Monsanto And Syngenta About To Receive Dozens Of Patents On Unpatentable Plants
from the literally-above-the-law dept
Last month we wrote about the strange case of
unpatentable plants
becoming patentable in Europe thanks to a decision from the European
Patent Office's Enlarged Board of Appeal. That cleared the way for
companies to obtain such patents, and according to this post on the "no
patents on seeds" site -- I think you can probably work out where its
biases lie --
that's about to happen:
the European Patent Office (EPO) is about to
grant 30 patents on plants derived from conventional breeding to
Monsanto and its affiliated companies. The Swiss company Syngenta can
expect to receive around a dozen patents very soon. Many of the patents
claim vegetables such as tomatoes, peppers, cauliflower, carrots and
lettuce.
Leaving aside the important question of whether it should be possible to
obtain patents on plants, there are some other issues. For example,
Monsanto is currently trying to acquire Syngenta. Although its initial
offer of $45 billion was turned down, the view seems to be that Monsanto
will go higher because it needs Syngenta's broad portfolio of products
to address the
growing concerns over glyphosate, which lies at the heart of much of its range.
According to a recent report,
Monsanto is willing to divest itself of all of Syngenta's "seeds and
genetic traits businesses as well as some overlapping chemistry assets
to win regulatory approval", but it's not clear whether that would
include patents on plants. If it didn't, all of the imminent plant
patents mentioned above might end up with Monsanto, which would
represent a dangerous concentration of power in this important new area.
The more serious problem concerns the EPO. The decision to extend
patentability to plants was taken by the EPO's Enlarged Board of Appeal,
which should raise conflict of interest concerns, since the EPO is
funded by patent fees. That wouldn't be a serious problem if there were a
higher court to which appeals could be made.
But as the EPO told Intellectual Property Watch:
Decisions made by the Enlarged Board of Appeal cannot be challenged before another judiciary.
One body that does have the power to revise EPO decisions is the
Administrative Council of the EPO,
but it is made up largely of senior patent officials from the 40 or so
member states of the EPO, and so it is naturally pro-patent and thus
unlikely to interfere with extensions to patentability. In fact, there
is no democratically-elected body at all that could force the EPO to
change its policy on anything. Worse, the EPO is literally above
national laws, since
its offices enjoy diplomatic immunity of the kind given to embassies. As Wikipedia explains
it:
The premises of the European Patent Office enjoy a form
of extraterritoriality. In accordance with the Protocol on Privileges
and Immunities, which forms an integral part of the European Patent
Convention under Article 164(1) EPC, the premises of the European Patent
Organisation, and therefore those of the European Patent Office, are
inviolable. The authorities of the States in which the Organisation has
its premises are not authorized to enter those premises, except with the
consent of the President of the European Patent Office.
While that's the case -- and there's very little prospect of it changing
in the short-term -- extensions of patentability to non-patentable
matter are not just likely to happen, but will be well-nigh impossible
to reverse.
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