EU Seed Law: Putting the Final Commission Draft in Perspective

One Swallow Does Not Make a Summer

Some very important changes appeared in the legislation draft in the last minute.  I posted about this here.  This is only because of pressure people all around the world put on the EU Commission.  Signatures on petitions, emails to commissioners and the like.  This was no gift, it came because we demanded it and worked hard for it.  We must keep up the pressure.  There are other problems with the legislation, and there is the possibility it will be amended later in the legislative process.

PLEASE KEEP SIGNING THE PETITIONS

Fundamentally it’s bad legislation.  It starts by declaring all seeds used in agriculture illegal, as well as most materials used in forestry management in Europe.  It does not criminalize seeds, it makes them illegal.  It then goes on to detail procedures for testing, certifying and registering this material, setting very strict rules on the people and companies that sell this material, then makes a few small but important exemptions.  This is the wrong way to approach these things.  Seeds should not be illegal — this does not make sense.  Even if the only practical risk for using the wrong seeds is an administrative fine, this can be a disaster for a small farmer or seed company.

Not much attention has been paid to the forestry side of things, but what’s going to happen when all the trees in Europe’s forests are distinct, uniform and stable?  How’s that going to be for biodiversity in general?  It’s an important issue, but those of us working on the food side of things don’t have time to get into this right now.

Beyond regulating the seeds themselves, everyone in the entire supply chain is to be regulated, and there remains the possibility that individual EU member states could add additional regulations.

It’s completely the wrong way to address this issue.

Horse Meat or Horse Hockey?

The EU commission (DG SANCO) is comparing this to the recent horse meat fiasco in Europe.  According to them, this is going to bring safety and purity to the food chain in Europe.  The only sort of purity it’s going to bring to our food is the kind of genetic purity the Third Reich tried to bring to Europe during the war.  Our food is not safer if it’s ‘genetically pure’, rather its less healthy, more bland and significantly more more damaging to the environment.  It’s dependent on strong chemicals and fossil fuels, in part to make up for it’s genetic weaknesses.

This sort of agriculture is destroying agricultural biodiversity in Europe and around the world.  Traditionally bred agriculture has virtually no consumer safety issues related to it’s genetics.

Black Holes

This legislation is completely filled with so-called delegated acts.  These are incomplete sections — to be determined at a later date.  These will be determined by industry dominated committees, immune to democratic process.  These delegated acts have been a huge problem for small seed companies and farmers in the past.  There are literally dozens of these acts, that at a later date could turn the whole piece of legislation upside down.

These must be dealt with now, by democratic process.

Protecting Europe’s Seed Industry and Exports

The argument is being made that somehow if genetically unpure seed were commercially produced in Europe it could tarnish the reputation of the seed industry, and harm exports.

If you buy seeds from a known source and get bad seeds, you don’t go back to that source.  The problem is nearly all of Europe’s seeds are produced by a very small number of very large companies, and the market needs to be opened to smaller operators.  It’s very bad for food security to be so dependant on our seeds in this way.  The truth is the seed industry is more afraid of competition than the loss of Europe’s reputation.

We need to protect and stimulate Europe’s small farmers and seed producers.  This is critical for the integrity of our agriculture, as well as the environment and rural development.

Protecting Europe’s Small Farmers and Seed Companies

There are very few provisions in this legislation that are good for small companies, but the limiting of the size of companies that can benefit from the so-called niche provision to €2.000.000 turnover or assets and 10 employees is a very good one.  Companies that miss this limit by a little bit can reorganize and adapt in order to meet the requirements, but it will remain an obstacle for the largest companies.

The Seeds for Home Gardeners Will be Criminalized!

Stop!  These were the words of one person, who misrepresented the situation.  In the earlier drafts of the legislation this was not totally clear, but these were rough drafts and intended for discussion.  The issue however was legality and not criminality, and it was a simple oversight slated to be clarified.  In the latest draft home gardeners are explicitly excluded.  This has never been a serious risk to home gardeners, only maybe to the companies that sell them seeds.

EU Seed Law: Final Commission Draft

After some dramatic last minute changes, the draft EU seed law passed the EU commission today, looking quite a bit different from what I posted about here and here.

In the final draft is a provision for €2.000.000/10 person companies, both seed and food products, that is largely exempt from EU seed law.    This is very good news!  This will mean a huge difference for European agriculture, small farmers and agricultural biodiversity.

