Austrian organizations Arche Noah and Global 2000 have circulated a briefing paper on the pending seed law, and with their permission I’m publishing it here. Formatting is limited in a blog post. Click here to download the original paper with original formatting.
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EU-Seed Law: Introducing the biodiversity perspective
A first glance at the Commission Proposal for the EU regulation on the marketing of plant reproductive material
May 2013
In this paper, ARCHE NOAH gives a short summary on the most urgent remarks and concerns on the Proposal of the European Commission for a Regulation on plant reproductive material (1) (PRM) from a seed savers’ point of view and with special regards to agricultural biodiversity.
ARCHE NOAH (Noah’s Ark) is a seed savers association in Central Europe, founded in 1990, with today more than 10.000 members, who closely and actively follows the process of review of the PRM law. Arche Noah is politically active in Austria and in Brussels. www.arche-noah.at
GLOBAL 2000 (Friends of the Earth Austria) is an independent Austrian environmental organization. Since 1982, GLOBAL 2000 has been working on controversial social themes to uncover potential hazards for humans and the environment. www.global2000.at
The PRM regulation’s hitches at a glance
The scope of the legislation goes beyond the commercial sector
Problem: In the present legislation, the scope of the directives is limited to the dissemination of seeds and other propagation material for the purpose of commercial exploitation. The new text applies to any form of transfer of plant reproductive material, broadening the scope of the legislation.
Solution: The words “aiming at commercial exploitation”, which have been deleted from the present legislation, must be reintroduced in the definitions (article 3). Limiting the scope of the PRM law to commercial activities would solve some problems mentioned in this paper.
Basically there is no founded justification to have a PRM regulation at all. Abolishing the existing rules and simply include the sector within the existing logic of controls of the food chain would suffice.
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Private exchanges of seeds, grafts and other PRM restricted
Problem: Article 2 restricts private activities to seed swap in kind. As soon as individuals would like to swap PRM against money, they enter into the category of “Niche Market”, having to fulfil all the obligations of article 36, comprising many pages of small print legalese.
Solution: The exchange of seeds and other plant reproductive material between individuals must be excluded totally from the scope of the regulation.
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Diversity farmers face administrative penalties – the “operator”
Problem: Any farmer who wants to make available PRM must register as an “operator” (Article 3.6), must fulfil requirements for quality management and traceability (Articles 5-8) and must pay yearly fees of unknown amount. No adequate exceptions are foreseen for farmers who want to pass on PRM from their own harvest. The exception in article 36 (“niche markets”) is insufficient.
Solution:
Since the very beginning of agriculture, farmers have selected and re-used seeds for the following season. It is absolutely disproportional to marginalise and threaten these activities with administrative burdens and penalties. The exchange of PRM between farmers and between farmers and individuals must be excluded totally from the scope of the regulation.
Back to Stone Age!
Franziska has heard about a seed and plant swap in her neighbourhood. She is curious to get some seeds for her balcony. She has no own seeds to give, and offers EUR 3 .- to a lady in exchange for two handmade seed packages. But she has to learn that this would be illegal . The seeds – if sold – would have to meet specific requirements and distinct labelling. That ́s just too complicated, the lady with the seeds says. Franziska feels ashamed to ask for the seeds for free. She leaves without seeds and very disappointed. Pay the penalty!
Jack is a passionate diversity farmer . He cultivates a large number of rare varieties of tomatoes on his farm. He markets the fruits on a farmers market. Many of the rare seeds he cannot buy, and he has to save his own seeds. In springtime on the farmers market, many of his customers ask for seeds and seedlings. They know Jack and trust the quality of his products. However, Jack may not pass on – otherwise he might face an administrative penalty. That is because he operates his labour-intensive farm with 11 employees =annual work units. Thus, the exception for niche markets (Art. 36) does not apply to him.
(3)
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Disproportionate and inapplicable
Problem: As a consequence, thousands of infractions to this legislation would happen each year. This regulation would criminalise a large, innocent and not sufficiently informed part of our society. Such rules which are not proportionate would unduly create a black market.
Solution: All small farmers and individuals producing PRM have to be exempted from the scope.
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ALL species and genera are affected now
Problem: Even for very rare crops with little or no economic importance, so-called “basic requirements” on quality and labelling have to be fulfilled (Articles 47-50). Further hurdle: If a species is not listed in Annex 1, it is forbidden to make it available under a name – unless an official(ly recognised) description of the variety is registered (Article 50)!
Solution: No obligatory registration and certification for seeds and other PRM that is open pollinating and not protected by a private intellectual property right (IPR).
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Deficiencies with regards to Democracy and the principle of subsidiarity
Problem: 39 important legal issues – e.g. amending Annex 1 – shall be decided by the commission arbitrarily by delegated acts.
Solution: Delete all delegated acts foreseen. Keep space for national derogations which allow adaptations to regional situations.
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The notion of a variety: A constraint to biodiversity
Problem: The variety is a technical and juridical concept closely linked with the notions of distinctiveness, uniformity and stability (Articles 60-62). It is not a natural condition of any wild or cultivated plant, because it is essential for evolution that living organisms are not uniform and able to develop (not stable).
Solution: Don’t stick to juridical concepts, accept nature.
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DUS and VCU tests – an obstacle for organic breeders
Problem: The DUS tests (“distinctiveness, uniformity and stability”) and – for agricultural crops – VCU test (“value for cultivation and use”) are biological and technical obstacles to the access on the market for varieties aimed at production in agro-ecological systems. The proposed “sustainable VCU” (article 59) and “heterogeneous material” (article 14.3) are very vague. Important details are left to delegated acts.
Solution: Concrete solutions that allow working with genetically diverse and adaptable varieties were delivered by the European Consortium of Organic Plant Breeders (EcoPB) (2) and IFOAM-EU.
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Regarding transparency…
Problem:
The compulsory registration of varieties is reasoned with the goal of transparency on the market. However, the register does not guarantee that a listed variety is really available and cannot inform the consumer about the performance to be expected under local conditions. Concerning the genealogy of a variety, confidentiality will be granted to breeders on their demand (Article 75).
Solution: Transparency can more easily be achieved by labelling similar to an operator’s label without registration and Official catalogue.
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“Officially Recognised Description”- a very limited niche
Problem: The simplified registration (Article 57) is open only for varieties that were available on the market before the entry into force of the regulation (“historical limitation”). There are many plant types that were only used locally and were never available on the market. Also, one or more “region(s) of origin” must be defined (“geographic limitation”). This is nonsense: hardly any major crop originated from Europe, neither wheat nor apple nor tomato. Plants have always moved and must continue (climate change, increased biodiversity).
Solution: Delete the historical and geographic limitations. The simplified registration must be re-opened to all open pollinating plants which are not protected by IPRs.
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Article 36 “Niche markets”
Problem: Article 36 provides exceptions for seeds and other PRM from registration. These exceptions only apply to small quantities of PRM. Professional operators can only make use of this exception if they have less than 10 employees and a turnover of less than EUR 2 million. The seeds/other PRM must fulfil labelling requirements and comply with requirements on quality, which has a financial and technical cost.
Solution: All small farmers (as defined in art. 8 (2) of Reg. 1765/92) and any private person have to be exempted from the scope of the regulation.
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Notes:
1) Proposal of the European Commission’s Directorate General for Health and Consumers (DG SANCO) for a Regulation on the production and making available on the market of plant reproductive material (plant reproductive material law) published on May 6th 2013. COM(2013) 262 final – 2013/0137 (COD)
2) http://www.eco-pb.org/fileadmin/ecopb/documents/ECOPB_Position_EUSeedLawRevision_120530.pdf
3) The stories in the box are real. The names were changed.
Summary: Our main demands to the decision makers
Concerning promoting agro-biodiversity:
- No obligatory registration and certification for seeds and other plant reproductive material (PRM) that is open pollinating and not protected by a private intellectual property right (IPR).
