http://grist.org/food/a-16th-century-dutchman-can-tell-us-everything-we-need-to-know-about-gmo-patents/



28 Oct 2013 9:00 AM

A 16th-century Dutchman can tell us everything we need to know about GMO patents

By Nathanael Johnson

Richard Jefferson was talking fast, too fast for me to take notes. He
was trying to explain what’s wrong with our food system, and what to
do about it, but there was too much to say, and we’d already stretched
the lunch hour past its breaking point. He kept moving forkloads of
salad toward his mouth, but the food couldn’t swim up the cascade of
words. It always ended up back on his plate.

Mark Coulson, 5th World Conference of Science JournalistsRichard Jefferson.

Jefferson talks this way because he’s passionate, and because he’s a
polymath. He was on the team of public scientists that created the
first transgenic plants (one day before Monsanto did it). He invented
a genetic marker that earned him notoriety in the field. Then he
became an intellectual property expert and created a framework for
open-source biological invention. Now, he’s trying to radically
transform the entire system of innovation to make it more inclusive
and local: He wants a system that empowers farmers in Africa to invent
their own solutions, rather than looking to multinational corporations
for fixes.

This sounds like it falls somewhere on the spectrum between shooting
at the moon and tilting at windmills, but he’s been able to persuade
some serious funders — the Gates Foundation, the Lemelson Foundation,
and others — to back him.

“The real problem with GMOs is not about science, it’s about business
models,” he said. Actually, he said, the problem isn’t limited to
GMOs: The real problem is that the people who need new solutions most,
like farmers in developing countries, are isolated in a system that
discourages ground-level innovation. Instead, we have a small group of
companies in rich countries, with a stranglehold on patents, designing
all the solutions to fit their own business models. This system works
primarily to bring in money for these companies, to maintain their
privilege, and to exclude competition.

So are patents the problem?

They’re a big part of it, but, patents aren’t intrinsically bad,
Jefferson said. The whole point of the patent system was to get people
to share their secrets. The very word patent comes from the Latin
patere: to lay open. You tell the world how to make your invention,
and in return, the people who use it have to work out a deal with you.
If someone uses your invention without your permission, you can sue
them — but only for a while, and only in the country where you have
the patents.

The problem is that the patent system has grown so complex that only a
few experts understand it. It’s impossible for normal people to
navigate the patent thickets to discover the treasures there, or see
the dangers. And these days everything from a cellphone to a seed
requires dozens of separate patents for the component parts. The
solution, he said, is mapping it out: what he calls “innovation
cartography.”

At this point, Jefferson could have tried to convince me by trotting
out arguments in the abstract, but he didn’t do that. Instead, he
decided to tell the story of the Dutch clerk who stole the Portuguese
maps.

Jan Huyghen van Linschoten.

In the 16th century, the Portuguese had the best maps. Well, the
Portuguese and the Spanish (“makes a better story if you focus on the
Portuguese,” he said). In any case, the Iberian peninsula controlled
all the information needed to send merchant ships to Asia (and, to a
large extent, the New World as well). The Iberians had invested
heavily in research and development, sending out De Gama, Magellan,
Dias, Columbus, all those explorers to map the world. And because they
were the only Europeans with reliable maps of the East Indies — these
maps were state secrets — the Iberians had a monopoly.

Once this monopoly was in place, three things happened: The Iberians
became rich; they pillaged their colonies with increasing ferocity;
and their innovation stalled completely. When there’s a monopoly,
Jefferson said, there’s no incentive to act well, or to improve.
Shipbuilding techniques plateaued, navigation science stagnated, and
the evolution of financing stalled.

Linschoten’s map of India.

During that time, our hero, Jan Huyghen van Linschoten, was working as
a secretary for the Portuguese archbishop in Goa, India. In that
capacity, he traveled all over the world. Somewhere along the way, he
got his hands on the Portuguese maps, and he copied them. Then he
returned to Holland. It took him a while — he was attacked by pirates
and stranded in the Azores for two years — but by the time he got home
he had written down all the information he’d gleaned (or stole) from
the Portuguese.

Then he did something unusual: Instead of using the information
himself, or selling it to a Dutch merchant house, he published it.
This was after the invention of the printing press, but before the
invention of copyright, so the maps multiplied freely. And this
publication triggered a cascade of world-changing events.

One of Linschoten’s maps. North is oriented left.

Linschoten published the maps in 1596. The British East India Company
started in 1600; the Dutch East India Company was founded in 1602. The
Dutch East India Company also represented an innovation in financing:
It was the first joint stock company, and its formation gave rise to
trade in options and derivatives. Once the maps were available and the
Iberian monopoly was broken, new ideas flowered, and new investment
flowed.

