Protection of Plant Varieties
The Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers' Rights Act, 2001 (PPVFR Act)
Objectives: Protection of plant varieties, farmers' rights, development of new plant varieties
The PPVFR Act, 2001 was enacted in India to recognize and protect the rights of plant breeders and farmers. It aims to encourage the development of new plant varieties while safeguarding the interests of those who conserve traditional varieties.
- Protects the rights of plant breeders to new plant varieties they develop.
- Recognizes the contribution of farmers in conserving, improving, and making available plant genetic resources.
- Promotes the development of agriculture by stimulating investment in R&D of plant varieties.
Example: A research institute develops a new high-yielding wheat variety and applies for protection under the PPVFR Act.
Answer:
Plant Variety Protection and Registration
Criteria for registration (novelty, distinctiveness, uniformity, stability)
To qualify for registration under the PPVFR Act, a plant variety must fulfill the following criteria:
- Novelty: The variety must not have been sold or disposed of in India or abroad before a prescribed time period.
- Distinctiveness: It should be clearly distinguishable from any other known variety.
- Uniformity: It must be sufficiently uniform in its essential characteristics.
- Stability: Its essential characteristics must remain unchanged after repeated propagation.
Example: A horticultural company creates a flower hybrid with unique color patterns and applies for its registration.
Answer:
Rights of Breeders and Farmers
Breeders’ Rights:
- Exclusive rights to produce, sell, market, distribute, import, or export the registered variety.
- Right to license the variety to others.
Farmers’ Rights:
- Right to save, use, sow, resow, exchange, share, or sell farm produce of a protected variety (except branded seed).
- Right to register traditional varieties they have developed or conserved.
- Right to compensation if the variety fails to perform as claimed.
Example: A farmer uses seeds from a protected variety on their own land.
Answer:
Infringement and Remedies
Infringement: Occurs when a person sells, markets, produces, or imports a protected variety without authorization or falsely applies the name of a registered variety.
Remedies under the PPVFR Act:
- Injunction against the infringer.
- Compensation or damages to the right holder.
- Seizure and destruction of infringing material.
Example: A seed company uses a registered breeder’s variety without permission.
Answer: