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Biden pushes to reform seed patent law

The U.S. patent system lets agribusinesses like Bayer and Syngenta monopolize seeds, tripling prices since the 1990s and squeezing farmers while blocking competition. Advocacy groups and the Biden adm

How everyone pays the cost for patents on seeds, and private companies get rich from keeping them secret
Phys.org โ€” 27 June 2026
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The United States allows companies to patent plant varieties, giving a handful of corporations control over the seed industry, driving up costs and st

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โšก Quickyla Analysis Original editorial context โ€” not sourced from the article above

Why This Matters

The monopolization of seed patents by agribusiness giants like Bayer and Syngenta isn't just an economic issueโ€”it's a threat to global food security. When a handful of corporations control the genetic blueprints of staple crops, they dictate not only prices but also cultivation conditions, leaving farmers with fewer choices and greater financial strain. This system rewards secrecy over sustainability, raising urgent questions about who truly benefits from the world's food supply.

Background Context

The U.S. patent system's expansion into agricultural biotechnology in the 1980s and 1990s transformed seeds from communal resources into proprietary assets. Before this shift, farmers could save and replant seeds year after year; now, they must purchase new patented varieties annually, often at inflated costs. The consolidation of the seed industryโ€”where a few firms now dominate the marketโ€”has further amplified these pressures, with Bayer's acquisition of Monsanto and other mergers reducing competition to near-oligopolistic levels.

What Happens Next

Pressure from advocacy groups and potential regulatory scrutiny under the Biden administration could force changes to patent laws or antitrust enforcement, but industry resistance remains formidable. Farmers may push for legal challenges to seed patent validity, while seed-saving activists could gain traction in state legislatures. Meanwhile, the global southโ€”where patented seeds are increasingly forced onto marketsโ€”may see both resistance and adaptation as countries weigh food sovereignty against corporate demands.

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