Biotechnological Agriculture in relations to property rights
Keywords:
Biotechnology, intellectual property rights, patents, genetic modification.Abstract
The majority of the population in developing nations depends on agriculture. Agricultural
biotechnology involves genetic modification and promises a number of important benefits, such as
improving agricultural yields by increasing the resistance of crops to pests and facilitating them to
flourish in harsh natural environments, improving the productivity of crops, and reducing pesticide use.
Also, concerns have been raised about the potential negative impacts of genetic modification. To
promote research and development in agricultural biotechnology, intellectual property rights (IPRs) are
one of the primary tools. Based on the fact that high investment is required to develop new genetically
modified (GM) technologies and products, stronger intellectual property protection is necessary to
stimulate research and to allow recovery of investment. As international rules increasingly raise the
level of intellectual property protection, there is rising concern about the potential negative impacts on
the dissemination of knowledge and important products, further Research and Development, food
security, and the conservation of biodiversity among other fundamental areas of public policy. It is thus
an important policy challenge to determine application of laws, rules and legislations to agricultural
biotechnology. IPRs are woven into innovations, enable entrepreneurship and they allow the leveraging
of private resources for resolving the problems of hunger and poverty.