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European Patent Office still granting patents on conventional vegetables; ‘Just following rules’


Geneva, Switzerland
May 23, 2013

Source: Intellectual Property Watch
By Catherine Saez

The European Patent Office is continuing to grant patents on conventional plants despite demands from the European Parliament and the German Parliament that the patent office refrain from granting such patents, the coalition of nongovernmental organisations called “No patents on seeds” said in a release.

According to the release, the EPO has granted patent EP2140023 to Syngenta, which says the invention concerns “novel pepper plants resistant to insects, and to seeds and fruits of said plants. The present invention also relates to methods of making and using such plants and their fruits.”

No patents on seeds said this case relates to pepper plants, such as chili, derived from conventional breeding and follows two precedent cases challenged at the EPO (for tomatoes and broccoli) for which decisions are still pending (IPW, IP-Watch briefs, 13 June 2012).

In the group’s view, the EPO has a biased way of interpreting the text of the European Patent Convention, which prohibits patents on plant and animal varieties. The coalition is concern, it said, “that patents will foster further market concentration, making farmers and other stakeholders in food supply even more dependent on just a few big international companies.”

It called for a revision of the European Patent Law “to exclude breeding material, plants and animals and food derived therof from patentability.” They launched an online petition, which they claim has received over 2 million signatures.

EPO: Stop Us Before We Patent Again

Meanwhile, EPO Deputy Spokesperson Rainer Osterwalder told Intellectual Property Watch that according to the European Patent Convention (EPC), plants fulfilling the patentability criteria such as novelty and inventive step are patentable. What is not patentable in Europe are essentially biological breeding methods for plants, such as marker-assisted breeding, he said.

A question remains on the plants issued from those processes as nothing in the current rules indicates how patentable plants should be obtained, he added. This question needs to be clarified by the EPO Enlarged Board of Appeal, in the context of the “broccoli” case, to which it has yet to give an answer.

In the meantime, in the case of patent EP2140023, the EPO had to follow the rules indicated by the EPC, Osterwalder said. The EPO values and respects the opinion of the European Parliament and keeps members informed of progress on those cases, he said, but a resolution of the Parliament is not a legally binding one and cannot supersede the EPO rules, which have been established by its member states.



More news from:
    . European Union - European Patent Office
    . Intellectual Property Watch


Website: http://www.epo.org

Published: May 23, 2013

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