Everyone pays the price as patent holders on seeds stifle innovation

Ars Technica ·

Everyone pays the price as patent holders on seeds stifle innovation

The result is that no one outside of the dominant companies, not even the US government, knows which economically crucial crops, most of which are grown from patented seeds, might be vulnerable to …

The result is that no one outside of the dominant companies, not even the US government, knows which economically crucial crops, most of which are grown from patented seeds, might be vulnerable to emerging pests and pathogens. For years, plant breeders have been calling for genetic assessments of these seeds and the crops they grow; to date, no such studies have been conducted. A shift in direction But the May 2026 Justice Department court filing saying seed patents are blocking agricultural competition and research indicates the tide may be turning. In 2023, multinational agrochemical company Corteva sued a genetic engineering startup, Inari , for infringing its patents by, among other things, obtaining samples of Corteva’s patented seeds from a public repository and analyzing their genetic makeup. Though the Justice Department didn’t weigh in favor of either company, its court filing said companies should not be able to restrict the public from sequencing genetic material that was deposited as part of the process of securing patent protection. Notably, the department’s court filing came from the Antitrust Division rather than the Civil Division, which usually handles intellectual property issues. That difference suggests that the government sees this extension of patent rights as an illegitimate way for a company to exclude other companies from competing. The case is still winding its way through the legal process. …

Original source: Ars Technica

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