Facebook Pixel {العنوان: سلسلة} | {اسم المغناطيس: سلسلة} - {الفئة: سلسلة} - اقرأ هذه القصة على Magzter.com
استمتع بـUnlimited مع Magzter GOLD

استمتع بـUnlimited مع Magzter GOLD

احصل على وصول غير محدود إلى أكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة وقصة مميزة مقابل

$149.99
 
$74.99/سنة

يحاول ذهب - حر

Why Trade Secrets Matter More Than Patents for India's Seed Companies

January 2026

|

AgroSpectrum

For India’s agritech and seed companies, trade secret protection is becoming an increasingly strategic tool for safeguarding competitive advantage. Much of the sector's value is rooted in confidential breeding expertise, in-house analytics, proprietary genetic resources, and specialised production know-how - assets that traditional IP frameworks such as patents or plant variety protection rarely protect adequately, leaving businesses exposed. As the industry scales amid statutory exceptions and exclusions, market expansion, counterfeit risks, and growing export aspirations, the ability to manage and secure sensitive information is evolving into a critical business capability. Companies that integrate structured trade secret governance into their broader IP and commercial strategies are better positioned to protect high-value R&D, maintain differentiation in a crowded market, and convert long-term research efforts into sustained business value.

Why Trade Secrets Matter More Than Patents for India's Seed Companies

In the agritech domain, especially within the seed-industry ecosystem, the concept of protecting innovation through trade secrets merits serious attention. For companies engaged in crop-breeding, seed development, and hybrid technologies, the confidential know-how, whether that is parental inbred lines, marker-based selection pipelines, or tissue-culture and regeneration methods, often constitutes one of the most valuable competitive assets.

Several high-profile global litigations, such as the Pioneer Hi-Bred International v. Holden Foundation Seeds dispute concerning misappropriation of proprietary corn germplasm, studies have shown that the commercial stakes of unauthorised access to breeding know-how can be extremely high. Similarly, disputes such as Syngenta v. Farmers Business Network have demonstrated how employee movement can lead to disclosure of confidential hybrid pipelines and breeding files. When we bring this into the Indian context, the case for trade secrets becomes even more compelling.

Why trade secrets matter for crop breeding and seed companies

Seed innovation is intensive and layered, often requiring years of selecting parent lines, making genetic crosses, testing performance across environments, and applying genomic and phenotypic data before a successful variety is commercialised. Because a successful variety yields farmer advantages such as higher yield, pest and disease tolerance, climate resilience, and quality traits, companies naturally seek to retain exclusive control over the mechanisms that enable those traits.

المزيد من القصص من AgroSpectrum

AgroSpectrum

AgroSpectrum

How AI Is Rewiring Decision-Making Across Indian Agriculture

For decades, Indian agriculture has lived with uncertainty as a structural condition—of weather, markets, prices, and outcomes. Decisions were shaped as much by intuition as by information, and risk was absorbed almost entirely by those closest to the soil. That equilibrium is now being quietly but decisively rewritten. Artificial intelligence, once confined to pilots and proof-of-concepts, has crossed a threshold. It is no longer an experiment in agriculture—it is becoming infrastructure.

time to read

7 mins

AgroSpectrum India Feb 2026

AgroSpectrum

Rewriting the Rules for Farm Inputs

India’s agricultural reform agenda is entering a crucial moment. After decades of relying on outdated, paper-based regulation, the government is now signalling a decisive shift towards technology-driven transparency and accountability.

time to read

2 mins

AgroSpectrum India Feb 2026

AgroSpectrum

AgroSpectrum

"India should move toward productivity-linked livestock insurance–but only through a phased, data-anchored evolution"

As livestock becomes an increasingly critical pillar of rural incomes amid climate and market uncertainties, the lack of effective risk protection remains a major gap in India’s agricultural policy landscape. In this exclusive AgroSpectrum interview, Ritesh Chauhan, Secretary of Animal Husbandry, Government of Himachal Pradesh, explains why advances in digital identification, veterinary networks, cooperatives, and fintech now make a scalable livestock insurance framework both viable and essential. Drawing from Himachal Pradesh’s on-ground experience, he shares practical insights on building trust, improving claim settlement, and strengthening insurer participation. Edited excerpts:

time to read

7 mins

AgroSpectrum India Feb 2026

AgroSpectrum

AgroSpectrum

Why 2026 Could Be a Turning Point for India's Aquaculture Sector

India's aquaculture sector is entering a decisive phase of transformation, driven by rising domestic demand, strong export growth and sustained policy support. As the world's second-largest aquaculture producer, contributing nearly 8 per cent of global fish output, India has achieved remarkable gains in production, productivity and economic value. However, escalating input costs, climate stress and disease risks are testing the limits of conventional practices. The next stage of growth will depend on adopting sustainable, resilient approaches that improve feed efficiency, diversify farmed species and strengthen climate adaptation across production systems.

