1.Percy's Future is Our Future
2.Canadian farmer stands up against Monsanto
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1.Percy's Future is Our Future
An Op-Ed by Dr. Vandana Shiva - 19-Jan-04
http://www.canadians.org/news_updates.htm?COC_token=23@@600357c633c9b421ce2b2a6bf59dfb8e&step=2&id=179
On January 20th, the Supreme Court of Canada will hear arguments in the “David and Goliath” battle between Saskatchewan farmer, Percy Schmeiser, and biotechnology giant, Monsanto Canada.
The Supreme Court of Canada will be the first high court of any nation to consider the question of patent infringement on a living being, in this case a seed. Not only will that decision have a considerable influence on the policy debate in Canada, but it is likely to also influence lawmakers around the world who are grappling with this issue.
The implications of this case go far beyond just the fate of one Prairie farmer. Farmers everywhere, particularly those in India and in the rest of the Global South, are keeping a watchful eye on what will be a defining moment in agricultural policy around the world.
This case has far-reaching implications for farmers’ rights to use traditional farming methods. These include the age-old agricultural practice of saving seeds. If other jurisdictions were to follow the approach adopted by Canada’s Federal Court of Appeal in this case, the result would undermine the tradition of seed saving of hundreds of millions of farmers whose livelihood depend on this practice.
In Sanskrit, Bija, the seed, means the source of life. Seed is the first link in the food chain. In India, saving seed is our duty, and sharing seed is our culture.
Patents on seeds and genetic resources rob us of our livelihood by making seed saving and seed sharing “intellectual property crimes.” This is an assault on our culture, our human rights, and on our very survival.
Seed saving gives farmers life. Seed monopolies rob farmers of life. When seed-saving is prevented by patents, poor peasants must buy new seeds for every planting season. Thus, a free resource that is grown on the farm becomes a commodity that farmers are forced to buy year after year.
This increases poverty and leads to indebtedness. As debts increase and become unpayable, farmers are compelled to sell their kidneys or even commit suicide in desperation. In 1997, globalization pressures allowed multinational seed corporations to seize control of the seed supply in India. More than 25,000 peasants have taken their lives since then.
The shift from farm grown-and-saved seed to a corporate seed monopoly is a dangerous shift from biodiversity to agricultural monoculture.
Monoculture and uniformity increase the risks of crop failure. Diverse seeds are adapted to diverse ecosystems. When they are replaced by the rushed introduction of unadapted and often untested seeds into the market, failure follows.
In the district of Warangal, the corporate seed monopoly has created a cotton crop monoculture, erasing millions of years of evolution and seed-breeding by farmers. When Monsanto first introduced genetically engineered cotton in India in 2002, farmers lost CDN$ 28 Million due to crop failure. Instead of producing 1,500 kilograms per acre as promised by the company, many farmers’ harvests were as low as 200 kilograms per acre.
In the state of Bihar, when saved corn seed was displaced by Monsanto’s hybrid corn, the entire crop failed. This created CDN$ 114 Million in losses and hence increased poverty for desperately poor farmers.
Poor peasants of the South cannot survive seed monopolies. That is why the case of Percy Schmeiser will decide the fate not just of one Canadian farmer but billions of peasants. The unjust and unethical case brought by Monsanto against Percy is a double crime against farmers. Firstly by creating and enforcing illegitimate patent rights to seed, it robs us of our human right and human duty to be seed savers. Secondly, it rewards the polluter with enhanced property rights and profits. The principle of “pollute pays” has been transformed into “polluter gets paid.”.
This perverse jurisprudence must be corrected for the sake of all farmers, and all species. Farmers’ freedoms must come before corporate monopolies. Farmers’ survival must come before corporate greed. Percy’s future is our future. Percy’s seed freedom is our freedom. Percy’s rights as a farmer are symbolic of the human rights of all farmers.
Vandana Shiva, physicist, feminist, philosopher of science, writer and science policy advocate, is the Director of The Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Natural Resource Policy. She serves as an ecology advisor to several organizations including the Third World Network and the Asia Pacific People's Environment Network.
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2.Unlikely hero: Canadian farmer stands up against Monsanto in biotech battle
By Mike Lee -- Bee Staff Writer
Sacramento Bee, January 19, 2004
http://www.sacbee.com/content/business/story/8127820p-9059857c.html
After nearly 50 years farming canola, Canadian grower Percy Schmeiser had his eye on retirement when a lawsuit from the world's largest biotech seed company landed on his doorstep, accusing him of gene theft. Now, as his appeal heads to Canada's top court Tuesday, Schmeiser has become an unlikely hero for the growing movement against genetic engineering of food crops. Instead of retiring in rural Saskatchewan, the wiry 73-year-old travels the globe to tell his story of resistance against gene giant Monsanto Co.
He sums up his sudden celebrity with typical humility: "It's no longer my case, it's the world's case."
