Licensing as a commercialization strategy to improve varietal adoption in Ghana

Ghana’s Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), through its Crops Research Institute (CRI) and Savanna Agricultural Research Institute (SARI), is responsible for developing improved crop varieties and has developed hundreds of varieties over the years. However, these public research i...

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Autores principales: Kuhlmann, Katrin, Nalinya, Adron Naggayi, Botey, Mireku, Gichuru, Lilian, Puozaa, Doris Kanvenaa, Onsando, James, Ahenda, Joseph, Mujaju, Claid, Ojiewo, Chris Ochieng
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CIMMYT 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178825
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author Kuhlmann, Katrin
Nalinya, Adron Naggayi
Botey, Mireku
Gichuru, Lilian
Puozaa, Doris Kanvenaa
Onsando, James
Ahenda, Joseph
Mujaju, Claid
Ojiewo, Chris Ochieng
author_browse Ahenda, Joseph
Botey, Mireku
Gichuru, Lilian
Kuhlmann, Katrin
Mujaju, Claid
Nalinya, Adron Naggayi
Ojiewo, Chris Ochieng
Onsando, James
Puozaa, Doris Kanvenaa
author_facet Kuhlmann, Katrin
Nalinya, Adron Naggayi
Botey, Mireku
Gichuru, Lilian
Puozaa, Doris Kanvenaa
Onsando, James
Ahenda, Joseph
Mujaju, Claid
Ojiewo, Chris Ochieng
author_sort Kuhlmann, Katrin
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Ghana’s Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), through its Crops Research Institute (CRI) and Savanna Agricultural Research Institute (SARI), is responsible for developing improved crop varieties and has developed hundreds of varieties over the years. However, these public research institutes face significant funding challenges that constraint breeding activities, variety testing and release, maintenance and provision of early generation seed (EGS), and handover to seed systems actors. This policy brief summarizes findings from a consultative meetings and workshops held in 2024 to understand how CSIR-CRI and CSIR-SARI can explore licensing to enhance varietal adoption and commercialization. It was identified that the licensing model currently implemented by the CSIR could have broader implications for public breeding objectives or farmers' access to improved varieties. Low awareness of Plant Breeders’ Rights (PBR) and intellectual property rights (IPR) regulations among staff, gaps in managing licensing agreements, and weak private sector engagement undermine crop variety commercialization through licensing. Recommendations based on stakeholder consultations included the development of an improved licensing strategy and standardadized guidelines, awareness creation, capacity building in variety licencing models, institutionalization of EGS supply processes, and improved engagement with the private sector.
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spelling CGSpace1788252025-12-16T02:07:33Z Licensing as a commercialization strategy to improve varietal adoption in Ghana Kuhlmann, Katrin Nalinya, Adron Naggayi Botey, Mireku Gichuru, Lilian Puozaa, Doris Kanvenaa Onsando, James Ahenda, Joseph Mujaju, Claid Ojiewo, Chris Ochieng licences commercialization policy briefs agricultural policies Ghana’s Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), through its Crops Research Institute (CRI) and Savanna Agricultural Research Institute (SARI), is responsible for developing improved crop varieties and has developed hundreds of varieties over the years. However, these public research institutes face significant funding challenges that constraint breeding activities, variety testing and release, maintenance and provision of early generation seed (EGS), and handover to seed systems actors. This policy brief summarizes findings from a consultative meetings and workshops held in 2024 to understand how CSIR-CRI and CSIR-SARI can explore licensing to enhance varietal adoption and commercialization. It was identified that the licensing model currently implemented by the CSIR could have broader implications for public breeding objectives or farmers' access to improved varieties. Low awareness of Plant Breeders’ Rights (PBR) and intellectual property rights (IPR) regulations among staff, gaps in managing licensing agreements, and weak private sector engagement undermine crop variety commercialization through licensing. Recommendations based on stakeholder consultations included the development of an improved licensing strategy and standardadized guidelines, awareness creation, capacity building in variety licencing models, institutionalization of EGS supply processes, and improved engagement with the private sector. 2025-11 2025-12-15T21:48:11Z 2025-12-15T21:48:11Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178825 en Open Access application/pdf CIMMYT New Markets Lab Kuhlmann, K., Nalinya, A. N., Botey, M., Gichuru, L., Puozaa, D. K., Onsando, J., Ahenda, J., Mujaju, C., & Ojiewo, C. O. (2025). Licensing as a commercialization strategy to improve varietal adoption in Ghana [Brief]. CIMMYT, & New Markets Lab. https://hdl.handle.net/10883/36242
spellingShingle licences
commercialization
policy briefs
agricultural policies
Kuhlmann, Katrin
Nalinya, Adron Naggayi
Botey, Mireku
Gichuru, Lilian
Puozaa, Doris Kanvenaa
Onsando, James
Ahenda, Joseph
Mujaju, Claid
Ojiewo, Chris Ochieng
Licensing as a commercialization strategy to improve varietal adoption in Ghana
title Licensing as a commercialization strategy to improve varietal adoption in Ghana
title_full Licensing as a commercialization strategy to improve varietal adoption in Ghana
title_fullStr Licensing as a commercialization strategy to improve varietal adoption in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Licensing as a commercialization strategy to improve varietal adoption in Ghana
title_short Licensing as a commercialization strategy to improve varietal adoption in Ghana
title_sort licensing as a commercialization strategy to improve varietal adoption in ghana
topic licences
commercialization
policy briefs
agricultural policies
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178825
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