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Say No to UPOV '91

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    Say No to UPOV '91

    An Op Ed by Regina area farmer and NFU board
    member Matt Gehl.


    "Say NO to UPOV ’91!

    Behind the noise of the Rob Ford and Senate scandal
    cover ups, the Canadian government is angling to
    legislate the removal of a right of farmers that should
    be non-negotiable.

    Ottawa is moving quickly to implement the UPOV ’91
    plant breeders' rights convention with First Reading in
    Parliament of the Agricultural Growth Act, an
    agricultural omnibus bill. The proponents for this
    move say that doing this will keep private plant
    breeding money in Canada and stop us from
    somehow immediately turning into Luddites.

    What is never acknowledged by the supporters of
    UPOV ’91 is what will be taken away from farmers. In
    exchange for this increased level of patenting of seed
    stocks, farmers will lose the right to save, store, sell
    and re-use farm-saved seed.

    Think about this for a second. In contrast to the
    practice of thousands of years of open source plant
    breeding – which incidentally has given us our
    present bountiful harvests – a farmer will NOT be
    allowed to save the seed they have grown to plant
    again the following spring if it has Plant Breeders’
    Rights attached to it. We currently have a similar
    system in place for almost all canola grown in Canada
    because as a GMO, the seed companies have been
    able to patent canola gene sequences and force
    farmers to pay royalties every year. The yearly cost of
    buying new seed is always a sore point with canola
    growers.

    Staying out of UPOV ’91 will not diminish Canada’s
    importance as a wheat-growing region. Research will
    always be done here because of our strength in
    growing wheat. More importantly, we do not need to
    be hostage to private plant breeders - our public
    plant breeding system has been doing a good job for
    a century.

    In fact, the canola boom started when an Ag Canada
    scientist working in the public plant breeding system
    changed the oil profile of what had been ****seed,
    making it usable as a cooking oil. This work was then
    turned over to private sector seed companies which
    commercialized – and claimed plant breeders’ rights
    on – varieties expressing the trait.

    UPOV supporters point to the canola model to
    support their call for giving the entire plant breeding
    sector over to private interests. But are the so-called
    ‘amazing gains’ made by privately-bred canola better
    than the gains in wheat yields and quality achieved by
    the Canadian tradition of public plant breeding? Dr.
    R.J. Graf, an eminent Canadian plant breeder, is one
    among many researchers who points out that gains in
    canola yield over the last 35 years have increased
    marginally – just one-tenth of a bushel per acre more
    per year – compared with increases in wheat yields.

    What is more interesting is that the cost of improving
    canola yields has been more than three times that of
    the public plant breeding system’s efforts to improve
    wheat. Wheat yield and baking quality have been
    constantly improving for a century thanks to the work
    of public plant breeders.

    There can be no denying the benefits that farmers
    and consumers have received from the work done at
    Ag Canada research centres – work that was ongoing
    until the Harper government set about cutting the
    budgets of public-interest breeding programs to the
    bone.

    Even a hundred years of successful public-interest
    plant breeding is nothing compared to the historical
    importance of farm-saved seed. Since the origin of
    agriculture, farmers have been selecting, saving and
    replanting seed from one year to the next, and
    sharing improved varieties with their neighbours.
    Ottawa is about to sign an agreement and bring in a
    law that would eliminate that right for many Canadian
    farmers.

    It is interesting that those who normally scream the
    loudest about the need to protect property rights are
    now championing UPOV ’91, a system that will
    protect only the intellectual property of multinational
    seed corporations at the expense of the intellectual
    commons that has been developed, collected and
    controlled by farmers over millennia.

    Stop Harper and Ritz from favouring the rights of
    plant breeders at the expense of the rights of farmers
    and consumers to use grain varieties developed
    impartially in the public interest.

    Keep your right to use farm-saved seed. Say NO to
    UPOV ’91!"

    #2
    Already sent several emails to MP's and MLA's. Give 'em hell boys.

    Comment


      #3
      Will the harper government care what we
      think? Talking to several organizations I
      feel that there is a small number of
      groups with a very small number of
      constituents who want to speak on behalf
      of a large number of farmers. Would the
      groups who support these changes please
      post here with their executive directors'
      telephone numbers?

      Comment


        #4
        Before everyone gets their panties in a knot, you should know that adopting UPOV91 doesn’t mean that farmers will lose their right to save and use their own seed.

        From the AAFC press release:
        <i> Among the key changes being proposed in this bill are amendments to the Plant Breeders’ Rights Act (PBR Act) to align with the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV'91) which would update Canada's legislation from the outdated UPOV'78 framework. <b>The amendments would include Farmer's Privilege which allows farmers to use seeds from the crops they grow. </i></b>

        Besides trying to create controversy where there is none, the only thing the NFU is honest about is that they want to stop Harper and Ritz.

        Comment


          #5
          There are other farmers who have real
          concerns than just members of the NFU.
          Please address farmers' concerns period.
          We need to address issues not
          personalities!!

          Comment


            #6
            So the Government takes away the age old right of
            farmers to save and use their own seed and in its
            place grant them this "Farmers Privilege" - an
            exemption which the minister or Government can
            extinguish at any time for any reason.

            Starting to sound an awful lot like the Land bills
            introduced in Alberta by our Communist Conservative
            Government.

            Comment


              #7
              It's the royalty on all grain grown that knots panties, who would like to pay that?
              Speak up please.

              Comment


                #8
                This is all fantastic, wheat hovering around $5.00 canola around 9, bring in some new legislation to take money out of my pocket and move it to a seed companies...... Awesome, Thank you Gerry Ritz!

                Comment


                  #9
                  Farmer Privilege isn't an exemption.

                  While farmers always have to be diligent to guard
                  our interests, it's really not helpful for some to
                  misrepresent issues for partisan political
                  purposes.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Is there a seed company who sells any of
                    the older canola varieties?

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Grower99. There are still seed growers selling Certified open pollinated Polish and Argentine canola seed.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        What is the approximate cost per pound?
                        Any idea?

                        Comment


                          #13
                          That article has so many incorrect and
                          completely misleading statements, it is
                          disturbing.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Is this an Op Ed or a grade 5 assignment to write a short story in fiction?
                            Mr. Gehl said <i>”farmers have been selecting, saving and replanting seed from one year to the next, and <b> sharing improved varieties with their neighbours.</i></b>

                            Doesn’t he realize that sharing PBR varieties with your neighbours is illegal under the current laws we have in place now. Is advocating theft really within the purview of the NFU?
                            It’s bad enough that the NFU is at best mistaken or at worst lying, but it really scares me that there are a lot of people who are fooled by these guys.

                            Farm leaders should be concentrating on ensuring that the details of implementing UPOV91 are favourable to Canadian farmers, instead the NFU is busy politicking with propaganda. The bad thing is that after all the BS they spout, no one is going to listen to their chicken little cries if they ever actually have a legitimate concern.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              And it always makes sense to not listen to common sense.

                              Ergo what do idiots contribute


                              And is there any hope of a wise decision ever being reached?

                              Comment

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