Changes are still possible as it passes to the EU Parliament and Council for final approval, but for the moment it looks like we have something to celebrate!

The final draft can be downloaded here.

Thank you everyone who signed the petitions and emailed your commissioners!

Important!  Please keep signing the petitions if you haven’t yet done so!  The fight is not yet over!

New EU Seed Law Draft

Yesterday the NGOs working on the seed law revision I’ve posted about several times, most recently here, received a 3rd and probably final EU Commission draft [Update: This draft has been updated, the last Commission draft can be downloaded from here.] of the legislation.  This is a major rewriting of previous drafts, 124 pages, but not significantly different. It’s better written and easier to understand, but the consequences are mostly the same.

There are some new provisions apparently making it legal for individuals and seed saving organizations to engage in seed trading, something we’ve been promised for a while now.  This is still not possible for farmers!

In a very promising way, there are three new classes of seeds introduced under this latest draft, however with significant limitations for all of them.

Officially Recognized Description (ORD)

This is a classification limited to older varieties, those on the market before the enactment of this legislation.  They will still have to be classified according to region of origin, regardless of if this is clear or how many regions it was previously grown in, however will be allowed to be registered for multiple regions.  It will only be allowed to be grown in the region(s) of origin, and it will still need to be maintained by an official seed company.

This is a different set of regulations that now exist for these types of seeds, and is cumbersome in it’s own way.  Many smaller seed companies won’t be able to satisfy these requirements, or will be forced to resell purchased seeds instead of growing their own.  In particular, that it must be maintained in it’s region of origin is not very sensible.

This new concept might benefit some consumers, in that some older varieties may make it onto market that aren’t available now, but probably only the larger companies will find it profitable to grow these and produce seed.

Niche Varieties

This is one of the more promising new concepts, essentially everything goes here.  No seed registration is necessary.  There are however 2 important limitations:

1.  This will be limited to companies with less than €75.000 annual turnover or assets, and a maximum of 4 employees.

2.  The seeds and/or products may only be sold once, to the final user, who may not resell them directly, or re-propagate the material for further sale.

What good is this?  The €75.000 in annual turnover is not profit, it’s total revenue in after paying expenses needs to pay the salaries of the 4 employees!  Then, whoever buys the products from this company must be the end user, so it won’t be possible to make use of any wholesaler or distributor.

In effect, this will make it possible for a very altruistic person, to sell their garden vegetables at a farmers market.

Heterogeneous Material

This is also a promising new class of material, unfortunately we don’t know anything about it, because it’s a ‘delegated act’, meaning the details will be worked out later.

I can tell you right now, if it’s limited to companies with less than €75.000 annual turnover or assets, and a maximum of 4 employees, it won’t mean anything.

We must continue to oppose this law until our demands are met!

Please sign the petition if you haven’t already done so!

Demands of Civil Society

  • No obligatory registration and certification for open pollinated seeds and other PRM not protected by a IPR.
  • The scope of the regulation must remain limited to marketing of PRM with a view to commercial exploitation
  • The exchange of seeds and other plant reproductive material between farmers and individuals must be excluded from the scope of the regulation
  • Open pollinated varieties and seeds bred for organic farming or specific local conditions must not be discriminated against by any norms, procedures or plant health requirements.
  • Micro and small enterprises need only comply with very basic rules concerning labelling and packaging, unless they are dealing with GMO or with PRM protected by IPRs (Plant Variety Protection or patents).
  • Ensure public transparency on breeding methods and IPR associated with registered varieties and plants.
  • Voluntary registration based on officially recognized descriptions shall be possible for all species and genera, without registration deadlines, or restrictions concerning when first marketed or geographic origin.

Press Contact

Journalists can contact the author of this blog for more information.

Email
Mobile phone:  +31 6 40109417
Skype:  patrick _wiebe (with prior arrangement)

EU Seed Law: English Language Petition

Please sign the new English language petition opposing the new EU seed law!

The petition is now available in other languages, but please only sign one copy!  The signature lists will be combined, and duplicate signatures will be removed.

More languages are on the way…

GERMAN

FRENCH

DANISH

SLOVENIAN

CZECH

BULGARIAN  (Requires Cyrillic installed in browser)

GREEK   (Requires Greek characters installed in browser)

CROATION

PORTUGUESE

HUNGARIAN

ITALIAN

POLISH

DUTCH

ROMANIAN

LATVIAN

 

Important EU Seed Law Vote: 6 May

There is an important vote coming up concerning proposed changes to EU seed law.  This is a vote in the EU Commission, by written procedure, on Monday 6 May 2013.