It matters nothing to his audiences that he was found guilty of patent violations by the Canadian courts, which agree with Monsanto that no matter how weedkiller-tolerant genes entered Schmeiser's seeds, he re-planted them illegally in 1998.
At Monsanto Canada, spokeswoman Trish Jordan said the past court decisions against Schmeiser speak for themselves. "When Mr. Schmeiser told his stories in court, they weren't found to be believable," she said.
Regardless of the case's outcome, however, environmentalist Kenny Ausubel said Monsanto "picked the wrong guy" for the first big test of patent law for biotech seeds -- a case critical to the maturing biotech crop industry.
Check in with Schmeiser most any month and you can find him hailing crowds in places as far-flung as Japan, Germany or South Africa. Last fall, he and his wife, Louise, drove 1,900 miles from their home in the tiny town of Bruno, Saskatchewan, to San Rafael.
There, Schmeiser greeted 3,000 environmentalists, aging hippies and counterculture enthusiasts at Bioneers, Ausubel's annual conference exploring environmental issues.
Outside, long-haired students performed yoga and mystical dances. Inside, Schmeiser -- an unassuming, trim man in glasses, a royal blue button-down shirt and slacks -- stepped to the podium. "We don't know how many good years we have left, but we are going to go down fighting," he told the crowd, his eyes tearing up as they responded with repeated standing ovations.
After his speech, Schmeiser was surrounded by fans, including Marie Sears, a nurse who traveled from Minnesota to hear him speak. Getting his autograph made her gush: "He is an inspiration and he is a true hero." Schmeiser has grown used to such receptions; it's the way that he knows it's worth risking the loss of his farm and even his wife's health to take on a multinational corporation.
At its core, Schmeiser's case is about ownership of genes -- developed by companies at a cost of tens of millions of dollars -- that make crops immune to herbicides. That genetic trick allows farmers to control weeds without harming their crops.
In addition to charging extra for their biotech seeds, companies demand that farmers plant them only once, interrupting the age-old practice of saving seed from year to year and making farmers beholden to corporations like never before.
Nonetheless, biotech crops have proven popular with farmers around the world. They were planted on an estimated 167 million acres last year, up 15 percent from 2002, the New York-based International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications announced last week.
The trouble is, genetically engineered genes disregard boundaries, traveling widely through North America in pollen, seed and crops. They regularly end up where they aren't welcome, such as in organic fields, countries that have banned biotech crops or Schmeiser's canola fields.
The next stop in Schmeiser's world tour is Tuesday at the Supreme Court of Canada. It's the first time a country's top court will address the question of gene patent infringement, according to legal experts.
Journalists from as far away as France and Japan are expected to show up in Ottawa to document the historical moment in biotech history.
Though a decision likely won't be issued for weeks or even months, the hearing could clarify at least one fuzzy area: whether the Supreme Court of Canada accepted Schmeiser's appeal because it wanted to expand or contract companies' ability to patent life forms.
Technically, the ruling won't matter in the United States, said Donald L. Uchtmann, a professor of agricultural law at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. "Having said that ... it serves as a model of how a nation with a similar heritage has dealt with this issue and these particular facts," Uchtmann said. "(It) at least causes Americans to think about whether such a result is just in the U.S."
The case is being monitored in California, especially by rice farmers worried about the planned introduction of biotech rice into the state. But perhaps no one is watching more closely than Arnold Taylor, president of the Saskatchewan Organic Directorate. His group has sued Aventis and Monsanto, alleging that they have ruined the province's organic canola market by failing to prevent genetic contamination of canola seed.
Even if Schmeiser loses, the organic growers could get a boost as long as the Canadian Supreme Court maintains that biotech genes in his fields belong to Monsanto. "We are saying, 'OK, you own it. The flip side is that you are responsible for the damages,' " Taylor said.
While Monsanto has gone after hundreds of farmers for patent infringement in the United States and Canada, few have stood up to the company. And none has created more of a public relations problem than Schmeiser, who motivates his adoring crowds by drawing on public speaking experience gained during a lifetime of provincial politics. He even has a Web site - www.percyschmeiser.com -- to promote what he calls a "classic David versus Goliath struggle" and direct supporters how to donate to his cause.
Schmeiser said he's raised $55,000 from donations -- some of them still just pledges -- but his legal bills and judgments are roughly 10 times that. He could even lose his farm, he said, if he loses this final case. "How can an average person ever stand up to multibillion-dollar corporations?" asked Schmeiser. "If I would not have had help from people all over the world, I could not have done it."
Schmeiser started developing canola seeds to resist prairie diseases in the 1950s. He then took time away from his farm and his implement dealership to serve as mayor of Bruno (population 650) and in the provincial Parliament for more than 30 years.
He and Louise also spent several winters traveling the Southern Hemisphere with humanitarian aid teams. They own about 1,400 acres, but now lease most of their land to other farmers. The result was a man gifted at the public podium, savvy about politics and wary of the alleged ways corporations and governments have oppressed citizens of developing countries.
