Monsanto may lose GM soya royalties throughout Brazil
Farmers notch up another victory in legal fight.
Rio de Janeiro
Paulo Fridman/Bloomberg/Getty
The biotechnology giant Monsanto is one step closer to
losing billions of dollars in revenues from its genetically-modified
(GM) Roundup Ready soya beans, following a ruling this week by the
Brazilian Supreme Court of Justice.
The decision marks the latest chapter of an epic legal
battle, in which millions of Brazilian farmers are trying to recover
payments made to the company over the past decade. It could also have
important implications for research in the country, some scientists say.
Brazil is the second-largest producer of
genetically-modified (GM) crops, after the United States. Last year, it
farmed 30.3 million hectares of the crops, mostly soya beans, but also
corn and cotton. It legalized the growing of GM crops in 2005, after it
became clear that about three-quarters of the soya crops produced in the
southern state of Rio Grande do Sul were already being grown from
Roundup Ready seeds that had been smuggled in from Argentina. Because
the crop is resistant to the herbicide glyphosate, marketed as Roundup,
farmers can spray they fields with the chemical to control weeds without
risking damage to their crops.
Since the legalization, Monsanto has charged Brazilian
farmers 2% of their sales of Roundup Ready soya beans, which now account
for an estimated 85% of the nation’s soya-bean crop. The company also
tests Brazilian soya beans that are sold as non-GM — if they turn out to
be Roundup Ready, the company charges the farmers responsible for the
crops some 3% of their sales.
Battles begin
In 2009, a consortium of farming syndicates from Rio
Grande do Sul mounted a legal challenge to the levy, arguing that it is
effectively an unjust tax on their businesses, and that it has proved
impossible to keep Roundup Ready soya beans separate from conventional
varieties. “The issue is that segregating GM and conventional soya is
difficult, since the GM soya is highly contaminating,” says João Batista
da Silveira, president of the Rural Syndicate of Passo Fundo, one of
the leaders of the legal action.
Monsanto
argues that most Brazilian farmers still use smuggled seeds, and that
the company is consequently being deprived of revenue and must recoup
its costs through the levy. But the Brazilian Association of Seeds and
Seedlings, a trade body, says that 70% of soya-bean farmers now buy
their Roundup Ready seeds legally.
In April, Giovanni Conti, a judge in Rio Grande do Sul,
decided that Monsanto’s levy was illegal, noting that the patents
relating to Roundup Ready soya beans have already expired in Brazil. He
ordered Monsanto to stop collecting royalties, and return those
collected since 2004 — or pay back a minimum of US$2 billion. Monsanto
appealed, and Conti's decision has been suspended for now, pending
consideration by the Justice Tribune of Rio Grande do Sul.
But in 2011, Monsanto had also made a parallel legal bid
to the Brazilian Supreme Court of Justice, the country's highest federal
court. The company argued that the syndicates had no legal status to
bring their case, and also that any final ruling should be limited to
Rio Grande do Sul, fearing that its losses would be even greater if it
applied to the whole country.
On 12 June, the judges of the Brazilian Supreme Court of
Justice ruled against Monsanto, deciding unanimously that the ruling by
the Justice Tribune of Rio Grande do Sul, once it is made, should apply
nationwide. Monsanto has declined to comment on the case.
Some scientists fear that if the company is forced to
repay royalties, it could trigger cuts in funding for biotech research.
For example, the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa),
which is affiliated with the Ministry of Agriculture, has a research
partnership with Monsanto. “Although Embrapa has other financial
sources, if the collection of royalties is interrupted then $5 million
to $10 million dollars will be cut from our budget, which would stop
some research projects,” says Elibio Rech, an Embrapa researcher. Rech
points out that royalties for intellectual property are crucial to
enabling new technologies that can help sustainable development.
Carlos Fávaro, president of the Mato Grosso association of
soya-bean and corn producers, agrees that intellectual property is
important, and that ceasing royalty payments could impact research. But
he insists that the current system is untenable: “The way of collecting
royalties is unfair, [Monsanto] charges us in double: when we buy the
seeds and then when we sell the soy.”
SOURCE: http://www.nature.com/news/monsanto-may-lose-gm-soya-royalties-throughout-brazil-1.10837
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