Now we have a similar situation, Jefferson said. There is a tremendous
opportunity — not in mapping Asia and the Americas, but in mapping the
patent system and all of its related knowledge. There’s currently a
“clergy” (Jefferson’s term) of patent experts, who help big companies
navigate the patent system for big fees. It simply costs too much for
small inventors to see what’s already out there, “or what reefs and
shoals to avoid,” Jefferson said.

The really crazy thing, Jefferson said, is that anyone can look up
patents and grab recipes for creating technologies. This is especially
true of the people who need innovation most, because patents don’t
apply in most developing countries. Patents can only stop use of an
invention in the country in which they’re granted. An enterprising
Ugandan company could look up the instructions for Monsanto’s seeds in
the patent literature, and build them tomorrow, without breaking the
law, Jefferson said. The innovators and entrepreneurs are out there,
he said — they just need the maps to show investors that the
technology exists and their plans are legal and feasible. So he and
his team created Lens.org, which works as a cartography tool for
navigating patents and, ambitiously, all human innovation.

The Linschoten story sounded too good to be true. But when I looked it
up, it checked out. The monopoly, the pirates, the theft of
intellectual property, it all actually happened. (Here are some
selections translated into English — there’s much more to his story.)
Historians even agree that Linschoten’s maps were instrumental in
breaking the Iberian hegemony.

Linschoten’s first book.

I don’t know if Jefferson is really a latter-day Linschoten, but I do
think this analogy is useful for thinking about GMOs. We live in a
time where agricultural innovation is done primarily by a small
handful of companies that invested heavily in research and development
early on. And innovation is stagnant: We see lots of variations on the
Bt toxin, all kinds of recombination of a few other transgenic traits,
and not much else. The investment dollar follows the proven
moneymakers. There’s little incentive for truly creative thinking
about the problem of agriculture.

Of course, the comparison extends beyond GMOs: Plenty of agricultural
technologies are patented. GMOs are just the most obvious target; they
are often used to represent the whole mess. As Jack Kloppenburg Jr.
shows in First the Seed, for most of history, seeds defied the rules
of capitalism as Marx defined them. Capitalism depends on separating
the consumer from the means of production. But if you are a capitalist
in the business of selling seeds you have a problem: A seed contains
its own means of production. You plant a seed and, instead of using
itself up, it produces … a lot more seeds.

So for most of history, farmers shared seeds, and innovators got
prestige, but not much money. That changed with the introduction of
hybrid seeds: Hybrids don’t reproduce their superior traits in
subsequent generations. For the first time there was a powerful,
inarguable, reason for farmers to stop saving seeds. GM technology
completed this transformation of seeds into a commodity. Few modern
farmers in the U.S. control their means of production anymore; they
rely on seed companies and plant breeders to take care of that for
them.

There’s nothing wrong with this division of labor, except that it
means that fewer people are tinkering. We’ve centralized the
responsibility for agricultural innovation among a few engineers, even
fewer investors, and just a handful of corporations.

The impenetrability of the patent system gives these firms a virtual
monopoly. As Kloppenburg puts it, “In what is frequently likened to a
nineteenth-century style ‘land grab,’ vast tracts of the genescape …
are being appropriated via patents.” There are few routes of passage
left, and any innovator who wants to traverse this landscape has to
contend with overlapping property rights and the constant threat of
attack by hungry lawyers. The big companies have the same problems, of
course, but they have the money to hire the intellectual-property
clergy to make deals. Now the big players have cross-licensing
agreements. Smaller inventors can’t even afford to sit down at the
bargaining table.

The result is an Iberian peninsula of farming technology. It has
tremendous power, but no incentive to try crazy new things. It stifles
innovation and is unresponsive to the needs of its consumers.

Jefferson wants to disrupt this system the capitalist’s way, with
newer, wilder ideas. Kloppenburg argues for — and has helped start —
an open-source system for plant scientists. It will take someone
smarter than me to figure out the best answer to this problem. My
point, in recounting this story, is simply to note that this is a way
that today’s handful of market-dominating GM seeds are linked to a
real problem. They’ve led to a consolidation of power, and an
increasingly confused patchwork of patents. They’re an integral part
of a sclerotic and narrowly focused system.

As Jefferson puts it, “The real problem is the inertial forces of big
business driving out strategies and models that would create a
vigorous, decentralized and democratized innovation capability.”

If there’s something that can be done about that, it’s worth giving up
lunch and talking till we’re blue in the face to make it happen.

Nathanael Johnson (@savortooth on Twitter) is Grist's food writer and
the author of All Natural: A Skeptic's Quest to Discover If the
Natural Approach to Diet, Childbirth, Healing, and the Environment
Really Keeps Us Healthier and Happier.
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