Patent Abuse in India’s Pesticide Industry: The Debate Over Data Exclusivity
Guest Author: Mr. S Ganesan, Public & Policy Affairs Advisor, Crop Care Federation of India (CCFI)
10 October 2024, New Delhi: The primary objective of the Indian Patents Act has been the promotion of science and technology for the benefit of our own social and economic development, and to a balance of rights and obligations under the Act.
Owning patents in India for new pesticide molecules but not commercializing them for the benefit of Indian agriculture and the agrochemical industry should be considered as a planned abuse of the monopoly rights granted under the Indian Patents Act, 1970. The abuse involves any action that Intentionally harms or injures another person for private gain. The abuse of patent rights occurs when a firm obtains patent for a product that it does not intend to commercialize. This kind of abuse is rather rampant in India in recent years in the field of agrochemicals/pesticides.
Our analysis shows that for every ten patents granted since 2010 to the western MNCs for new pesticide chemistries/ molecules, six have not been commercially introduced in India though they were promptly commercialized in other countries.
Particulars | No. of pesticides |
No. of pesticides (new molecules) patented in India between 2010-2022 | 62 |
No. of patented pesticides (new molecules) commercially launched in India between 2010-2022 | 27 (44%) |
No. of patented pesticides (new molecules) commercially not launched in India between 2010-2022 though launched outside India | 35 (56%) |
It gives empirical evidence to the extent of pesticide patent abuse in India from 2010 till 2022.
This planned abuse brazenly contravenes the mandatory requirements in Section 83 of Indian Patents Act which states inter-alia that “patents are granted to encourage inventions and to secure that the inventions are worked in India on a commercial scale and to the fullest extent…. without undue delay”. The abuse doesn’t stop here. The western MNCs who do not commercially introduce all their patented molecules are now Actively lobbying for “data exclusivity” to bring their old and off patent pesticide molecules to the Indian market.
Data exclusivity is a form of intellectual property protection outside the ambit of TRIPS Agreement. It is a TRIPS plus privilege. This is a double whammy for India. It would only end up creating yet another market monopoly to the western MNCs.
The Patent Abuse Explained
Article 5 A(2) of the Paris Convention considers that a failure to work a patent in a country that granted the patent protection could amount to an abuse of monopoly rights conferred on the patent owner. The term “working a patent” refers to commercialization of the patent in the country that granted the patent. A “patent not worked” means the invention (in this case new pesticide molecule) has not been commercially exploited in the country (India in this case) that granted the patent.
The WTO-TRIPS Agreement 1995 sets out the objective of intellectual property rights in Article 7which says that the protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights should contribute to the promotion of technological innovation and to the transfer and dissemination of technology, to the mutual advantage of producers and users of technological knowledge and in a manner conducive to social and economic welfare, and to a balance of rights and obligations. Article 8(2) of the TRIPS Agreement permits Members to take appropriate measures to prevent the abuse of intellectual property rights by the holders.
Patents are strictly territorial rights. The patent rights are limited to the country that granted the patent. The patent can act as a fuel for economic growth only if it is worked (commercialized) in the country that granted the patent.
The Intellectual Property Appellate Board (IPAB) in their order 45 of 2013 against Bayer Corporation asserted that patented invention refers to invention that is worked (commercialize) in the territory of India and made available to the public.
Under our Patents Act, a failure to commercialize the patent is unacceptable and actionable. Section 83 of our Patents Act carries several obligations to achieve this. They include:
Understanding Section 83 | What it requires? |
83(a) | Patents are granted to encourage inventions and to secure that the inventions are worked in India on a commercial scale and to the fullest extent that is reasonably practicable without undue delay; |
83(b) | [Patents] are not granted merely to enable patentees to enjoy a monopoly for the importation of the patented article; |
83(c) | The protection and enforcement of patent rights contribute to the promotion of technological innovation and to the transfer and dissemination of technology, to the mutual advantage of producers and users …,” |
83(f) | “that the patent rights is not abused by the patentee…. the patentee does not resort to practices which unreasonably restrain trade or adversely affect the international transfer of technology; |
83(g) | Patents are granted to make the benefit of the patented invention available at reasonably affordable prices to the public. |
In an open defiance of these mandatory requirements given in the Section 83 of Indian Patent Act, the western MNCs operating in India fail to commercially introduce many of the patented molecules in India though they introduce them in other countries.
Section 84(1)(c) of the Patents Act allows grant of compulsory license if a patented invention has not been worked in the territory of India.
Abuse of Patent Rights and Competition Act 2002
The objective of Competition Act is to ensure a fair functioning of the market, creation of the market and there is no undue denial of the market access.
When a dominant company holding Indian patents for a new pesticide, fails to commercialize it in India is an abusive exclusionary conduct. Patent holders are barred from abusing their rights by Section 83(f) of the Patents Act.
According to Competition Commission of India (CCI) “as long as there exists an anti-competitive and abusive behavior on the part of the patentee, the Competition Act will be triggered”.
Failure to introduce new pesticides even 10 years after the patent demonstrate prima facia that the patentee is abusing the patent rights in India. This abusive behavior is anti-competitive.
Data Exclusivity: A Subject Conclusively Dealt With
It is pertinent to note that data exclusivity is a TRIPS plus measure that the Government of India and various Parliamentary Committees have steadfastly opposed in various forums.
Our Parliamentary Standing Committee on Patents & Trademark(24th Oct 2008) strongly advised the Government not to succumb to data exclusivity demands from the foreign companies.
The TRIPS Agreement does not require undisclosed test data be treated as a form of “property”.
The Delhi High Court in its order dated 1st July 2009 (Syngenta vs Union of India, WP 8123/2008) observed that there is no statutory support to granting data exclusivity in India. The High Court of Gujarat also took the same stand in the Civil Application No. 6462 of 2016.
In the Parliamentary Committee report of 2022 on Pesticide Management Bill, the Committee observes that the patent period of 20 years is sufficient to get the returns on the investments made in R&D of a new molecule and hence the demand of data exclusivity/patent term extension is not justifiable.
In the recent European Free Trade Agreement (EFTA), India has rejected the data exclusivity demand.
We will continue to monitor the progress in commercial launch patented pesticides in India.
We urge the patent holders of new pesticide molecules to abstain from acts that are designed to frustrate the object and purpose of Indian Patents Act. Patent abuse is patently wrong.
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