- Re-Open registration based on officially recognized description to all varieties; delete all geographic, historical and quantitative restrictions
Concerning promoting democracy and farmers’ rights:
- The scope of the regulation must be limited to the marketing of PRM with a view to commercial exploitation
- All small farmers producing PRM have to be exempted from the scope
- The exchange of seeds and other plant reproductive material between farmers and between farmers and individuals must be excluded from the scope of the regulation;
- Delegated acts: No delegated acts at all. Everything has to be inside a single legal act.
Concerning promong consumers ́ choice and transparency:
- Ensure that open pollinating varieties and seeds bred for organic farming or specific local conditions are not discriminated by norms of (even voluntary) registration, certification and plant health requirements.
- Micro and small enterprises shall only comply with basic rules concerning the operators as long as they are not dealing with GMO or with PRM protected by IPRs
- (Plant Variety Rights or patents).
- Ensure transparency on breeding methods and Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) associated with registered varieties and plants.
Contact us:
Brussels:
Pierre Sultana
pierre.sultana[at]arche-noah.at
+32 (0) 493 11 89 72
EN, FR, DE
Austria:
Iga Niznik
iga.niznik[at]arche-noah.at
+43 (0) 650 999 13 05
DE, EN, FR, PL
Austria:
Heidemarie Porstner
heidemarie.porstner[at]global2000.at
+43 (0) 699 142 000 52
DE, EN
What happens with farmer-farmer seed transfer across international borders? The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD)and the ITPGRFA (FAO Seed Treaty) try to place this either under the CBD national sovereignty provision or in the FAO Treaty under a multilateral system. That is, countries `own’ the seeds and not farmers. If farmers can move seed a cross borders (excepting plant quarantine controls, I wish they could) the entire talk-shop of international Treaties collapses.
Hi Dave,
This seems to be where the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (aka TTIP or TAFTA) comes in. I don’t have the exact language in front of me, but basically they are trying to make standard the premise that plant material crossing borders have to satisfy the laws of the destination country.
Since most farmer to farmer exchanges will require the originating farmer to be a registered operator (with all the red tape, inspections, fees and rules that go along with that), farmers outside of Europe who wish to give even free seeds to a European farmer will have to be a registered operator, or some sort of European recognized equivalent in their own country. This would probably fall under the rules of ‘niche market’, meaning seeds could only be transferred in ‘small quantities’, with the definition of small to be determined later by a delegated act.
In general, this is the mechanism used to export EU seed laws around the world via free trade agreements.
What’s the issue? •Seeds, young plants, tubers and other types of “plant reproductive material” are fundamental to our future food supplies and, more widely to the productivity, diversity, and quality of all plant crops – in agriculture, horticulture, vineyards and forestry. •EU legislation on how these items are traded needs to be simplified, updated and brought into line with other EU policies, by: -improving registration procedures – to ensure different varieties can be reliably identified and, in the case of agricultural crops, are suitable for cultivation and use -strengthening certification and inspection, to protect the identity, quality and health of plant reproductive material -cutting red tape and costs by making the rules more flexible and efficient across the EU making the rules more compatible with policy aims such as sustainable intensification of agriculture and biodiversity.
Thanks for the comment.
I think the question a lot of us are asking is why any red tape is necessary at all. Why can’t anyone just plant what they want. Even the reduced red tape you’re talking about is far too much for most small farmers.
Issues like sustainable intensification are very abstract, and can mean a lot of different things to different people. In an age where obesity plays a much greater role than hunger, why are we even discussing the importance of intensification at all? There’s no shortage of food in Europe, or the world as a whole, nor are there any credible indications this is likely to be an issue in the near future. The most sustainable approach is most likely de-intensification.
Of course the business model of some farmers depend on registration, certification and intensification, and this should certainly remain an option for them.
Piling the same red tape on a farmer who has a completely different business model, and thinks in a different way, is unfair. It’s unfair to the farmer, and it’s unfair to the consumer who’s choices will be severely limited. The red tape you’re proposing discriminates against anyone except the large scale intensive farmer, and puts them at a severe disadvantage.
In fact, looking at the legislation as a whole, the red tape you are talking about will become worse for small farmers in the new situation.
Why not get rid of all mandatory red tape for everyone, and keep it as an option for those farmers who want it?