Everyone pays the price as patent holders on seeds stifle innovation
by Julie Dawson, Kiki Hubbard, and Paulina Jenney, Th from Ars Technica - All content on (#76GJE)
The United States is one of only a handful of countries that allows companies to hold patents on plant varieties. As a result, a small number of corporations can-and do-suppress competition in the seed industry, stifle innovation, and turn taxpayer subsidies intended for farmers into corporate profits.
The US Department of Agriculture has found that two companies control more than 70 percent of US corn and soybean seed sales, and the top four cottonseed companies control nearly 94 percent of that market.
In a May 2026 court filing in a legal dispute between two US seed companies, the Department of Justice said patents on seeds are obstructing competition and research in the agriculture industry.