May 12 2009 Consulted on June 26 2009 Archived January 10 2011 at the Wayback Machine UPOV October 26 2017 Guidance On How to Become a Member of UPOV PDF Report Retrieved November 17 2021 a b Syam Nirmalya Syed Shirin Munoz Tellez Viviana 2023 The UPOV accession process Preventing appropriate PVP laws for new members PDF APBREBES and South Centre Examination of the Conformity of the Philippine Plant Variety Protection Act of 2002 With the 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention PDF UPOV March 5 2007 Retrieved November 26 2021 Examination of the Conformity of the Protection of New Plant Varieties Act 2004 of Malaysia With the 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention PDF UPOV February 2 2005 Observers Retrieved March 8 2024 UPOV System of Protection http www upov int en about upov system htm Archived December 18 2005 at the Wayback Machine 2002 General introduction to the examination of distinctness uniformity and stability and the development of harmonized descriptions of new varieties of plants PDF Report UPOV April 19 2002 Retrieved July 29 2015 Patents and Plant Variety Protection The Development Fund a b Explanatory Notes on Exceptions to the Breeder s Right Under the 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention PDF UPOV October 22 2009 Retrieved December 1 2021 Exceptions to the Breeder s Right 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention UPOV 1978 Act International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants PDF UPOV October 27 1978 Verordnung uber den Schutz von Pflanzenzuchtungen Fedlex June 28 2008 Glossar Begriffe und Erlauterungen im Sortenschutz PDF BLW October 10 2013 PVP Act United States Code United States WIPO Lex wipolex wipo int Retrieved July 6 2022 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas resolution adopted by the Human Rights Council on 28 September 2018 United Nations September 28 2018 Retrieved December 21 2021 International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture FAO 2009 Retrieved December 21 2021 Shashikant Sangeeta November 1 2016 International Contradictions on Farmers Rights The interrelations between the International Treaty its Article 9 on Farmers Rights and UPOV PDF UPOV a b c Anja Christinck Tvedt Morten Walloe 2015 The UPOV Convention Farmers Rights and Human Rights An integrated assessment of potentially conflicting legal frameworks Bonn and Eschborn Germany Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit GIZ GmbH Braunschweig Thomas Meienberg Francois Pionetti Carine Shashikant Sangeeta Dommen Caroline 2014 Owning Seeds Accessing Food A human rights impact assessment of UPOV 1991 The Berne Declaration Golay Christophe Research Brief The Right to Seeds and Intellectual Property Rights PDF Geneva Academy Retrieved December 21 2021 a b c Fakri Michael December 30 2021 Seeds right to life and farmers rights Report of the Special Rapporteur on the right to food Michael Fakhri UN Digital Library United Nations Retrieved March 31 2022 Sentence by the Supreme Court of Justice of Honduras declaring the Law for the Protection of Plant Varieties unconstitutional PDF APBREBES Views Experiences and Best Practices as an example of possible options for the national implementation of Article 9 of the International Treaty PDF FAO ITPGRFA FIAN International UPOV Report on the Impact of Plant Variety Protection PDF Geneva UPOV 2005 Lieberherr Silva Meienberg Francois 2014 UPOV report on the impact of plant variety protection A critique PDF Zurich Berne Declaration a b Impacts of strengthened intellectual property rights on the plant breeding industry in developing countries a synthesis of five case studies N P Louwaars Wageningen Wageningen UR 2005 ISBN 90 73384 59 1 OCLC 66478173 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Access to Seed Index Access to Seeds Foundation Retrieved July 13 2022 Access to Seed Index Shows Implementation of UPOV 1991 Unnecessary For the Development of a Strong Seed Market A Policy Brief by the Association for Plant Breeding for the Benefit of Society APBREBES PDF Association for Plant Breeding for the Benefit of Society APBREBES Retrieved July 7 2022 a b Coulibaly Mohamed Brac de la Perriere Robert Ali 2019 A Dysfunctional Plant Variety Protection System Ten Years of UPOV Implementation in Francophone Africa PDF APBREBES and BEDE PLUTO Plant Variety Database UPOV Retrieved January 7 2022 Sperling Louise 2021 The Informal Seed Business Focus on Yellow Bean in Tanzania Sustainability 13 16 8897 doi 10 3390 su13168897 Noleppa Steffen 2017 The socio economic benefits of UPOV membership in Viet Nam An ex post assessment on plant breeding and agricultural productivity after ten years PDF HFFA Research GmbH UPOV Misleads Developing Countries with Absurdly Incorrect Information APBREBES March 1 2021 Retrieved January 13 2021 Manalo Cid Ryan P Igna Normita G 2021 Plant Variety Protection in Practice in Vietnam The Pains in the Gains Achieved PDF Philippines Searice a b Ki Moon Ban August 18 2015 Agriculture development food security and nutrition Report of the Secretary General UN docs Retrieved March 31 2022 Birachi E A September 1 2021 Analysis of the Yellow Bean Corridor in Tanzania PDF USAID Oberthur Sebastian December 19 2011 Intellectual Property Rights on Genetic Resources and the Fight Against Poverty PDF European Parliament Directorate General for External Policies of the Union Retrieved March 31 2022 UN Secretary General Agriculture development food security and nutrition Report of the Secretary General PDF United Nations General Assembly a b c Rubenstein Kelly Day June 2006 Crop Genetic Resources An Economic Appraisal PDF USDA ESR Report Summary Retrieved April 29 2022 What is happening to agrobiodiversity FAO Retrieved April 29 2022 Guidance for the Preparation of Laws Based on the 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention PDF UPOV Council April 6 2017 Farmers Seed the regulatory framework and seed policy in Niger PDF SWISSAID April 2019 Retrieved April 29 2022 UPOV ITPGRFA 2016 See in particular the interventions of Bram de Jonge Seed Policy Officer Oxfam and Sangeeta Shashikant Legal Advisor Third World Network and the final comments of Guy Kastler from Via Campesina UPOV to decide on farmers and civil society participation in its sessions European Coordination Via Campesina ECVC amp Association for Plant Breeding for the Benefit of Society APBREBES Archived January 10 2011 at the Wayback Machine Graham Dutfield Food Biological Diversity and Intellectual Property The Role of the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants UPOV Archived March 23 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2011 Colonization never ended Twitter GRAIN org December 6 2021 Retrieved May 2 2023 GRAIN in 2021 Highlights of our activities PDF GRAIN org STOP UPOV Facebook Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants amp oldid 1214485537, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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