Plant patents provide a very important tool for people, companies, and universities to protect each new variety of plant they develop.  Plant patents protect the developer’s exclusive control over asexual propagation of the new variety. For information about the effort that goes into developing a new plant variety, and the importance of plant patents, click here.

So if you have a plant variety that you want to patent, how do you do it? What do you need?

First, you need to name the variety. To do so, you give the variety a “generic name.” This is NOT the same as the trade name you intend to use for the variety. Do not use the attractive, commercial trade name in the plant patent application. For more on why it is important to avoid that mistake, click here.

A good generic name is one that makes it easy to identify the variety but that won’t even try to double as a trade name. If your name is Mary Smith, and this is a Cannabis variety that was originally bred in 2015, and you are patenting the third selection from 2015, the name could be something like MScann15-3 (Mary Smith Cannabis 2015, third selection).  Pick a naming convention that works for you and that you can keep using for all the varieties you might patent. Some breeders name their selections as soon as they show some promise and then only patent a few of the named selections. It’s all about record-keeping and what works for you.

In addition

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By Dale Hunt – The opinions expressed here are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of his professional colleagues or his clients.  Nothing in this post should be construed as legal advice.  Meaningful legal advice can only be provided by taking into consideration specific facts in view of the relevant law.

Since I live and work in the US, my blog is obviously US-centric.  However, I have helped plant breeders in many different countries obtain IP protection for their cultivars all over the world.  In the US, protection for plant cultivars can be in the form of plant patents, utility patents, and/or USDA PVP registrations.  In the rest of the world, the IP protection is more uniform, and is generally referred to as Plant Breeders’ Rights (PBR) or, less commonly, Plant Variety Rights (PVR).

Plant Breeders’ Rights through UPOV in Nearly 100 Countries

In almost all countries where such rights are available, they arise under a mostly-standardized system known as UPOV (Union internationale pour la protection des obtentions végétales, or International Union for Protection of New Varieties of Plants). There are currently 75 members of UPOV, most of which are individual countries but some of which are groups of countries — like the European Union (28 member states) and the African Intellectual Property Organization (17 member states).  Most of the EU countries are also separately members of UPOV, so the total number of countries that participate in UPOV — individually and/or through a regional authority — is currently 94.  You can check the current membership of UPOV here.

This post is primarily for Cannabis breeders and mainly for Canadian breeders who are interested in protecting their

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By Dale Hunt – The opinions expressed here are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of his professional colleagues or his clients.  Nothing in this post should be construed as legal advice.  Meaningful legal advice can only be provided by taking into consideration specific facts in view of the relevant law.

My thanks to Eric Lundgren, JD, for helpful input on this post.