If the legislation passes this vote, it will then be sent on to the EU Parliament and Council.

Worse Than What We Have Now

The European NGO analysis of the two draft texts we have seen so far concludes it’s worse than existing legislation, and of these two texts the second was far worse than the first.  This proposed new regulation is an attack on agricultural biodiversity, innovation in agriculture, small farmers, independent plant breeders and independent seed companies, in Europe and around the world.  This legislation is a de facto prohibition on biodiverse seeds for farmers and gardeners.

One of the more troublesome aspects of this legislation are the ‘delegated acts’, effectively meaning many of the most important aspects of it will be decided later in committee, immune to democratic process.

This legislation will not only impact agriculture and consumers in Europe, but also around the world as aspects of it are exported through trade agreements.

If you’re in Europe now, please consider writing or emailing your commissioner as soon as possible and asking them to vote against the proposal.  You can get the email of your commissioner by sending an email to address-information [at] ec.europa.eu and asking for the email address of your commissioner.  You can find your commissioner on this page.  Most email addresses are in the form firstname.lastname@ec.europe.eu, but it’s best to verify this in advance.

Open source seeds have put some ‘pre-written’ emails online, as well a list of Commission email addresses and lots of other background information.  I haven’t verified his email addresses are correct, so you may still wish to verify them as per above.

Please Sign the Petition!

You can find the English version of our petition here.

What Seed Laws Mean in General

This EU regulation covers Plant Reproductive Material (PRM).

Modern day seed laws in Europe have their origins in the 1920s and 30s, at a time of extreme views on genetic purity.  Even now, in existing legislation, you see terms like ‘inferior material’ and ‘superior’.  There is further justification that only genetically pure food is safe, or that farmers need to be ‘assured of quality’.  It’s a way of thinking about genetics that’s not logical, and has no scientific basis.  Even the rhetoric surrounding GMOs is very similar, in the quest to make genetically perfect food.   In fact there are many very important reasons why we should not think about agriculture in this way, and many reasons to think our food might be much healthier and more environmentally friendly, if it was more genetically diverse.

As consumers we would benefit tremendously from the increased choice unrestricted biodiversity could give us.  Innovation in agriculture would explode.

In modern times the idea of ‘genetic purity’ is to facilitate the intellectual property rights (IPR) on food, in other words to be able to patent the plant so no-one else can sell it.  If a plant variety is very uniform and genetically stable, than it’s much easier to define, and therefore establish IPR over it.  It’s also because food and agriculture are increasingly viewed as commodities, to be bought and sold on stock markets, and this is really only possible if crops are very uniform.

The problem comes about because the larger seed companies see truly biodiverse food as strong competition to their products.  For this reason, there are currently two criteria all seeds must meet in order to be marketed, DUS (Distinct, Uniform and Stable) and VCU (Value for Cultivation and Use).  All seeds must meet this criteria, regardless of if any IPR is claimed on them, and from the point of view of a small farmer or seed company these systems of registration are unrealistically cumbersome.

This is a little like declaring the Linux computer operating system which is free of IPR illegal, because it isn’t similar enough to Windows, its commercial counterpart.

There is simply no reason to maintain this de facto ban on non commercial seeds, except to perpetuate the monopoly seed companies have on our food supply.  If the larger companies feel they need a DUS/VCU registration system for IPR, this should not preclude alternatives without IPR or maybe even with different systems of IPR.

There are some much touted exemptions in this regulation, like a new concept of ‘Officially Recognized Description’.  Even this would only be available to varieties on the market before the enactment of the legislation (and in many cases, especially with older varieties, this may be impossible to prove).  Also required would be ‘Country of Origin’, and plants just don’t exist naturally in this way.  When varieties are taken to another location and grown for a number of generations, they evolve and have to be considered a different variety.  How can you classify a variety according to Country of Origin under these circumstances?

Within the legislation are also many aspects that represent unfair regulation on smaller farmers and seed companies, like excessive paperwork, labelling, packaging, fees, principle of cost recovery meaning costs for being treated unfairly by the legislation could not be recovered from increased fees for the larger agricultural companies, and a great deal of other ‘fine print’.  The legislation is very much written by and for the larger agriculture interests, and there’s just no place in it for smaller players.

