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What's up! Why some are pushing the new seed rules!

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  • sawfly
    Senior Member
    • Mar 2005
    • 876

    #41
    .
    there is the right to collect at sale.
    this turns what we have now with a one time royalty.

    into a yearly royalty. collectable
    every year the variety is planted.
    .

    just like canola , where you sign away your rights ,to replant when purchasing seed.

    now op upov91 varieties will have to pay
    royalties each year. even cleaning it yourself.(that is the plan)
    pretty easy to see

    the ground work is done with upov91

    like i have stated before.
    they will be nice to us at first .
    (fees/ etc.)
    probably even buy us dinner.

    that combined with doing everything in their power to rid us of the older free stuff.
    and with Harpers help
    (closing the public wheat breeding)

    buying out any competition, locking down the genetics,(just like we saw with canola)

    once that is accomplished, then they
    can turn the screws on rates and terms so we are exactly like canola.

    it will play out exactly the same as canola did.
    but to make it worse , then they will have control of everything you could possibly plant.

    you have no choice but to pay whatever they want.


    now if what we are going to get
    from the private breeders is going to be so f ing wonderful.

    then why can they not stand to have the public wheat breeder around.

    if that does not tell you what the plan is , then you had better wake up.

    this whole thing just reeks.

    if it is not supposed to work like i have stated .

    then say so in the bill,
    keep the public breeding.
    put in guarantees, to access
    varieties.

    how can you not see it.

    just look at canola and repeat

    Comment

    • sawfly
      Senior Member
      • Mar 2005
      • 876

      #42
      another thing
      i do not know for sure.
      if the law applies the same

      but what if the free trade agreement
      would prevent us from ever getting back into public breeding.

      same reason we could not nationalize the railway or any industry, without being sued for commercial damage compensation .

      if we were to do public breeding again .

      the gov. can be sued for the seed co.s lost revenue and potential revenue .

      if you look at canola
      what kind of potential revenue is at stake here.

      billions

      that might explain why Harper is so quick to kill Gov. breeding.

      i get so sick of Mulroney and Harper selling out our sovereignty.
      to corporate friends

      Comment

      • bucket
        Senior Member
        • Jan 2008
        • 17022

        #43
        That's the part the conservatives will say "...but we didn't know..."

        Because they don't understand the term "due diligence".

        Comment

        • bucket
          Senior Member
          • Jan 2008
          • 17022

          #44
          Canada would be better served with people that stood up for our interests rather than always using terms like " well this is what it takes to belong"

          This country needs to grow up, and start influencing the rest of the world with what made Canada a successfull country.

          It wasn't by following the herd.

          We are a young country and if you compare it to junior coming home to farm, sometimes its better to let junior try out the ideas. It has made alot of good farms better.

          I don't like other countries dictating what happens here for their own benefit.

          NAFTA helped but no one knows how much it has tied our hands either.

          If the rest of the free trade agreements come on line we are still not prepared to meet the demands anyway.

          Canada has to start looking inside itself and work on its internal problems.

          Comment

          • wd9
            Senior Member
            • Nov 2000
            • 3196

            #45
            Sawfly, what do you want to see? If not
            royalties, how do you generate the
            millions required to breed new varieties
            and traits? should the gov pay for it
            all? What is the farmers responsibility
            to pay and how much?

            An Act is just an Act, but a sound
            business model with advancement in
            cereals development, isn't that the real
            endgame?

            Please, i'm not a seed grower, work for
            monsanto, in government, don't profit
            from seed in any way so please don't go
            there. Just a farmer who wants access to
            and wants to see new and better cereal
            varieties.

            Comment

            • grower99
              Senior Member
              • Nov 2011
              • 224

              #46
              At what cost is accessing these new
              "super" varieties ok with you? If the
              cost and contract conditions are too one
              sided what other options will you have in
              5,10,15 years?

              Comment

              • wd9
                Senior Member
                • Nov 2000
                • 3196

                #47
                It greatly concerns me that the trend is to cower in the corner from
                fear of seed companies and royalties yet not a post on farmers'
                perfect timing opportunity right now to own and control a big chunk
                of cereal breeding in Canada.

                It shows to me farmer owned breeding won't work in Canada rather
                then using the advantages within UPOV91 to create a strong farmer
                owned breeding program for cereals - with no EPR!

                And yes, it works in other counties, but in Canada, probably not.

                Comment

                • bucket
                  Senior Member
                  • Jan 2008
                  • 17022

                  #48
                  It works in other countries where they have trouble meeting their own needs.

                  When you are exporting country like Canada and your importing costomers can set the rules as to what enters their country, it may be a little more difficult.

                  Any excuse will do.

                  We have witnessed it already.

                  Comment

                  • grower99
                    Senior Member
                    • Nov 2011
                    • 224

                    #49
                    What steps are needed to establish a
                    farmer owned and controlled breeding
                    program in a political environment which
                    is being tipped in favour of a few
                    corporations?

                    Comment

                    • charliep
                      Senior Member
                      • Oct 2000
                      • 9002

                      #50
                      I found this article in Alberta Farm Express interesting.

                      [URL="http://www.albertafarmexpress.ca/2014/04/09/big-changes-coming-to-plant-breeding/"]Alberta Farm Express[/URL]

                      For what it is worth, the debate goes well beyond UPOV91 (an international standard) to how plant breeding will be financed in western Canada and who will do this activity. These questions have already been dealt with in the cases of canola and pulses.

                      Comment

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