Europe has one of the most diverse seed industries in the world. In Germany, the Netherlands and France alone, hundreds of small breeders are creating new varieties of cereals, vegetables and legumes.

Relying on decades of careful selection to improve desired traits like yield, disease resistance and flavour, they adapt seeds to local environments through methods like cross-breeding.

This legion of plant breeders help maintain Europe’s biodiversity and ensure that our food supplies stay plentiful. But their work is under growing threat from the patent industry.

Although it’s illegal to patent plants in the EU, those created through technological means are classified as a technical innovation and so can be patented.

This means that small-scale breeders can no longer freely plant these seeds or use them for research purposes without paying licensing fees.

  • Th4tGuyII@fedia.io
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    3 个月前

    What’s the point in making something illegal to patent if you can just side-step it by a technicality and enforce a patent anyway?

    If the point was to protect food security, then make it illegal to patent regardless of how the breed was created - sorry if you spent more breeding them artificially, food security for the people should be more important than money.

    • WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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      3 个月前

      But if we didn’t allow evilcorp to profit off the suffering of others, that would be communism, and as we all know communism is the devil.

    • bouh@lemmy.world
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      3 个月前

      That’s politics: one side tries to do the right thing and manage to get law written. The other side then hire lawyers to find a way to bypass this law. A judge get to choose who wins until the next law is voted. It means the first law wasn’t well written in the first place.