India Opposes Amendments to Plant Treaty over Sovereignty Concerns
July 7, 2025

Why in the News?

The Union government and farmers' groups have raised concerns over proposed amendments to the International Plant Treaty, warning that they may dilute farmers' rights and undermine India's sovereignty over its plant genetic resources.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Background (Plant Treaty, Recent Meeting)
  • Proposed Amendments (Key Amendments, India’s Stand, Core Concerns, State’s Role, Implications, etc.)

India Stands Against Proposed Amendments to the Plant Treaty

  • As global negotiations on plant genetic resources unfold in Peru, India has voiced serious objections to proposed amendments to the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (commonly known as the Plant Treaty).
  • The concerns stem from fears that the amendments would undermine India’s seed sovereignty and the rights of its farmers.

About the Plant Treaty

  • The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA is a legally binding global agreement adopted in 2001 under the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations.
  • The treaty aims to:
    • Conserve plant genetic resources
    • Promote sustainable use of these resources.
    • Ensure fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from their use, especially in research and development.
  • India ratified the treaty in 2002.

About the Recent Negotiations

  • The 10th session of the Governing Body of the Plant Treaty is being held in Peru from July 7 to 11, 2025.
  • An Ad Hoc Open-Ended Working Group is considering amendments to Annex I of the treaty to expand the coverage of the Multilateral System (MLS) to all Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (PGRFA).
  • This proposed expansion implies that India and other countries would be obligated to share all of their plant germplasm under standard international agreements, potentially overriding national terms and conditions.

Core of the Concern: Sovereignty and Farmers’ Rights

  • Indian farmers’ organisations such as Bharath Beej Swaraj Manch and Rashtriya Kisan Mahasangh, have publicly opposed these amendments. They argue that:
    • Annexe I’s expansion would bring all plant genetic material, without exception, under international access frameworks.
    • This move contradicts the treaty’s original mandate, which only facilitated access to a limited list of crops critical for food security.
    • India’s sovereign rights over seeds and plant varieties would be compromised.
    • Farmers’ rights to save, use, exchange, and sell seeds would be diluted under a globally determined material transfer system.

Institutional Response and Representation

  • The Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) has stated that national interest will be safeguarded.
  • India’s official representative at the Peru negotiations is Sunil Archak, Principal Scientist at ICAR’s National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources and also the Co-Chairperson of the ongoing working group.

States’ Role and Constitutional Implications

  • Kerala has emphasised that agriculture is a State subject under Schedule VII of the Indian Constitution.
  • It criticised the lack of consultation with State Governments and farmers’ groups, warning that the amendments could also sideline State Biodiversity Boards and their regulatory role over local genetic resources.
  • Such unilateral shifts in treaty obligations, without broader domestic deliberation, risk undermining India’s federal structure in agricultural policymaking.

Broader Implications for India's Agricultural Policy

  • The proposal to include all PGRFA in the MLS system could:
    • Impact India’s capacity to regulate access to indigenous germplasm.
    • Reduce incentives for local innovation in seed conservation and development.
    • Facilitate foreign entities’ access to India’s rich genetic heritage without proportionate benefit-sharing.
  • The proposed Standard Material Transfer Agreement (SMTA), if universally applied, would mean India cannot tailor access rules based on the type or origin of the germplasm.
  • This may have long-term implications for India’s bioprospecting potential and intellectual property frameworks.

 

Enquire Now