Schmeiser's own troubles started in 1997 when he noticed something unusual after farm workers had sprayed chemicals to kill weeds around roadside power poles. Said Schmeiser: "I came past the farm one day and everything was brown except a few plants -- canola plants. Everything should have been dead because it had been sprayed" with glyphosate, the technical name for Monsanto's flagship weedkiller, Roundup.
The anomaly perplexed the veteran seed breeder. He grabbed his sprayer and went out and tried again. Again, the plants survived.
Herbicide-tolerant canola had been commercialized in 1996 in Canada, and it quickly spread across the prairie. Today, about 70 percent of the crop is genetically engineered -- about 8 million acres.
Schmeiser said he hadn't heard about the new technology in 1997. He figured the roadside plants had simply grown resistant to Roundup after years of spraying around power poles. "At the time, we didn't even know there was such a thing as a patent on seeds," he said.
But he soon would. That same year, Monsanto hired a detective company to look for gene thieves in Saskatchewan. Schmeiser was targeted the same way most of Monsanto's suspects are -- after an anonymous tip that he was illegally growing patented seeds. Investigators sampled canola from the roadside bordering Schmeiser's farm and determined it was herbicide-tolerant.
They alerted Schmeiser to the problem and the court record simply says Schmeiser "did not treat seriously the concern raised" by the investigators. He later said in an interview that he thought it was legal for farmers to save their own seeds, no matter what.
Through Schmeiser's regular practice of saving seeds for the next year's crop, herbicide-resistant seeds were widely spread across about 1,000 acres of his canola the following year. That prompted Monsanto to file its very first claim against a grower, aimed at protecting both the company's intellectual property and other growers who were paying a fee of $15 an acre for access to the novel seed technology, above the cost of the seeds.
"His was our first case ever that we said, 'OK, we have got this program in place and we have to find out if this patent is valid,' " said Jordan at Monsanto. "The only way you can test this is to say, 'Hey, we think this guy is infringing on our patent and we want to do something about it.' " Today, in the United States, Monsanto targets about 100 growers a year -- a tiny fraction of the tens of thousands of farmers who plant biotech crops. Unlike Schmeiser, however, most farmers choose to settle out of court.
Monsanto says that after it pays legal fees, court settlement money is given to agriculture-related youth and scholarship programs at a pace of about $15,000 a year.
The Canadian federal judge who first heard Schmeiser's case said the farmer should have known some of the seeds he saved were Roundup-tolerant before he planted his 1998 crop, regardless of how the genes got into his fields in the first place.
"His infringement arises not simply from occasional or limited contamination," Judge Andrew MacKay ruled. "Growth of the seed, reproducing the patented gene and cell, and sale of the harvested crop constitutes taking the essence of the plaintiff's invention, using it without permission."
In 2002, three appeals court judges also sided with Monsanto.
Despite the mounting legal losses, Schmeiser has received a huge boost from press coverage, which has generated worldwide interest and sympathy. That, in turn, brought invitations from around the globe to warn anti-biotech forces about the dangers of gene giants. Schmeiser said he doesn't charge speaking fees, asking instead to be reimbursed for travel costs and that groups which bring him in consider donating to his legal defense.
Unlike her husband, who talks easily with the press, Louise Schmeiser is reticent. She had enough of public life when Percy Schmeiser was in politics. She suffers from high blood pressure that her husband blames on ongoing scrutiny of their farm by Monsanto. But she is not bitter about the hard road they've traveled for the past six years fighting biotech crops, also known as genetically modified organisms. "I hope that we can make a difference," she said. "Before we got involved with this court case, a lot of people didn't know what GMO's stood for."
After the Canadian Supreme Court ruling, Schmeiser hopes to slow down. "How much can my health take?" he asks. Yet already he's planning another trip to California this winter to support anti-biotech forces in Mendocino County who are trying to prevent the growing of biotech crops in their county through a March ballot measure.
And Schmeiser knows that if he wins in court, it will be especially hard to say no to the adoring crowds that turn up everywhere he speaks.
Monsanto vs. Schmeiser
1997: Veteran Canadian farmer Percy Schmeiser discovers popular herbicide Roundup didn't kill canola plants on the roadside bordering his farm. Following his standard practice, Schmeiser saves seed to reuse the following year.
1998: Schmeiser is targeted by Monsanto for alleged biotech seed patent violations after detectives find herbicide-tolerant seed spread across about 1,000 acres of his canola fields. Schmeiser maintains his reuse of the modified seed was inadvertent.
2001: Canadian federal judge supports Monsanto's patent infringement case, saying it doesn't matter how the seed got onto Schmeiser's land or whether he intended to benefit from its reuse. Judge orders Schmeiser to pay Monsanto his 1998 profits and court costs, roughly $173,000 Canadian.
2002: A three-judge appeals panel dismisses Schmeiser's appeal.
2003: In May, the Supreme Court agrees to hear the case in Ottawa.
Tuesday: The court is expected to try to balance the interests of industry in having a strong patent law with the broader social and practical implications of giving companies control over life forms.