Volume 2, No. 10, October 2001

 

The Great Basmati Sell-out

— Suman

 

With the USPTO (US Patent and Trademark Organisation) upholding the Texas based Rice Tec’s patent application for basmati, India’s genetic wealth is once again being hijacked by the TNCs. What process began with the so-called green revolution in the 1970s is now being taken to its extreme in the name of globalisation. All India’s vast genetic wealth is under severe threat.............. it was first neem, haldi, now it is basmati, amla and a host of other genetic products. India’s animal and vegetable life is a very rich source of genetic wealth built up over centuries which is being systemically usurped by the TNCs.

The Indian government and some NGOs have tried to create a lot of confusion around this latest judgement, claiming some quixotic victory. They are like the monkey that lost its tail, and began preaching that all monkeys should do away with their tails.

What then is the actual nature of the judgement? In the present judgement, though basmati cannot be used as a brand name, Rice Tec can market its rice under its own brand names (e.g. Texmati) and state on the package that it is ‘superior to basmati’. In addition, Rice Tec, which had earlier (1997) got permission for 20 rice varieties, has now been granted the right for five. Both these points are claimed as some kind of victory for India. That is totally false. Firstly, basmati is like a generic name for the rice, so there was no question of getting a right to use it as a brand name. Brand names are many, even in India; but all add basmati on the packet. This right has now been granted to Rice Tec. Besides whether it is 20 rice lines or 5, makes very little difference in its ability to swamp markets in the US. More important, it opens up the door for Rice Tec to replace Indian imports to the US with their variety of ‘basmati’ rice.

Yet, this too is not the basic question.

The key question is whether ‘rice lines’ derived from varieties traditionally developed by cultivators in specific geographic areas, should at all be patentable. In fact, it is commercial plant breeders like Rice Tec who build on traditional knowledge without paying for it. It is like a factory getting its raw material free of cost. Rice Tec then develops a product, which is supposedly new and so valid for a patent, which is unavailable to the original source product. There is no suggestion of even sharing the royalty, though the original strain has been hijacked by the American Company. With this victory the US can challenge Indian Basmati throughout the world as it can file for similar rights wherever there is a large market for basmati. There have, in fact, been precedents for this. For example, a Kerala-based company sold a product derived from pepper. A US firm, Sabinsca Corporation, which has a patent on pepper products, recently served a notice on the Indian Company seeking to restrain its sales.

In fact, the real defeat did not come merely with this judgement, but much earlier. On May 15 of this year the US Federal Trade Commission (FTO) denied a petition by three NGOs that had demanded geographic-based protection, as has been granted to champagne. The Commission ruled that basmati was not specific to a region. In other words, as long as the company grew rice that fulfilled the definition provided by the US department of Agriculture, it could label that rice as basmati, irrespective of whether the rice fields are in India or in Thailand or Texas or anywhere in the world.

In this entire process of protecting India’s genetic rights the Indian government has taken a most negligent attitude leaving much of the battle to be fought by NGOs and exporters. This is not surprising, as right from the times of the green revolution the Indian rulers and its bureaucracy have been the main tools through which the country has been looted of its gene wealth. In fact, India’s top-most agricultural institution, the ICAR (Indian Council of Agricultural Research) and also some agricultural universities, has, for the last four decades, acted as the main vehicle of US agribusiness in this country. These agents, together with American plant breeders were treated as VIPs, who would traverse the length and breadth of this vast land without any restriction whatsoever, usurping the thousands of Indian varieties, and developing them into money-spinners for the US seed companies. Their Indian collaborators would, no doubt, get some crumbs. Besides, a vast network of internationally funded institutions, like the IRRI (International Rice Research Institute), the CIMMYT (International Maize and Wheat Research Institute), the IITA (International Institute of Tropical Agriculture), etc., had a nest of ‘Indian’ scientists on Washington’s payroll.

Without such collaborators, built up over decades, it would never have been possible for the present basmati fiasco to have occurred. It has been reported by the Gene Campaign in 1996 that, through this gene robbery the American TNCs gave gained a gigantic $70 billion over the years. With the present WTO patent regime in place, this loot is bound to increase ten-fold. The recent Farm Breeders Bill, passed by parliament as part of the new WTO regime, is nothing but a means of enhancing the loot of our peasantry by US agribusiness. The USPTO basmati patent and the ‘Indian’ Farm Breeders Bill are but two side of the same coin. The fight against Monsanto, Rice Tec, and US Agribusiness, is inconceivable without simultaneously smashing their collaborators within our country.

 

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