time to read

4 mins

AgroSpectrum India Feb 2026

AgroSpectrum

AgroSpectrum

How Integrated Sugarcane-based Industries are Driving Sustainable Growth, Ethanol Output & Rural Transformation

Sugarcane is called the \"green gold\" of agriculture, and indeed, this crop has historically been vital to the prosperity of rural communities. This versatile crop, esteemed for its production of sugar, jaggery, and khansari, is now at the forefront of a transformative movement. In fact, this transformation is leveraging the crop's immense potential. Utilising its agricultural strengths, India, recognised as the second-largest producer of sugarcane globally, is addressing multiple critical issues of our time, including climate change, energy security, and rural development. The area designated for sugarcane cultivation has grown to over 5.4 million hectares, with yearly outputs exceeding 400 million metric tonnes. As a result, sugarcane has evolved beyond being just a crop; it has emerged as a catalyst for change.

time to read

4 mins

AgroSpectrum India Feb 2026

AgroSpectrum

AgroSpectrum to host 2nd edition of Technovate 2026 on March 12-13 in Vashi

After the successful completion of its first edition, AgroSpectrum is again ready for its second edition of AgroSpectrum Technovate 2026 on 12 and 13th March 2026 with the theme \"Transforming Agriculture with Innovation and Technology\" at CIDCO Exhibition & Convention Centre in Vashi, Navi Mumbai.

time to read

1 min

AgroSpectrum India Feb 2026

AgroSpectrum

AgroSpectrum

Boosting turmeric supply chain initiatives

India leads the global turmeric supply chain, being the largest producer, consumer and exporter of turmeric. The major turmeric export markets for the country are Bangladesh, the UAE, and the US. It accounts for over 62 per cent of the market, with its supply chain spanning cultivation in key states like Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, and Bihar. This yellow spice from the Curcuma longa plant serves as both a culinary staple and a traditional remedy with anti-inflammatory properties. Though India is one of the largest producers of turmeric, the country imports a substantial amount from other countries. Erratic climatic conditions, value addition, product innovation and product development appear weaker, leading to a shortfall in output. Proper strategies should be in place to boost turmeric production and the supply chain. Let's dig deeper.

time to read

5 mins

AgroSpectrum India Feb 2026

AgroSpectrum

AgroSpectrum

"Our technology bridges scientific precision with farmer knowledge, creating a system that is scalable, future-ready, and capable of transforming agriculture at scale"

As climate volatility reshapes Indian agriculture, digital intelligence is emerging as a critical resilience tool. In this exclusive AgroSpectrum interview, Ajay Shelke of WOTR explains how FarmPrecise applies AI and hyperlocal weather data to deliver field-level advisories and evolve into a farmer-centric digital operating system for climate-vulnerable regions. Edited experts;

time to read

4 mins

AgroSpectrum India Feb 2026

AgroSpectrum

AgroSpectrum

How AI is Reimagining Agriculture in India

Agriculture remains central to India's economy, contributing to GDP and employing nearly half the workforce, but it faces challenges such as fragmented landholdings, monsoon dependence and resource inefficiencies. Technology, particularly Artificial Intelligence (AI), is emerging as a key enabler alongside policy support. AI-driven tools like satellite imagery, Internet of Things (IoT) sensors and data analytics are strengthening precision farming through yield forecasting, risk mapping and micro-climate prediction. Focusing on the current Rabi season, this analysis draws on pilot initiatives to examine how AI is improving efficiency and profitability while addressing accessibility challenges for small and marginal farmers.

time to read

4 mins

AgroSpectrum India Feb 2026

AgroSpectrum

AgroSpectrum

“Policymakers can make climate-smart farming viable by creating incentives that are practical and profitable.”

UPL, with its presence in over 140 countries, has recently launched its global campaign #AFarmerCan. Jai Shroff, Chairman and Group CEO, UPL Group, in an interaction with AgroSpectrum, elaborates on how UPL is advocating stronger financial and institutional mechanisms that reward sustainable practices and build long-term resilience. Edited excerpts;

time to read

4 mins

AgroSpectrum India Feb 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size