Micro-enterprises

Near the beginning of this process, we (many European NGOs) made a proposal that micro-enterprises should be exempt from the most cumbersome aspects of this legislation, unless it involved a farmer working with GMO varieties, or those covered by IPR.  There is broad agreement that this is the way forward, a simple division that allows lager companies to have the IPR and rules they need, and let the smaller farmers and seed companies operate under regulations that make sense for them.

We haven’t heard very much about this proposal.

Conflict of Interest

I posted about this before a few days ago.  For all intents and purposes, this legislation was written by one person, representing the French seed industry.

Last Minute Compromises

In a meeting with IFOAM, a European NGO promoting organic agriculture, DG SANCO commissioner Tonio BORG expressed assurance the concerns with the legislation would be addressed by a number of last minute compromises.  There’s no official word on exactly what these compromises are, meaning everyone is now discussing a very hypothetical piece of legislation, however there are rumors.

Apparently there is a very small exemption pending for smaller-than-micro-enterprises.  €2.000.000/10 employee companies MAY be exempt from some of the registration fees, and €75.000/4 employee companies exempt from the DUS registration requirement, but maybe not the VCU.  The decision to exempt the fees would be on a country by country basis, so it would not be guaranteed.  There would still be the principle of cost recovery, meaning the cost for these exemptions could not be passed onto the larger companies through higher registration fees.  In effect this means these costs would have to be paid directly by national governments out of the public purse, or raised some other way.  Almost certainly the smaller, poorer countries will not elect to do this.

Regardless, varieties where there is no proof they were on the market before the legislation came into force would not be candidates for registration, and all varieties would still have to be registered according to country of origin.

These last minute compromises cannot be taken seriously.  They are far too little, far too late.

Agriculture by Populations

This is really the key sticking point in this legislation.

In nature, in plants and people, reproduction takes place in groups and results in genetic evolution.  It’s not logical to exclude this in agriculture.  These small genetic changes represent increased productivity, disease and pest resistance and many other very important traits.  No amount of materials stored in genebanks around the world could match the resources of this sort of agriculture if it were realized.  It’s very important to allow farmers the possibility to make full use of this genetic resource, saving and trading their own seeds, both for old varieties and newly created ones.

Environmental Impact

The current system has resulted in a massive loss of agricultural biodiversity in the last few decades, according to the FAO this is about 75%.

The current system is integrated with the agro-chemical industry, and results in far more chemicals being introduced into the environment than is necessary.

The current system is reliant on commodity crops, requiring high fossil fuel inputs, transported long distances, to be turned into processed foods or fed to animals.  There are far more efficient ways to feed the worlds population.

Demands of Civil Society

  • No obligatory registration and certification for open pollinated seeds and other PRM not protected by a IPR.
  • The scope of the regulation must remain limited to marketing of PRM with a view to commercial exploitation
  • The exchange of seeds and other plant reproductive material between farmers and individuals must be excluded from the scope of the regulation
  • Open pollinated varieties and seeds bred for organic farming or specific local conditions must not be discriminated against by any norms, procedures or plant health requirements.
  • Micro and small enterprises need only comply with very basic rules concerning labelling and packaging, unless they are dealing with GMO or with PRM protected by IPRs (Plant Variety Protection or patents).
  • Ensure public transparency on breeding methods and IPR associated with registered varieties and plants.
  • Voluntary registration based on officially recognized descriptions shall be possible for all species and genera, without registration deadlines, or restrictions concerning when first marketed or geographic origin.

 Links and Country Information

Here are links to websites in specific countries and in local languages.

UK

Heritage Seed Library/Garden Organic

Real Seed Catalogue

Germany

Kampagne für Saatgut-Souveränität

Dachverband Kulturpflanzen- und Nutztiervielfalt

Verein zur Erhaltung der Nutzpflanzenvielfalt

Save Our Seeds

Austria

Arche Noah

Denmark

Frøsamlerne

Netherlands

Bifurcated Carrots (this site)

ASEED

Finland

Maatiainen

Bulgaria

Agrolink

Ireland

Irish Seed Savers

Brown Envelope Seeds

Greece

Peliti

Aegilops

Slovenia

Seed Guardians

Press Contact

Journalists can contact the author of this blog for more information.

Email
Mobile phone:  +31 6 40109417
Skype:  patrick _wiebe (with prior arrangement)