CAMBIA & IRRI - (The International Rice Research Institute)
today announced a major joint venture to advance the BiOS Initiative
- a new strategy that will galvanize agricultural research
focused on poverty alleviation and hunger reduction. The venture
is catalyzed by a 2.55M USD grant to CAMBIA from The Ministry
of Foreign Affairs of Norway.
The BiOS Initiative - Biological Innovation for Open Society-
is often called Open Source Biotechnology. The BiOS model has
resonance with the Open Source software movement, famous for
such successful efforts as Linux. Open Source software has
spurred faster innovation, greater community participation,
and new robust business models that break monopolies and foster
fair competition. BiOS targets parallel challenges that limit
the effective use of modern life sciences in agriculture to
only a few multinational corporations.
"New technologies are increasingly tangled in complex
webs of patent and other legal rights, and are usually tailored
for wealthy countries and well-heeled scientists," said
IRRI's Director General, Robert Zeigler. "Half the world
depends on rice as a staple food - but this also means half
the world's potential innovators could be brought to bear on
the challenges of rice production, given the right toolkits
- and the rights to use them". In the joint work, CAMBIA's
Patent Lens, already one of the most comprehensive costfree
full-text patent databases in the world, will be extended to
include patents in major rice-growing countries, including
China, Korea, and India. These same countries are growing powerhouses
of innovation, poised to play lead roles in the next generation
of biological problem solving.
The Patent Lens will also develop analyses and foster the
capacity in the developing world to create patent maps of the
key emerging technologies that could be constrained by complex
intellectual property rights worldwide, including the rice
genome itself. These patent 'landscapes' will be used to guide
the development of improved technology toolkits in a new, inclusive
manner.
Says Richard Jefferson, CAMBIA's CEO, "It's not so much
about getting access to old patented technology - it's about
forging collaborations to develop better, more powerful tools
within a 'protected commons' to get different problem solvers
to the table." These could for example be tools for precise,
natural genetic enhancements, using non-GM approaches (for
example, homologous recombination), new plant breeding methods
such as marker assisted selection, or even true breeding hybrids
of crop species that would allow farmers in developing countries
to use hybrid seed year after year. Adds Jefferson, "Scientists
and farmers need better options for problem solving, that meet
their priorities, work within their constraints, build on their
ingenuity, and maintain their independence; this is what BiOS
is all about."
IRRI, an autonomous international institute based in Los Banos,
The Philippines, is one of the foundation institutions of the
CGIAR (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research),
and is dedicated to improving the lives and livelihoods of
resource poor rice producers and consumers worldwide.
IRRI has been at the forefront of rice research for almost
thirty years, delivering new rice varieties and practices to
rice farmers throughout Asia and the developing world. Now,
rice has become the model system for grain crops worldwide,
with its entire DNA sequence known; but the 'mining' - and
patenting - of this genetic resource and the possibility that
the tools to improve it could be restricted by broad patents
has raised legitimate concerns that must be met head-on.
CAMBIA, based in Canberra Australia, is an independent non-profit
institute that invents and shares enabling technologies and
new practices for life sciences and intellectual property management
to further social equity.
CAMBIA is the founder of the BiOS Initiative (www.bios.net),
the Patent Lens (www.patentlens.net) and the online collaboration
platform BioForge (www.bioforge.net). CAMBIA published the
first explicit 'open source' biotechnology toolkit in the Journal "Nature" in
February 2005. Included in that publication was the technology
'TransBacter' in which the technique of plant gene transfer
by Agrobacterium, covered by hundreds of patents, was bypassed
using other symbiotic bacteria to add beneficial genes to rice
and other plants. This and other technologies have been made
freely available under BiOS licenses.
Work by IRRI, CAMBIA scientists, and others in an online collaboration
community, will optimize this process and other open source
enabling technologies, ensuring their availability to scientists
throughout the developed and developing world.
Press Contacts:
CAMBIA: Dr Richard Jefferson, CEO, r.jefferson@cambia.org
+61 2 6246 4502 (work) +61 419 499 753 (mobile)
Press liaison: Stephanie Goodrick, s.goodrick@cambia.org
+61 2 6246 4503 (work) +61 2 6246 4533 (work fax)
IRRI: Dr Robert Zeigler, Director General, r.zeigler@cgiar.org
+63 2 5805600 (work) +63 2 5805699 (work fax)
Press liaison: Duncan Macintosh, d.macintosh@cgiar.org
+63 2 5805600 (work) +63 2 5805699 (work fax)